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Monday 27 August 2012

Ajax lands for the Fish Festival


Saturday morning:  Heading out Through the Gaps.......
 and the forecast is for a scuffly night......
 first end away.......
 first tier away......
 shooting at speed.....
 command control......
 anchor aboard.....
 info sent......
 company in the morning......
 the Belem underway......
 and heading south......
 breakfast time....
 first tier aboard.....
 gutting and washing, fish in slush ice.....
 more hake.......
 fish going down to the fishroom.....
 back to sea for the porbeagle.......
 Ed over-ending.....
 gannet patrol......
 Matt on the hauler.....
 Chris watching for fish.....
tea up and bound for Newlyn to land at the Fish Festival.

Friday 24 August 2012

French and English fishermen en accord!

In the Central Channel area, as a result of dialogue between potters working the resource and fishing areas with trawlers. 

This coexistence of business is managed by the Central Conference Channel for fishermen Bretons, Normans, English and Belgians.

The following cards illustrate updated versions of these agreements.


Thursday 23 August 2012

Maiden voyage for the crabber, Emma Louise


After spending a few hours on sea trials yesterday.......


The first of the Emma Louise's 1700 poys comes aboard safely into the the hands of the boat's owner Mike, glad to be back at sea on his latest boat to join the fleet......

 just to make sure that the deck layout and safe working practice is in place for skipper Mario and his crew.


Morning has broken.......

 Deserted Penzance high street..... 
 on watch.......
 only a few days to go to the Fish Festival.......
 sequel to the Cantebury Tales, Cornish edition.......
 plenty of 'addock this morning.......
 and a few brill too with several inshore boats providing the best quality fish.......
 a smattering of Cornish Sardines.......
 first light........
 and away goes the Dawn Treader........
 for a few minutes the harbour glowed........
 as last of the Gary M heads for the gaps........
 party on the quay.......
 it's a sign........
 king bass heads off into the sunrise.........
 as the big scalloper Jacoba enters the gaps........
 and puts ashore a partial trip.........
 to a waiting Dutch lorry........
 making for the market........
 bound in from the Scillies, the St Mary's lifeboat........
strong onshore winds last week have left the beaches in the Bay covered in weed, shame the local farmers can't come and pick up this superb fertiliser - like they do on Swanage beach - keeps everybody happy..

Wednesday 22 August 2012

Some of the Newlyn fleet ready for the scrapyard

Delayed for the first time in years owing to inclement weather.......
Matt Harrop, certificated deckhand looking for work - give the man a call if you are short handed....
brilliant brill winging their way to a plate near you......
meaty mackerel buried ice......
landing day for the line boat, Sea Spray.......
it takes a fair few morkis to bait all those Newlyn potters pots every day.......
sparkling sun.......
don't ask me, says Mr T.......
with her numbers painted out their is only one place this boat is headed for, the scrapyard......
not so with the fleet's flagship........
heading out to sea.......
another one of Stevenson's old faithfuls ready to be towed away.......
and another......
giving it a good tug........
next in line for the scrapyard, at this rate the artists will be stuck for attractive old wrecks to paint!.......
the rock 'n rolling skipper.......
should be the Emma's first trip today, that was a long two weeks Mario........
the Ajax, formerly known as AH32 has now been re-registered with Truro as her home port......
the 50s are now back in vogue it seems.......
local swan being harried by a young gull.......
gorgeous oil ready for auction at WH Lane's forthcoming picture sale.

ANNUAL BLESSING OF THE FLEET


ANNUAL BLESSING OF THE FLEET 

An invitation is extended to all Fishermen, their families and friends and all visitors to join in this community Service.
“It is not fish you are buying but men’s lives” 
J W Donald Mission Secretary 1953

This important event in the calendar of Newlyn Fishermen is held every year to commend the men and boats of our fishing fleet to the care and protection of God.

The service will take place in the LORRY PARK of NEWLYN HARBOUR on SUNDAY 26th AUGUST 2012, commencing at 7.00 p.m.

The community singing will be supported by the highly regarded BUCCAS FOUR and led by the PENZANCE SILVER BAND

On completion of this short service refreshments will be provided at Newlyn Fishermen’s Mission.
ALL ARE WELCOME

Monday 20 August 2012

Day Trip for Journalists

It's not difficult to understand the appeal for journalists on a day trip to the coast from London, of the story that the small -scale fishing fleet has been robbed of its birthright by "quota barons". 

All but 4% of the UK's quotas are held by producer organisations - collectives of fishermen of which most of the larger class of vessel and some of the smaller boats are members. And this, it is claimed, is why some under-10m fishermen in the South east face problems of quota shortage at some times of the year. It's a clear, simple, narrative that has heroes and villains. David and Goliath. And it’s essentially untrue. 

 The notion that the problems in ports like Hastings lies with the commoditisation of fishing rights in the form of tradable quotas and that this has led to the dispossession of small-scale fishermen by powerful economic interests who are largely anonymous, makes arresting copy but is just not the case. The Guardian is the latest visitor to Hastings (scenic and a convenient day trip from London) and to come away with a garbled tale of dispossession and malevolent forces within the industry and Government. 

But no one in Hastings apparently told the Guardian journalist John Harris that the fundamental quota problem in Hastings lies with cod, nor the fact that the essential issue lies with the UK's share of the Eastern Channel cod quota, which is less than 10% - the balance going mainly to France. Nor has he been told that everybody in the Channel, big boat or small boat, has a problem of not enough cod quota for exactly the same reason. This is not a problem that can be changed by tinkering with the UK’s domestic management system. And where he got the idea that the under-10m fleet in Hastings is deprived of monkfish and hake quota, which they don't even catch, goodness knows. 



Setting aside the problem of Eastern Channel cod, most under-10 metre vessels don't catch anything close to their monthly quota limits most of the time. Yes, that's correct. Most of the small scale fleets don't catch their quota allocations. Partly that's because they are targeting stocks like crab, lobster and bass for which no quotas are set. But that fact does put the 4% statistic into some kind of relevant context. 

That is not to deny that some under-10s are severely constrained on some quotas for some of the time. And this is a particular problem in areas like the Thames estuary where the fleets have very limited access to non-quota species. No one believes more strongly than the NFFO that ports like Hastings should retain a strong vibrant inshore fleet. But that is not going to be achieved through misrepresentations of the causes of the problems in Hastings and the Thames ports. 

There are solutions to the problems facing ports like Hastings but they will only come into place by addressing the real underlying issues that have been brought to the fore by Buyers and Sellers registration in 2007, (a move which the Guardian should note effectively ended large scale misreporting of catches in the UK). 

 One of the realities that have led to pressures on parts of the small scale fleets in the South east has been the expansion of the catching capacity of the under-10 metre fleet through the arrival of the super-under 10s. These vessels of 9.5 metres and abovecan out-fish many larger vessels and now catch around 70% of the under-10m pool quotas despite amounting to only 14% of the fleet. A solution that leaves the super-under-10s out of the equation will not be a solution at all. It is also a fact that fragmented and geographically dispersed, the small scale fleets lack of collective organisation and this has left the under-10s relatively disadvantaged in using their assets (unutilised quota) to secure quotas for the stocks that they do need, in the way that producer organisations do on a daily basis.

It is part of a journalist's job to simplify complex issues. But when simplification leads to serious distortion and misrepresentation journalists should be called to account. And those in the industry peddling those distortions or misconceptions should ask themselves what they are likely to achieve by it when the narrative falls to bits under the slightest scrutiny.

Fishy response on social network:

@PecheFraiche @throughthegaps 140 characters simply not enough to express my thoughts on quota mismanagement!