Hi,
I'm heading to Bonaire soon and plan on hunting lion fish. Apparently now PADI says you need to be certified to hunt them, even tho I am a DiveMaster. If that's what I have to do that's what I'll do.
What I'm wondering is, what the lionfish population is like? And if anyone has some tips about this.
Thanks.
Hunting anything is a Bonaire restriction as it's a marine reserve. No spearguns, slings, poles, etc. That said, several operations offer a course resulting in authorization to rent the appropriate gear (ELF, shears, bag, gloves) and dispatch Lionfish. I think the course I took was $125 (PADI) and to rent the gear after was $35/day. Population varies from site to site, the less accessed sites more. When I have my camera in hand, there seem to be more. The larger ones tend to be deep, especially during the day. The big ones we found started around 80 feet. They are incredibly fast, the ELF is restrictively short and the fish tend to hide back in coral formations, overhangs, blind spots. Taken together, it is much harder to dispatch the buggers than it may appear. Move slowly, they see you coming and seem to sense the distance you require to sling the ELF. As soon as you are in striking distance, they flee. You won't get a second chance. Bring a critter spotter light, they blend well into surrounding coral. Swim slowly, shining light back into crevices. Approach slowly, with the ELF prepped at your side. Watch your depth and time. One in my class had an OOA on our second dive and he was our shallow diver. It requires 2 divers - the concept is diver 1 spears, puts fish on piece of dead coral, rock or bottom (or they swim off tips), diver 2 spears a second time to stabilize. Now fish is no longer spinning and flapping so a head and tail spear is optimal situation. One diver then holds both spears while the other uses the shears to cut just behind eyes, quickly and humanely dispatching. Of course the fins are still flapping around while you try to snip, the fish is still flapping, they are slippery, the shears don't cut fast or deep. Diver with snips opens catch bag and fish is placed within. My buddy is a well seasoned dispatcher of sealife and even he was amazed at their speed. They seem to vanish - one second they are all puffy fins akimbo and the next, almost as if you've stuck a pin in them, the fins collapse, they deflate their entire body and they are out of there. Good luck!