How the fish are really caught (sometimes)

socalnano24

Active Member
So I'm bored, thought I'd share a story.
I went to Rarotanga last year (Cook Islands) to visit a friend of mine from the US who had flown out to Raro to be a tropical fish collector.
I told him when I got out of school I'd get my scuba cert and go check out the island. Didn't know how much of an adventure I'd be getting myself into...
My buddy couldn't get off work for the week I was there so I had a week in the life of a wild collector.
Now the company he worked for (all 2 people)was the only one on all of the Cook Islands (so theres quite an abundance of fish compared with other tropical locations).
7 am.. the roosters are crowing and the geckos are chirping. Time to drink some coffee and ride our bikes to the dive shed.
8 am.. already loaded 10 3000 psi steel tanks into the 22 foot flat bottom boston whaler, along with a funnel (net shaped like a 3' funnel for fish collection), an underwater scooter(like a jet ski but underwater), several 40 gallon trash cans filled with 4 inch segments of pvc. 3 peoples dive gear, and enough water and food for the day.
9 am.. we rode to town sitting in the back of the boat, behind an 80s toyota truck passing mopeds and bicycles. (the wealthy on this island have nissan frontiers or an occasional fiat).
by 10 am were already on our first dive, a mile off shore in 120 feet of water. My buddy has just brought the funnel and two other nets down and set them up on the bottom. Today were collecting schools.
10:15. a 100 foot net and a 30 foot net are set up in a hyperbolic shape with the "funnel" in the middle connected to one of hte 40 gallon trash cans. My buddy and his dive partner go off on the reer with fiberglass sticks in their hands. They come back waving the sticks out to the side along with the most tiny schooling fish you've ever seen! The schools bank off until theres just one species, Today I think we were getting larai anthys. In a matter of a few minutes the trash can is full of about 100 fish. Put the lid on and grab another trash can. This cycle goes on until were running out of air 20 minutes later.
10:35 I've made my way to the boat anchor and have started working my way up the line to our decompression tank. My buddy and his dive partner are still down bringing the trash cans full of fish over to the float bouy (the fish need to be acclimated every 20 feet for four hours, to ensure proper decompression)
11:00 finishing decompressing and making our way up to the boat. I've now been on my first "fish collection". Apparantley my buddy got about $2.50-$6.00 for most fish.
On other dives of his I found out some more info on the ocean products.....
Full grown angels could be worth $12 a piece. Jefferjai (a rare deep water fire fish were worth 500 a piece to him). He also caught a few boyle eye. Worth up to a grand a piece if they had been special ordered. Some of these fish were collected as deep as 250 feet.
I was more interested in shallow dives to the tourist sites though. Here's some pictures of that.
 

socalnano24

Active Member
the island

me on the boat

on the way down

hand collecting tangs with nets

butterfly

a napoleon wrasse (about 5 and a half feet long)

more net catching

cool corral head


waiting to surface
 

socalnano24

Active Member
Anyways, the rest of the day we went to two or three other locations, periodically making our way back to dive down and raise the fish. On an average day my buddy made 8 dives average 115 feet. On my first day out I went on three.
After the last bucket was raise to maybe 60 feet (took three days to get most of the buckets all the way up). We radioed in to his company and were picked up at the boat dock. Then rode back into town to clean the boat.
8 pm - finished cleaning the boat to go home and eat some dinner
9 pm - exhausted from my first day in "paradise?" I think were going to be dong this all week
 

mantisman51

Active Member
There aren't many fish that we typically buy for our aquariums at 100'+ is there? Most all the reef fish that we buy have 30-50' maximum depth. It almost sounds fun, but I'd stick to snorkelling in the Caribbean. Relaxing by the beach in Puerto Rico and snorkelling all day seems alot easier and a whole lot cheaper. Glad you had a good time.
 

socalnano24

Active Member
I think you'd be surprised how many fish are caught at depths greater than 60 feet.
There were alot of wrasses and flame angels at 80-120. Lion fish were all the way down to 80 feet.
Most firefish were all the way down to 200 feet different colors at different depths.
I'd have to check some of the other types that we caught. I wasn't a fish hobbyist at the time, only a scuba diver (southern cali at that) so I wasn't as adept at fish names yet. haha
The hand net catching we did (not the schooling trash can technique)was at 55 feet deep, where we caught lots of different tangs and butterflys along developed angels.
 

t316

Active Member
So at 9:00 AM you are going down the road, and by 10:00 AM you are a mile off shore?
 

deete

New Member
This is all very interesting to me. What a great experience to be able to have. Someday I'll get SCUBA certified. When I do, Catalina will be first on my list. (I live in Fullerton)
 

flpriest

Member
Very cool! That would be something I would like to do one day. Not necessarilly to collect fish to sell, but to go down 40-60' to see the fish in their home, instead of looking at them in an aquarium in my home.
Thanks for sharing!
 

socalnano24

Active Member
Originally Posted by Deete
http:///forum/post/3074722
This is all very interesting to me. What a great experience to be able to have. Someday I'll get SCUBA certified. When I do, Catalina will be first on my list. (I live in Fullerton)
Catalina is amazing! Lots of kelp forests. I've seen leopard sharks, bat rays and horn sharks there. Along with lots of cucumbers, sea urchins, sheeps head and the occasional lobster.
Laguna Beach isn't bad either, last week I went on a dive in Laguna and say a school of mating bat rays in the shallows. Prolly about 20 4-6 foot wide ones.
 

socalnano24

Active Member
Originally Posted by flpriest
http:///forum/post/3076172
Very cool! That would be something I would like to do one day. Not necessarilly to collect fish to sell, but to go down 40-60' to see the fish in their home, instead of looking at them in an aquarium in my home.
Thanks for sharing!

Yeah, I wouldn't want to sell for a living. It was a lot of work! Good experience for a few days though.
 
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