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Thursday 24 May 2012

Old School

Hide them razors! - Roger has seen it all!

Stranger things at sea

Yound Adam, next generation in the Curtiss dynasty takes a mooring rope from the legendary Joe Crowe aboard the Elisabeth Veronique as he pulls into a berth......
the boat is currently triple-rigging and targetting quality fish like brill, Dover, lemon and megrim sole.....
it seems that rigger boots are de rigeur abord her......
last trip they had the right foot, this trip the left from an old Hunter Bullseye boot......
just a sample of this weeks catch, it never ceases to amaze trawlermen just what appears in the cod ends........
suits you Sir!........
off up the slip goes the netter, Gary M........
as the Tranquility pulls into berth on the end of the new quay......
wear and tear on a beamer shoe, with one new plate fitted.......
after landing the inshore boat, Shiralee heads home......
so too the Scillonian III at just after 7pm........
there's a big match tonight when the Pirates take on London Welsh at the Mennaye Field ground.

Kathleen and May


One of the most significant of English historical ships, well, the Katheleen & May.......
and not just because she is the last three masted topsail schooner afloat.......
but because on seeing this ship, HRH the Duke of Edinburgh, finding her laid up and redundant in the River Torridge in the mid 60s then decided to start the maritime trust using her as their initial exhibit firstly in Plymouth, Sutton Harbour, and then for the latter years in St Katherine’s dock London - we owe him for this move - just like we have Prince Albert to thank for such iconic instituitions as the Great Exhibition and the V&A Museum - closer to home we now have the Cornish Maritime Trust that looks after the maritime history of a county where no one is more than 14 miles from the sea.........
the has been owned by Plant Hire Company's boss Steve Clarke since 1998.......
and as you walk on the deck of the boat and look about.......
you begin to appreciate the love, care and attention to detail that has been lavished both topsides......
and down below in the old hold......
when she was used mainly to haul coal in her early years........
the engine room sports an unusual hydraulic drive for her props.....
the helmsan's view for'ard.....
and from astern of the wheel........
the original cargo winches must have seem some serious sweat fall to the deck.......
as would the main sail winches as she was worked four-handed!........
so, looking at the size of her it would be a fool who picked a fight with one of the deckies aboard her!.........
view looking across the deck of the James RH - the Kathleen & May is on her way to London where she will be moored opposite the Queen during the jubilee celebrations on the Thames - no doubt she will give owner Steve Clarke a wave as she awarded him an OBE not so long ago!

Wednesday 23 May 2012

Busy market

Seems the guys weren't too impressed with the old guard.......
on a brand new plinth, the grader waits.......
end-to-end with fish........
seeing red......
looking into the future aboard the Clairvoyant.........
she's looking good......
more litter ready to be bagged.......
no AIS so no chance of identifying this tall ship coming in to the Bay to anchor.

Tuesday 22 May 2012

Brewing in Newlyn

Murky start to the day - it wasn't like that at 5am though.......
a good run of Dovers hit the market from the beamer Lisa Jacqueline......
though the price for hake was not so strong as word of big landings of the fish in Scotland went round the market.....
it's JD time of year for the inshore boats so Mr Nowell on the Imogen III will be pleased.....
the bass boys are having a tougher time of it though......
still reeling from the shock of seeing the pollock quota slashed from 10 tonnes to 5 tonnes down to a crazy 1 tonne in a short space of time, under 10m boats like the Sea Spray (rigged to hand line pollock) have been forced to fork out hard cash and buy in quota just to let them carry on fishing - at the very time of year when they would normally be ensuring enough to cover them for the slack winter months - with the MMO upping the quota to a measly 2.25 tonnes these small boats will be looking for a little more consistency in quota management in the near future - though it's hard to see how such small cuts have any real impact on stocks in the grand scheme of things.........
and here are a few of those line caught pollock - these fish were being touted by many as the new cod not so long a ago and as a result the increased fishing effort has resulted in the erratic quota management decisions referred to above.......
there's still a weak showing of mackerel in the area which means these guys will make good money.....
the lights are on on the new fish grader, but no sign of it being used just yet.......
"where do you want it guv?"........
one of the apartments in the historic Pilchard Works is on the market, a chance to buy into a piece of Newlyn history......
alchemy at M and R's crab works.......
star buys for the day.......
food for people on the go at Stable Hobba industrial Estate in Newlyn.