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Keys Gearing Up For Lobster Mini-Season

The spiny lobster carapace must be at least 3 inches long to be legal to harvest.
Fish & Wildlife Conservation Commission
The spiny lobster carapace must be at least 3 inches long to be legal to harvest.

By late last week, people and boats were already trickling in to the Florida Keys for the lobster sport mini-season.

They were getting ready for the two-day event, taking place Wednesday and Thursday,  when recreational divers get a jump on catching the tasty crustaceans. The regular lobster season, when commercial fishermen can start bringing in their catch, starts Aug. 6.

The state Fish & Wildlife Conservation Commission estimates more than 59,000 people take part in the mini-season — more than half of them in the Florida Keys. Because of that, and because the rules are tougher in the Keys than anywhere else, law enforcement will be busy.

That includes FWC, as well as officers from the Monroe County Sheriff's Office. They'll be on boats and on some borrowed Wave Runners, making sure people are obeying size and catch limits, said Deputy Becky Herrin. And the enforcement doesn't end at the high tide line.

"In addition to that, we're going to have officers — both road patrol and some of our detectives — out checking boat ramps to make sure people are complying there as well," she said.

Herrin said visitors to the Keys should be especially careful this year to lock up their gear overnight. The Keys have recently seen a rash of marine equipment thefts.

"You leave your electronic equipment on your boat or your fishing rods and your dive equipment and you might come out in the morning and find that it's gone," Herrin said.

The Keys have special rules for mini-season. While the statewide catch limit is 12 per person per day, in Monroe County and Biscayne National Park, it's six. No harvesting is allowed in Pennekamp State Park during mini-season. And some local areas of the Keys have special rules.

You can find information about the lobster rules here, with extra information about the Keys here.

One rule that's new this year and applies everywhere: If you catch 10 lionfish, you get to take home an extra lobster.

Copyright 2020 WLRN 91.3 FM. To see more, visit WLRN 91.3 FM.

Nancy Klingener covers the Florida Keys for WLRN. Since moving to South Florida in 1989, she has worked for the Miami Herald, Solares Hill newspaper and the Monroe County Public Library.