In France and Belgium it is like in Australia. +1 with bowlofpetunias
:cheerleader::daisy::love4:

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In Florida you can spearfish lionfish even on a rebreather.
Kill the little bastards!
I hate it when people paint an entire group with the same sweeping statements.![]()
Inspired by an attempted hijack of another thread, I thought it could be interesting to learn about regional differences in what's accepted or not, and what's legal or not, in different corners of the world.
I can start. Norway
- Harvesting is generally accepted among the public, and I don't think there are legal limits on amounts. Scallop harvesting is very popular, and many scuba divers carry a catch bag "just in case"
- Spearfishing is legal in salt water and generally accepted. Not legal in fresh water.
- Spearguns are normally not used by scuba divers, but popular among freedivers.
- The pole spear is the UW hunting tool chosen by scuba divers; I've never met a scuba diver with a speargun. I'm pretty convinced that this is for safety reasons. Even if I'm pretty comfortable with guns in general if they're handled correctly, I don't think I'd be comfortable buddying up with a guy carrying a speargun. Mental bandwidth and all that.
- Spearguns must, AFAIK, be powered by rubber bands or pressurised air; powerheads are illegal
Not true
I was shocked at the number of Lobster in Florida and California. IMHO the most important thing is to know the regulations for the area. I am not against hunting but I am sure against Illegal hunting!
My personal experience has been that catch limits, methods, times and locations are set after evaluation of the ecosystem. Humans may just be another predator in the ecosystem to keep population density balanced and healthy. That only works when the appropriate management strategies are in place.
That means you better not be spearing or trying to take a lionfish here where they belong! I will cheer you on and enjoy chowing down on the results in the waters where they don't belong!
:doh: I will confess I'd rather buddy with a photographer than someone spearing but seriously I recognize that as a personal bias. I have no objection to either if they are still good buddies. There are good Spearo buddies and good Photographer buddies. I hate it when people paint an entire group with the same sweeping statements.![]()
- The pole spear is the UW hunting tool chosen by scuba divers; I've never met a scuba diver with a speargun. I'm pretty convinced that this is for safety reasons. Even if I'm pretty comfortable with guns in general if they're handled correctly, I don't think I'd be comfortable buddying up with a guy carrying a speargun. Mental bandwidth and all that.
dumpsterDiver;7539490:
A couple years ago when I inquired with a spearing operator I was told scuba was illegal. Please show me a link that says otherwise so I can plan a trip with friends.
---------- Post added November 1st, 2015 at 10:13 AM ----------
Absolutely ridiculous statement as I wasn't trying to paint an entire group just giving my opinion. I guess a better statement would be that there are fantastic spearo buddies and fantastic photographer buddies, they are just better buddies when they aren't spearing or taking pictures. As I said before they are very task oriented when performing these activities and aren't so focused on being a "traditional" dive buddy.
---------- Post added November 1st, 2015 at 10:16 AM ----------
This is a sweeping statement. Try and hunt some large open water or rig fish with a pole spear. You object to my statement but then say you wouldn't be comfortable buddying up with a spearo with a gun due to mental bandwith? Isn't this repeating my statement but in a different way?