Wilson on Outdoors: Tracking wounded game with an electronic device?
Q: Archery season is starting, and before we go out I would like to know if it’s legal to use an electronic tracking device that attaches to an arrow to help track our game. The tracking device separates from the arrow as the arrow contacts the target and enables the hunter to better follow the wounded animal. Are these devices legal?
Jared T., Red Bluff
A: No, unfortunately, they are not legal. The regulation below restricts the use of computerized or telemetry devices to track big-game mammals. The device you describe is not legal in California at this time.
“No person shall pursue, drive, herd, or take any bird or mammal from any type of motor-driven air or land vehicles, motorboat, airboat, sailboat, or snowmobile. Additionally, no person shall use any motorized, hot-air, or unpowered aircraft or other device capable of flight or any earth orbiting imaging device to locate or assist in locating big game mammals beginning 48 hours before and continuing until 48 hours after any big game hunting season in the same area. No person shall use at any time or place, without Department approval, any computer, telemetry device or other equipment to locate a big game mammal to which a tracking device is attached.” (California Code of Regulations Title 14, section 251).
Q: After abalone diving in Mendocino last weekend, I didn’t realize until too late that when I tagged my abalone I recorded my abalone catch incorrectly on my abalone report card. I recorded them out of order in the wrong column, then used the corresponding wrong tags. This meant I skipped three of the lower numbered tags. The tags are still on the report card, and the corresponding recording fields on the report card are still empty. Can I go back and use those missed tags for my next trip?
Atsu I.
A: No, the law requires that “Tags shall be used in sequential order, and shall not be removed from the report card until immediately prior to affixing to an abalone. Any tags detached from the report card and not affixed to an abalone shall be considered used and therefore invalid” (CCR Title 14, section 29.16(b)(4)). You are also required to write “Void” on the abalone report card in the spaces you skipped and dispose of the three corresponding tags. This is because the law also says, “…(5) No person shall possess any used or otherwise invalid abalone tags not attached to an abalone shell.”
Q: Our club would like to hold a halibut derby in San Francisco Bay, and we need information on permits. When and where are they needed and what are the requirements? Do we need a permit for a halibut derby in the bay or are permits only needed for bass fishing?
Mark S.
A: Permits are not required for saltwater fishing contests. Waters of the Pacific Ocean include all of San Francisco and San Pablo Bays west of the Carquinez Bridge (CCR Title 14, section 27.00). As long as all fishing is done in waters west of the Carquinez Bridge, you will not need a fishing contest permit.
Permits are required for various fishing contests in freshwater. For information on the requirements when holding fishing contests in inland waters, how to obtain contest permits and permit application forms, please visit our fishing contests, tournaments and derbies website.
Q: As an avid fisherman on a private vessel at a slip, I often take friends out hoop netting or fishing. Often, these friends are perfectly happy to operate my boat while I tend the fishing line(s) or hoop nets. Do these companions need to have a fishing license as long as we follow the bag limits and limits on nets and lines in the water for a single fisherman? It is often a spur-of-the-moment decision to go out, and sending my guest off to get a license for one or two hours of fishing is inconvenient at best.
Jack Z.
A: It is legal to take non-licensed passengers to observe while you are fishing or hoop netting as long they do not engage in any sport fishing activities. It is only in the commercial fishing industry where those who assist with the boat handling and other tasks need their own commercial fishing license.
Carrie Wilson, marine environmental scientist with the Department of Fish and Wildlife: CalOutdoors@wildlife.ca.gov.
This story was originally published August 30, 2016 at 4:41 PM with the headline "Wilson on Outdoors: Tracking wounded game with an electronic device?."