Coastal Alabamians or visitors to the Mobile Bay area might've heard the Eastern Shore town city of Daphne called "Jubilee City."
That's a reference to a rare sea-life event known as a jubilee. It might be that in the entire United States, it occurs only in Mobile Bay. And Tokyo Bay is the only other place researchers know about that has jubilees.
It's something that may happen in Mobile Bay when you have an afternoon shower and wind out of the east. The oxygen level drops in the bay, causing at least the bottom-dwelling sea life to move out to the shoreline. The shallows can fill up with flounder and crabs and shrimp. In a strong enough event, everything will move near the shore.
Floundering can be a lot less challenging during a jubilee.
They usually last maybe a few hours, but AL.com's John Sharp reports that there was one that lasted a couple of days around Father's Day.
A lot of people showed up to take advantage, and a number of them were arrested as well.
Department of Conservation and Natural Resources Commissioner Chris Blankenship said it drew people who aren't usual bay anglers, and that some people seem to think it's a free-fish event. There were people ticketed for being over the limit on flounder and for having undersized fish. There was even a disorderly conduct arrest made when a man allegedly started yelling obscenities at Marine Resource Officers.
You can't take some people anywhere.
Blankenship said the flounder population took a dive six years ago and regulators have been working hard to rebuild it. His agency wants folks to know that if a jubilee happens, regulations and limits don't go out the window, and don't assume it's a fish kill going on and that you're doing the bay a favor by filling up your Yeti.