I guess that'll give plenty of time for the Maine lobsters to make their way up here ...
I guess that'll give plenty of time for the Maine lobsters to make their way up here ...
-- "I'd like to be ... under the sea ... In an octopus' garden ... in the shade ..."
Here I am holding my 14.5lb lobster and my 11lb one, my friend Tinny is holding my 9lb one!
BTW he is 6'-8" tall and this was taken in 1975!
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Gave this one to my dad.
p.s. That's me and I'm 6'3"
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I take it the East Coast lobster with claws are not quite quick enough to get you with their claws?
A friend got nailed by a small crab and apparently small crabs can pinch quite hard, but that crabs claw pales in comparison to those lobster claws.
SMN Publisher
This is a west coast lobster, west coast of the UK
The bigger they are the slower they are, their claws slow them down. But strength wise they can break any bone in your hand. Clawless lobsters are known as Rock Lobsters, there's very few left as diver pick them up too easily.
For PSAI/SSI/SDI/TDI Diver Training or RHIB Charter in Cornwall visit - Atlantic Scuba
For PSAI/SSI/SDI/TDI Diver Training or RHIB Charter in Cornwall visit - Atlantic Scuba
It is all about location. The Maine Lobsters (clawed ones) are found in great numbers in the North Atlantic off the coast of the US. In the tropical waters off the south eastern coast of the US there are great numbers of Spiny Lobster and even Slipper Lobster. I can only tell you where I have seen them personally, I don't know about other parts of the world. I have never seen them in California, but I have only been diving there a few times. I did see a good number of them in Jamaica as well off Negril.