Rocky Entries

Abalone Diving

Home
Marine Resource Issues
Northern California Diving
Current Conditions
Abalone
Diving the fun stuff
Fish & Game Regulations
How to Harvest
Freediving
Ear Pain (or not)
Dangers
Equipment
What To Do With Them
How Long Can This Last?
Issues the hard stuff
Kayak Diving
Dive Clubs
Dive Log
Links

On the first day of April every year, the Highway 1 corridor north of Jenner awakens from a sleepy winter to a sudden rush of human visitors. Should that date happen to coincide with any weekend day, the influx borders on spooky; an early morning drive along Highway 1 reveals vehicles parked at every conceivable angle at every roadside pullout, abandoned (temporarily) by occupants who have gone to the sea. Hours will pass before some semblance of quiet and normalcy returns to the day and even that will only last until early the next morning when the ritual will repeat itself.

April 1 is the opening day of abalone season in northern California. It's the first opportunity in four months for enthusiasts to indulge an irrational need to spend an hour or more wading or diving in unfriendly and frigid coastal waters in hopes of returning home with a few abalone. On a typical weekend during the season, they'll be out there by the hundreds; on opening weekend, that number quickly reaches into the thousands.

Why?

Ab Divers returningWhy would anyone brave numbing-cold, potentially dangerous surf, unexpected currents, and rumors of man-eating sharks (spending an estimated $6,000,000 and $10,000,000 every year) for abalone? Presuming it's unlikely that all of the estimated 40,000 recreational abalone harvesters are quite simply nuts, there just might be some reasonable explanation.

For most, the major part of any explanation lies with the universal appeal of a treasure hunt. If you went to a local seafood market to buy abalone, you'd have to pay something in excess of $100/pound for abalone (assuming you were able to find it at all). Each legal-sized abalone yields a pound or more of meat and every abalone harvester may take up to three abalone. Even though a ban on the sale of recreationally harvested abalone sets its intrinsic value to zero, there's still a perceived value for a limit of abalone that starts at $300 and easily goes to $600, $700, $800 or more. Where else can you engage in a relatively inexpensive activity that offers valuable treasure just for the taking? It's a powerful inducement for the more adventurous kids of any age.

But, regardless of the appeal of a treasure hunt, there aren't very many who would partake of this sport were it not any fun. The fact that more and more people are caught up in this minor mania each year attests to the fun involved and, by extension, that the dangers and discomforts of abalone diving can be largely overcome. These web pages are a compilation of the information needed to invest wisely and play safely in the waters of northern California. I hope you find them interesting and useful.

As a measure of the appeal of abalone diving independent of (most) of my biases, the following recent articles appeared in various newspapers:

Sacramento Bee's Sunken Treasure article
L.A. Times Dive deep for this ab workout July 2005 article
Sonoma West Times' Diving for your Dinner July 2005 article by Kerrie Russell

CalTip


Last Modified: July 22, 2005


{norcadiver@sonic.net}