Oregon seasons are less constrained than Washington’s with year around opportunities in all Oregon’s bays. There’s an ocean closure from October 16th– November 30th but outside that it’s wide open.
Anytime you’re fishing, crabbing, clamming or harvesting wildlife in the northwest be sure to check the regulations and double check to make sure you’re compliant. For example, you’ll need a shellfish license in either state to crab.
Crab can be caught from shore or boat. Generally, a boat gives you the best opportunity to rack up full limits. Oregon’s been pretty generous in that regard allowing 12 per person in all waters.
Maybe the most attractive feature of catching crab is how easy it is. Anybody can do it.
From a boat you’ll need some traps (up to 3 per person in Oregon), at least 50’ of leaded nylon rope, 2 buoys attached to the end of the rope and in Oregon those buoys need to be visibly marked (use an indelible pen) with your name and/or phone number or address and some kind of bait bag or cage. Whether you’re crabbing from the boat or the bank you’ll need a crab gauge to measure them. Ours’ have a small float on them…just in case they take a dive into the drink. A boat hook is always a good tool to have when you run to pick-up your traps.
There’s quite a bit of discussion on what constitutes the best bait. It’s really a matter of personal preference. I like chicken thighs, some use salmon carcasses, others shad or tuna and more recently there are canned options like Crustacean Sensation that fit neatly into plastic holders and save some of the mess associated with other baits.
Once the bait’s in the trap and you’re ready to begin tossing them into the briny depths, you’ll need to find a spot. 20’ to 30’ of water is ideal. In places like the Columbia, west of Hammond is best. Be sure to keep your traps out of the navigation channel. Generally, the closer you are to the ocean the better, so you’re well-advised to set your traps accordingly and not way up the bay.
Names like “Crab Harbor” (Tillamook Bay) are a sure tip-off of an area to try.
Timing’s everything. Most will target the last hour of the incoming tide, through the high slack (flood) and pull them when the tide starts to run out. Knowing where you are in the tide is essential. “Soft tides”, tides that have a minimal exchange between high and low tide, will allow you soak your traps longer or crab throughout the entire day while steep tides require you tend your traps carefully. Otherwise you may lose them or have them buried by the strong tidal currents.
The more you do it the better you’ll get at picking your spots but when you get the right timing the catches can be epic!
There’s an art to deploying your traps too.
The objective is to not get the trap’s buoy rope around your prop. You can easily assure this doesn’t happen by positioning your boat in whatever current or wind will carry you away from your traps. Throw the trap’s buoys from the bow, feed out the trap rope until it’s all out, then pitch the trap, all the while drifting away from the buoys as the rope lays out in front of your boat off the bow and nowhere near the transom where your prop resides.