Phil thanks for the expansion on your thought stream. I commend your sence of conservation for a species that by your description is pressured in your area. I understand your reluctance to become part of the element exerting pressure in it's recovery to levels you would like to see. Without looking at it deeply I can not comment into what activities are responsible before or currently leading to it's current state. I would venture to speculate that even if spearfishing represents a considerable amount of pressure it probably pales in comparison to what other uses (commercialization ie trapping etc) have or continue to have on the species. Your states DNR or other organization managing that resource are working on your behalf (the citizens of California) to manage it in ways that should bring you and all the highest level of utility. If not you should raise your concerns with the public and in turn with them (the dnr) to attain the same. On another point while we would all love to travel to exotic places to chase pelagics it may not be in the cards for us all. Sometimes the best anyone can do is save 2-3 days a month to get wet and we do what we can when we can. The person escaping from work a few hours ealy, the person saving his vacation time, the person on a shore dive and countless others I am sure have as much if not more passion for our pastime than the next guy. If one stays within both your legal limits and also your own limit of when you feel you have enough you can hold your head up high and be confident that something good has occured as a result of the persuit of your passion. The proof that the thread starter though of it along these lines is that they saw fit to share the experience with friends in a public forum. I say kudos to them and good luck to you and all in making spearfishing all you want it to be now and in the future.