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Tuesday 2 April 2013

First market after the Easter break, busy enough.


Early one morning just as the sun was rising...


just as the waves crashed on the prom...


auction time...


still plenty of aged cod about...




and a good smattering of ray on the ground...


bright eyed gurnards cut a dash...



even the cuttles are still thick on the ground...



more rays...



amidst the yellow wellies...



and mighty megs...


on comes the results of net mending Freddie's labours...



a bin at a time...


classy ocaen going cat is an ealry sailing season visitor...


along with this hefty Dorset based yacht


that's a serious bow the Emma sports...


twin rigger Crystal Sea II...


from green to grey to white...


back tomorow then!

Fish provenance - the Irish are on the ball!



Picture this: you are out shopping in the company of your smartphone or android, and you spot some tempting tuna, or cod or hake. The price looks good, but you are an ethical Irish Times reader. So, naturally, you want to know more.


Thanks to a new project currently being developed by two State agencies, you should be able to use a phone or tablet app to scan the barcode, link in to relevant websites and find out where the fish was caught, how, by whom and when.

What’s more, the same links should even suggest some useful recipes, and give suitably impressive details on the sustainability of the stock.

The E-Locate project, as it is called, is a joint Bord Iascaigh Mhara (BIM)/Sea Fisheries Development Agency (SFPA) initiative which promises to give a 21st century level of traceability to the 21st century consumer.

Labelling regulations

Funded by the European Commission, it has been devised in response to yet more EU legislation on weighing, labelling and traceability of fish – a “positive approach” to something potentially onerous, in the words of BIM’s fisheries development managerMichael Keatinge.

It will have particular benefits for fish-lovers who are keen to buy catch caught by Irish boats in these waters.

“Irish fish” has been something of a misnomer since the State became a member of the EU, and signed up to shared waters under the Common Fisheries Policy (CFP).
Current labelling regulations make it almost impossible for the seafood industry to identify wild fish, caught in shared European waters, as distinctly Irish.

“North-east Atlantic” is about as close a location permitted on retail fish stalls for most species, except for farmed salmon which can be described by nationality.
It’s one of the reasons that the Responsible Irish Fish (RIF) label was initiated byFrank Fleming and fellow catchers four years ago.

Supported by both BIM and Bord Bia, the label guarantees that the fish is not undersized and has been caught in a sustainable way.

More than 100 Irish vessels and all four main fishing co-operatives have signed up to the RIF label, and it has resulted in a small increase in price for catches, Fleming says.

‘Five times the price’

However, some 75 per cent of seafood sold here is imported, due to restrictions on Irish whitefish quotas, while better prices abroad have resulted in some 75 per cent of catches here being shipped away.

“It’s a crazy situation, especially when we have second largest sea area in the EU,” Irish Fish Producers’ Organisation (IFPO) chief executive, Francis O’Donnell says.

“We have had to live with small quotas, but this is not translating into higher prices for the primary producer,” he says. “It’s very difficult to explain why some fresh fish is being sold for five times the price that was paid at point of landing.”

A spot check which the IFPO conducted last week found that monkfish which had fetched €4 a kilo on landing was retailing at €31 a kilo in a Cork supermarket.

Support your fishing communities in the UK - they need you now!



Pressure from environment has left every fishing port in the UK under with a sense of persecution and concerne for their very existence.

Now fishermen from aorund the coast are coming together making their voices heard.  Using the power of the web to share ideas and provide a platform from which to proclaim their cause the fishing communities of the UK are urging people to ask their fishmonger, "is it local?"

If you are a fishing boat, get some of these printed and put them on your fish for auction:




If you're a fishmonger, print these off for your fish display counter:



Saturday 30 March 2013

Friday 29 March 2013

Dutch Fishermen proud of MSC certification

Photo courtesy of Fishing News
AMSTERDAM - There is increasing MSC plaice on the market, and consumers should be encouraged more plaice on the table. Last Monday were in Amsterdam plaice and sole fishermen twinrig, flyshoot and outrigger put in the spotlight in front of the culinary press. In December earned the Cooperative Fisheries Organization (CVO) the MSC certificate. The counter stands at forty participating vessels. For MSC plaice are fishing season from 1 March to 15 December.

William Pike (on behalf of the SC 35 and SC 45) and skipper Simon Breed flyshooter SCH 65 Monday in Amsterdam were present to the MSC certificate to receive from the hands of Nathalie Steins MSC. "We have collectively more than two years on the certification work and now the result is there. That is something we can all be proud,'' said Pike. During the press conference presented Cees Kramer chef of Restaurant De Boet from Urk variation and cooking possibilities with plaice. 

To consumers to encourage more often plaice on the table starts the Fish Marketing Board in May an advertising campaign in the women's magazines and gives them a recipe from plaice.

Fish2Fork says eat those commercially fished dredged scallops

When celebrity chef Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall donned scuba diving gear for his recent Fish Fight broadcast and inspected the seabed where a scallop dredger had just fished, he declared in shocked tones that all that was left was “desert”. 

His coverage prompted ire among not just scallop fishermen but the wider fishing community, and provoked a host of vitriolic comments on websites such as The Real Fish Fight. But both the programme and the reaction from the fishing industry left unresolved the question of how sustainable dredged scallops are and how extensive the scallop dredging is. 

 On the face of it, scallop dredging is a destructive form of fishing that tears up the seabed and leaves little else able to thrive apart from the scallops themselves. Physically, the dredges have metal ‘teeth’ that tear into the seabed and rip up anything in their path as they are pulled by a boat. Such destructiveness is regarded by some chefs, scientists and environmental campaigners as an unacceptable price to pay for scallops, which in the UK are either king or queen scallops. 

 However, there are many other factors that also need to be taken into account, such as what sort of ground is being dredged. Storm and tide-tossed sands, for example, make a good habitat for scallops and the other creatures found there are adapted to disturbance. 

The Marine Conservation Society is currently reviewing its advice on scallops but in the absence of this guidance, Fish2fork believes that they can continue to be put on menus.

Thursday 28 March 2013

Latest animation seeks to explain the discard debacle





Every year in the EU, 1.7 million tonnes of fish are thrown back into the sea after being caught. This wasteful practice is widely criticised and negotiations between the Council and the European Parliament over the reform of the Common Fisheries Policy (CFP) are seeking to address the problem. This video explores the reasons for discards in the EU, their implications and the current efforts to end the practice.

This video can be viewed on the IIEA website:http://www.iiea.com/blogosphere/video...


It forms part of The Environment Nexus -- your digital ecosystem.

http://www.iiea.com/environmentnexus