13-12-2009, 06:26 PM
[quote name='shinchan' post='14240' date='Apr 12 2009, 07:30 AM']Aloha, I know this is a squid forum but just wondering if anyone fishes for the octopus found in Puget Sound? It seems like they'd be fairly abundant. I'm moving there in August and was curious to see if anyone specifically fishes for them. I read through the Washington State fishing rule and regs and it states that
[color="#231f20"]Octopus must be caught with hands or instrument which does not penetrate the octopus, except that octopus taken while angling with hook and line may be retained.
[left][size=2]That's exactly how its done here in Hawaii (other than diviing for them) with a Tako (Japanese for octopus) lure with two or more spikes at the end of a steel shank topped by a cowrie shell. You drag it on the bottom (30-200 ft deep), feel for the resistance, jerk it and haul it up. So I'm guessing pots or tubes in use in WA? BTW, they're great on the bbq or deep fried or made in po'ke. And they're probably a lot bigger than the 3-5 lb average size in Hawaii.... <img src='http://www.squidfish.net/forums/public/style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/cool.gif' class='bbc_emoticon' alt=':oops' /> Any info greatly appreciated.[/left]
[left]Mahalo, Randy[/left]
[/color][/size][/quote]
You may try a octopus lair pot. It is my goal to try setting lair pots for Giant Pacific Octopus in the San Juan Islands. I got the idea from this article [url="http://www.wildlifenews.alaska.gov/index.cfm?adfg=wildlife_news.view_article&articles_id=303"]http://www.wildlifenews.alaska.gov/index.c...articles_id=303[/url] they appear to have been used successfully in alaska so why not here.
[color="#231f20"]Octopus must be caught with hands or instrument which does not penetrate the octopus, except that octopus taken while angling with hook and line may be retained.
[left][size=2]That's exactly how its done here in Hawaii (other than diviing for them) with a Tako (Japanese for octopus) lure with two or more spikes at the end of a steel shank topped by a cowrie shell. You drag it on the bottom (30-200 ft deep), feel for the resistance, jerk it and haul it up. So I'm guessing pots or tubes in use in WA? BTW, they're great on the bbq or deep fried or made in po'ke. And they're probably a lot bigger than the 3-5 lb average size in Hawaii.... <img src='http://www.squidfish.net/forums/public/style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/cool.gif' class='bbc_emoticon' alt=':oops' /> Any info greatly appreciated.[/left]
[left]Mahalo, Randy[/left]
[/color][/size][/quote]
You may try a octopus lair pot. It is my goal to try setting lair pots for Giant Pacific Octopus in the San Juan Islands. I got the idea from this article [url="http://www.wildlifenews.alaska.gov/index.cfm?adfg=wildlife_news.view_article&articles_id=303"]http://www.wildlifenews.alaska.gov/index.c...articles_id=303[/url] they appear to have been used successfully in alaska so why not here.