Alaskan Sea-Duction
Guru
- Joined
- Jul 6, 2012
- Messages
- 8,084
- Location
- USA
- Vessel Name
- Alaskan Sea-Duction
- Vessel Make
- 1988 M/Y Camargue YachtFisher
Alaska Halibut Fishing Regulations
For those traveling to Alaska and wanting to do some halibut fishing from your boat, there are important rules you should know. When you get your Alaska fishing license and the fishing regulations booklet you won't see much about halibut. That is because halibut are federally regulated, not the state. NOAA publishes the rules and unfortunately they are not kind to cruisers that live aboard and want to eat halibut they catch.
I stopped by the NOAA office in Sitka today and talked to a law enforcement officer about the current rules. The rules changed over the winter. When you catch a halibut you can cut four fillets and freeze them. New this year, you are allowed to eat one of the fillets but must keep the other three intact. If you catch another halibut, you can cut four fillets but you cannot eat any of it. You are only allowed to have one missing fillet on board. The only way to use the frozen halibut is to transfer it to land.
NOAA will be out there boarding boats this summer. In previous years we've had friends who were boarded, had their halibut confiscated and received a warning letter.
Good luck.
For those traveling to Alaska and wanting to do some halibut fishing from your boat, there are important rules you should know. When you get your Alaska fishing license and the fishing regulations booklet you won't see much about halibut. That is because halibut are federally regulated, not the state. NOAA publishes the rules and unfortunately they are not kind to cruisers that live aboard and want to eat halibut they catch.
I stopped by the NOAA office in Sitka today and talked to a law enforcement officer about the current rules. The rules changed over the winter. When you catch a halibut you can cut four fillets and freeze them. New this year, you are allowed to eat one of the fillets but must keep the other three intact. If you catch another halibut, you can cut four fillets but you cannot eat any of it. You are only allowed to have one missing fillet on board. The only way to use the frozen halibut is to transfer it to land.
NOAA will be out there boarding boats this summer. In previous years we've had friends who were boarded, had their halibut confiscated and received a warning letter.
Good luck.