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Monday 13 February 2012

Monday's market.

Just a smattering of mackerel on the market this morning.........
though the beamer WSS landed 4 boxes of bass, not the norm for the beam trawl!........
still good quantities of cuttles on the ground.......
which need to be kept away from these high quality flats like brill and turbot - cuttle ink is not easy to wash off!........
"action", shooting HD video with Canon kit - more and more small film crews who visit the market use DSLRs to shoot video - hard to beat the quality of lens' available.........
even at 1000 litres a day fishing over a big tide the economy of these eurocutter beamers is hard to beat with their high revving main engine going through 12-1 reduction gearboxes - comparable beamers with much older slow revving engines can burn as much as 3000 litres a day - that's a lot more fish to catch just to pay the fuel bill.........
the future's still orange for Ocean Fish.......
flowers and fruit, a reminder should the importance of the date tomorrow have escaped attention.......
still very wintry skies in the mornings but compared to the rest of the UK, Cornwall must seem like the tropics.....
out in the Bay the Anglian Earl, now painted green, is at anchor.

Sunday 12 February 2012

Floating crane Odin on the move north.

AIS tracks from the tug Wal and the jack-up crane Odin as they round Land's End from Falmouth.
The Odin's deck can take loads up to 900 tonnes and the deckhouse has accommodation for 40 people. She was built in 2004 and is owned by Hochtief Construction of Hamburg.The rig is being towed by the German tug Wal which was built in 1992 and owned by Bugsier.


She is used primarily in the construction and servicing of off-shore wind farms.

Saturday 11 February 2012

Newlyn netters take ice for the next tide.

Cast up on the beach.......
time for ice........
aboard the Silver Dawn.......
as the inshore rib heads off to a shout.......
three Dutch crewed flagged Belgian beamers have landed in Newlyn, but not on the market.......
tiers of nets ready to go aboard the CKS........
a few inmates let out for the day and a game of Euchre in the Mission.......
temporary railing after a car demolished the original.......
bolted to the narrow pavement........
showing the increase in height demanded by new regulations.......
similar to the replacement railings up by the Fishermen's Arms, sadly, not quite modelled on the original castings.

Warm poached ray wings with sunny and aromatic flavours of Morocco.

 Infuse a broth of water (2 pints) with seasoned white wine vinegar, a sliced onion, 2 celery stalks, garlic and bay leaf for 30 minutes........
 prepare a Moroccan spice mix ( a pinch of saffron infused in hot water, 2 toms, skinned and seeded, few crushed coriander seeds, pinch of cumin, small roasted red pepper [over a naked flame], red chili to taste, 2 garlic cloves, 5 fl oz of olly oil, i tbsp of lemon juice, 2 tsp of coriander and mint plus salt 'n pepper to taste) with 
 skin your wings - or better still, get your fishmonger to do it for you......
 poach (and turn) for around 10 minutes.......
recipe courtesy of Rick Stein's Coast to Coats p105. 

March 10th 2012 - this year's Painting Party on the Quay

Coming next month - a date for your diary!



After last year's inaugural painting party on the quay, Newlyn will once again host a similar event to celebrate English Tourism Week in Cornwall........
 this was the scene in the early hours of Sunday morning, reminiscent of times gone by.........
 and a visual feast for those who came armed with acrylic....... 
 or oils, like well known local Newlyn artist, Bernard Evans......
 or pencil and sketch pad........
the end result, luggers captured against the Old Quay.

Gig ashore!





08.54 Penlee ILB Launch, Rowing gig hard aground on Hogus Rocks six persons onboard.

Friday 10 February 2012

Worst fish restaurant? - Chef and fishmonger Mitch Tonks fights back!

Mitch Tonks cooking with Matt Dawson down the quay in Newlyn.

Here's the most recent post on Mitch Tonks' blog - highlighting some of the mis and dis-information that surrounds the sourcing and supply of sustainable fish in the UK and the potential downside of MSC accreditation - when the law of unintended consequences kicks in and muddies the water.

"Communication is Key: When I was first in the fish business I didn’t ever hear the word sustainability, now thanks to some of the great campaigning work that has been done it’s become a topic deeply rooted in our behaviour and thinking. For us in the industry we have access to good opinion and knowledge, but for the consumer, the ones who really matter, it’s a different story. The amount of confused messaging must be as damaging as it is guiding. Don’t eat this and don’t eat that then pick up another book or read another blog and it’s ok. The fact is that there is so much mixed messaging that I wouldn’t be surprised if consumers gave up on it and hoped that their retailer or restaurant had done all the work for them. 
Take the cod argument for example, a recent brilliant TV show that highlighted some of the poorer practices in commercial fishing also said categorically “Cod is of the menu “ – why ? Norway as an example produces over 700,000 tonnes of MSC approved fish, we’ve always imported more cod than we catch locally yet you would believe we’ve eaten it all from broad statements like that. And, whatever we may think, gurnard and dabs will not replace cod consumption. I am lucky to have spent time as a fishmonger and chef and have access to some great people across the industry and strongly believe that our policies in my business ate the right ones. But I recently discovered that in the new Fish 2 Fork guide that my restaurants along with another well know seafood chef were rated as one of the worst in country. 
How? Why? I contacted them and they told it was because I sold plaice & ray which are on the “red” list, if I took them off I could score higher. We take sustainability seriously in our business with MSC accreditation and other practices, I live in Brixham and talk it all day long with the guys out on the front line. The South West fisheries are know to be well managed and controlled, most of my fish is from there. When I look out my window and see the tiny fleet that makes up England’s biggest port it’s hard to imagine there are enough boats and days at sea to regress stocks, in fact the news about our fishery is positive down here. I did my research on plaice and challenged my poor rating with Fish 2 Fork. In the East Channel we know there is a discards problem associated with French fishermen. Unless tackled it will most certainly keep the stock under pressure. The science advice is that stock status is "unknown" because of lots of variables. However the signs are that the stock is rising and the fishing pressure is falling. The science says "do not increase catches and do something about discards”. 
In West Channel, the Brixham fishery, the picture is clearer and better. The science says there has been a dramatic cut in fishing pressure, mainly due to the Beam trawlers cutting pressure on sole. This has been under the long-term sole management plan. The biomass of plaice is skyward! We know there are migration uncertainties involving East Channel, but discards are known to be much lower in this fishery than in East. The beam trawlers in West Channel are still using the gear developed in the Project 50% Trials and are seeing great improvements in catch quality, much reduced discards rates and they are not catching the smaller end of the mature size-ranges. It's a good news story! If West Channel plaice was managed by single-area quotas we would have 33% to 45% increased quota for 2012, but the quota is combination of West and East channel, with the East being the far bigger portion. 
All in all, the picture is one of Brixham vessels doing their best to deliver more, within sustainable limits. The ray we buy from the market are not targeted species but bi-catch, it would seem wrong to not buy them when they are landed. I thought I would look at the top rated restaurants – what am I doing wrong? One that I looked at used 4 species of fish on it’s menu, 2 of them, gurnard and pollock, which are being hailed as the new species to eat have huge challenges, pollock caught on the South Coast is tighter controlled than ever and gurnard is data deficient and we are unable to form a true picture of the stocks – even I’m confused, let alone a consumer! 
The reasons our ratings are so low is that all of the Fish 2 Fork opinion comes from one source, the MCS (Marine Conservation Society) now I’m not saying they are wrong but I am saying that one body does not have all the answers and should not be dishing out blanket advice without balancing it with the other great work and opinions that are out there. Please please please let’s get the communication right and clear about all this so those ultimately eating seafood can make proper informed choices."

Mitch Tonks' blog can be seen here