='"loading" + data:blog.mobileClass'>

Wednesday 11 April 2012

Another day in the Bay.....

 Give the man a shout if you are shorthanded......
 BELOW!........
 sail training ship TS Pelican at anchor off Battery Rocks......
 at anchor, the Fehn Calais registered in Barbados basks in mid-day Cornish sunshine......
 so that's why they're called waders........
 carefully does it.......
Mr Billy's, for those who enjoy fine tea penzance has a new watering hole just to compliment the 27 ale houses.

Surveying the sea bed with sonar south of the Scillies.


There gold in them thar seas! The treasure seeking Odyessey Explorer is currently working south of the Scillies. Unlike a trawler, her equipment does not travel on the bottom as she uses powerful sonar, magnetic field devices and an ROV to survey the seabed and then wreck sites.

Tuesday 10 April 2012

3100 to go to go!


Ride with the boys in spirit!

Three men from 771 Search and Rescue squadron, based out of Culdrose, Cornwall, are setting out to ride 3100 miles from Oceanside, San Diego to New York Cities, Times Square. We aim to complete the ride in 17 days following the RAAM (Race Across America) route through 12 states, 88 Counties, 350 communities and 170,000 feet of climbing. The team are attempting to raise £20,000 for charity along the way. The Little Harbour Children's Hospice, St Austell, the Cornwall Air Ambulance and the Royal Marines Charitable Trust Fund. 


We have been working hard raising money in supermarkets, shopping centres and even women's clothes shops! With concerts, children's parties, coffee mornings, auctions and much, much more planned! Donations are available via our 'donate now' tab. We will be offering corporate opportunities to any businesses who would like to support us and the charities


We have a partners page, where our sponsoring company logos and links will appear. Additionally, our team will wear clothing printed with their company logos, who choose to sponsor the event.

"It's not a factory out there!"


The EU's 'legalised' support for EU vessels fishing off the west coast of Africa debate continues. Guardian Environmental Editor witnessed this at first hand as the biggest boat in the fleet hauled a trawl with a code end full of fish. Once a rich natural resource for countries like Senegal, Sierra Leone and Guinea, the sea-fishing areas of west Africa have fallen prey to the world's largest and most modern fishing fleets. John Vidal boards the Green Peace ship Arctic Sunrise to investigate a problem that has serious implications for regional prosperity John Vidal's travel costs to Senegal were paid by Greenpeace. The NGO had no say over editorial content 

Extract from the Greenpeace web site:
"It seems the captain of Britain’s largest fishing boat isn’t partial to a spot of tea, despite a kind invitation from John Vidal, Environment Editor of the Guardian, as he radioed the vessel from our ship the Arctic Sunrise, off the coast of Mauritania. (See for yourself in John’s video, above.) But perhaps it was the topic of conversation that was less than palatable. This vessel is just one of many destructive European factory trawlers that our ship has encountered off West Africa in the last six weeks. It’s a classic example of how Europe’s most powerful fishing interests continue to abuse our oceans, at the expense of the local communities that rely on them. While the owner of the Cornelis Vrolijk claims its company doesn’t receive taxpayer subsidies for its operations and that it pays licence fees to Mauritania, we know the reality is rather different. The fleet of freezer trawlers that this vessel belongs to receives, for example, millions of Euros in fuel tax exemptions every year. On top of that, taxpayers pay 90 per cent of the fees for these vessels to access West African waters."

Busy post-Easter market thanks to passing gale.

 In for a wet star on the Mount this morning.......
 promenade breaker........ 
 morning moon on a big tide........
 fishing off the green.......
 most of the fleet are safe in the harbour.......
 signs of summer mackerel.......
 eyes down for a full house........
 sand sole........
 Dover sole.......
 Dorys don't come much bigger than this.......
 just a reminder.......
 quality to the fore........
 little wind after the blow yesterday........
 back in Newlyn, the Sea Spray makes her way back to a pontoon berth.......
 the NSA in safe hands at Helen Feiller Gallery
 and then it rained.......
 to let..........
 a lone angler trying his luck for bass at high water........
 along with the lone swan.......
a Gill Watkiss painting up for auction at Lanes.

Monday 9 April 2012

French trawler lost off Lorient.



The trawler Lorient Father Milo just sunk after collision with a Turkish freighter Lady Ozge, around 14 pm, 20 nautical miles (30 km) west of Belle-Ile (Morbihan). One of two fishermen was recovered by the tanker of 120m, carrying vegetable oil, but the second is missing. Significant research resources have been deployed in this sector of the Atlantic ocean to find the missing: the helicopter Dragon 56 of the Safety Car, the EC 225 helicopter of the Navy, with divers on board, the SNSM star of Belle-Ile and six fishing vessels. The circumstances of the collision are not yet known.

Down-time reading



While the location for this international symposium, a forum for scholars, fishery managers, fishing families, and others to explore the human dimensions of fishery systems and the growing need to include social science research in policy processes may have been thousands of miles away from Newlyn, many of the issues addressed are found in the UK. The symposium was a place for sharing what has been learned about the opportunities and constraints that fishing people in northern countries encounter in a time of significant environmental, social, and economic change. 


Diverse panels and presentations addressed the sources and effects of external impacts on fishing people and their communities. Papers for further investigation might include the following: p30, p42, p43, p48 and p85.