July 1 is opening day for recreational crabbing in Puget Sound. Each year an estimated 12,000 crab pots are lost in Puget Sound, resulting in the capture of an estimated 180,000 Dungeness crab a year with no one to harvest them. The Snohomish County Marine Resources Committee (MRC) and the Northwest Straits Foundation continue to partner to educate crabbers about the problem.
There are several ways crabbers can prevent losing their pots:
- Avoid marine transit and ferry lanes.
- Check tides and currents. Avoid crabbing during strong tidal changes and currents.
- Make buoys more visible. Add a second buoy or stick and flag.
- Use a weighted line to sink below the surface and avoid being cut by passing boats.
- Weight your pot so they do not move in high currents or tidal changes.
- Use longer line. Use one-third more line than the water depth to allow for tide changes.
- Secure lid and escape panels with biodegradable cotton escape cord. This allows crabs to escape from lost pots after the cord degrades.
- Stay with your pot. A watched pot will bring home more crab.
This handy checklist and additional information can also be found at www.derelictgear.org. You will find instructional videos, helpful apps and other resources to help catch more crab and avoid having your crab pots become one of the 12,000 lost each year.
Marine Resources Committee members will be at the 10th Street Boat Launch in Everett starting on July 1. Volunteers will be on-site in the mornings of July 1, 2, 8 and 9 from 6-10 a.m., providing educational materials including free rot cord and gauges for measuring your catch. Come with any questions you may have on how to correctly set up your crab pot so you can catch more crab. The goal is more crab for you, less lost pots for Puget Sound.
The Marine Resources Committee is a service provided by Snohomish County Surface Water Management, a division of the Department of Conservation and Natural Resources. For more information, visit www.snocomrc.org.
Two most important items above: WEIGHT and LINE LENGTH. Most people have no idea how hard the current runs in the Puget sound. And they throw an unweighted collapsible trap down and 4 hours later are cussing that someone stole their highly valuable crab pot. I find a couple dozen every year floating out in 600’ of water.
Weight not only keeps your pot where you left it, it keeps the pot steady on the bottom. Crab are not going to enter a pot that is bouncing around on the bottom.
The line length not only accounts for tide level, it also helps with the tide strength – your bouy is going to pull in the direction of current flow – you have to account for the angle. The bouy is going to be 50’ from where the pot is when the current is at its peak.