Neeves
Well-Known Member
Unusually, and not something you would know - totally irrelevant. On Tasmania's west coast, where we had a private cray fish licence, tides are 30cm. Around Sydney tides are 2m.20m of high water or low water?
However was not thinking of depth but distance. We laid our pot in 10m depth but on the shore line. It was very difficult to access, impossible in a commercial cray boat, and we accessed in the tender, with Josepheline anchored behind the little island we chose to lay the pot.
Quite a few years ago sailing past St Vaast we noticed lots of small lights. As we got close found out that they were lights on pot markers. I don't know whether it was a trial by the French as I now try to avoid night sailing.
I've also seen quite large pot buoys, some in deep water, being dragged under by the tide, so trying to keep them visible all the time, regardless of tide is a problem.
Our cray pot weighed 26kg and was a bit of a handful to retrieve - but it had to be heavy to be stable in the Southern Ocean
Jonathan

