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Tuesday 16 April 2013

£1000 reward ! - Keep an eye on your gear !

Fishing gear theft is becoming increasingly widespread and thieves appear to be targeting gear carefully, possibly to order rather than on spec, with small boat fishermen increasingly becoming victims of thieves.

Ex-Fishing News hack, Phil Lockley picking crab from his pots in Falmouth Bay.


Phil Lockley, who fishes from the Helford River, and a familiar name to Fishing News readers, said that six new bass nets were stolen from his pontoon on the river.

“This was two tiers of three nets of single mono netting, rigged on white float rope with a yellow fleck and braided white lead rope with a blue fleck, all brand new from South East Netting,” he said.
“Small boat fishing is hard work as it is,” he said. “But then someone kicks 600 quid out of what you’ve made. Cameron Henry on the John Peter II came out of it worse, as he had fifteen similar nets stolen, plus fifty crab pots and fifty prawn pots. These are all pots that his father made, so they are clearly identifiable,” he said, adding that it seems this gear has been stolen to order rather than by opportunists, as the thieves had to cross two fields with a lorry to reach it.




“Nothing has been seen so far and the police are taking this seriously,” he said, adding that the theft of outboards along the river also indicates theft to order, with specific brands targeted at different times.
“Chandlers can recommend anti-theft devices for outboards, as these are particularly vulnerable and attractive to thieves,” said Ben Gardiner at Devon and Cornwall police.

“There are a range of devices on sale that will make it much more difficult to take an engine, and no measures make an easy target. There are even tracking devices for boats on the market, but even cheaper measures are effective in mitigating against crime, organised or opportunistic.”

He told Fishing News that anyone aware on a crime in progress should call 999, or should call the 101 non-emergency number to report a crime or speak to a neighbourhood officer about marine crime.
Retiring fisherman Charley Reading told Fishing News that after selling his boat a few weeks ago, he found that 75 distinctive cuttlefish traps had been stolen sometime between 7th and 14th March from Portmouth’s Camber Docks.

“My boat hadn’t been very active since the end of last year, and it seems that someone noticed. I had already lost a pallet of 10mm leaded backrope and three oyster dredges that were taken from the boat,” he said.



The cuttlefish traps are ones he made himself using plastic-coated AquaMesh from GT Products, making them particularly distinctive; some are square and black, others round and either black or white – and he had already sold them along with other gear.

“They all have bottoms roped in with second-hand 14mm pot rope. These traps are my own design, so they are very recognisable,” he said, adding that he feels it unlikely that these pots have been stolen to be sold on and it is more likely that a rogue fisherman somewhere on the south coast is gearing up for the imminent cuttlefish season.




“The traps were taken from a locked compound where they were stacked eight high. They had planned this pretty well as they would have needed a big lorry or several trips with a large van to move them, and I guess that there must have been at least three people to climb into the compound and pass the traps over the wall.”


Cameron's stolen pots 
Falmouth fisherman Cameron Henry had fifteen nets, fifty prawn pots and and fifty of these distinctive crab pots stolen from his store in a story that echoes others being heard along the south coast of England as gear thieves target small boat fishermen


Anyone noticing cuttle traps that could fit the bill are asked to contact the police quoting crime number: 44130099874.

There is a £1000 reward for the full set of 75 traps, or a partial reward if some are recovered.


100 years old! Fishing News tells it as it is!


On sale at your local newsagents now!

Monday 15 April 2013

An EU-blogger on board Greenpeace’s Arctic Sunrise

It has taken a couple of months to get everything in order, but I am now very happy to be able to announce my most unlikely, and most exciting, project to date as a blogger about EU affairs – I am going on board the Greenpeace boat Arctic Sunrise, as part of the boat’s ‘Support Sustainable Fishermen‘ tour around European waters.

I’ll be joining the boat on 27th May in St Malo, and will be sailing across the channel to Fowey, disembarking on 30th May. I’m happy to be on the ship in French waters as I speak French and will be using that to try to better understand the views of local fishermen.

The aim of the project is to support sustainable fishing, in the context of the reforms of the EU’s Common Fisheries Policy. I’ll be talking to and interviewing fishermen, trying to work out how sustainable fishing could work in European waters, and live blogging and tweeting my experiences. I will also be writing a few longer pieces.

Costs of getting myself to and from the ship, and any other additional costs, I am financing out of my own pocket. Accommodation on board is provided by Greenpeace.

This will be the first of many blog entries about the voyage!It has taken a couple of months to get everything in order, but I am now very happy to be able to announce my most unlikely, and most exciting, project to date as a blogger about EU affairs – I am going on board the Greenpeace boat Arctic Sunrise, as part of the boat’s ‘Support Sustainable Fishermen‘ tour around European waters.

I’ll be joining the boat on 27th May in St Malo, and will be sailing across the channel to Fowey, disembarking on 30th May. I’m happy to be on the ship in French waters as I speak French and will be using that to try to better understand the views of local fishermen.

The aim of the project is to support sustainable fishing, in the context of the reforms of the EU’s Common Fisheries Policy. I’ll be talking to and interviewing fishermen, trying to work out how sustainable fishing could work in European waters, and live blogging and tweeting my experiences. I will also be writing a few longer pieces.

Costs of getting myself to and from the ship, and any other additional costs, I am financing out of my own pocket. Accommodation on board is provided by Greenpeace.

This will be the first of many blog entries about the voyage!

Letter from 217 civil groups to EU Fisheries Ministers

This the the scale of the non-fishing , lobby in Europe - all these organisations with an increasingly loud and more widely heard voice thanks to programme's like HFW Fish Fight.


Letter from 217 civil groups to EU Fisheries Ministers

To EU Fisheries Minister cc.: Environment Ministers

Brussels, April 9, 2013

Dear Fisheries Ministers,

As negotiations on the reform of the Common Fisheries Policy (CFP) are entering the final and decisive stage we, the undersigned organisations, are writing to you to urge you to support the European Parliament’s aim to restore fish stocks by 2020 and end overfishing by 2015.

Thirty years of EU fisheries management under the CFP have resulted in serious depletion of fish populations, degradation of ecosystems, and damage to marine species and their habitats. Forty-seven percent of the assessed stocks in the Atlantic and 80 percent in the Mediterranean are overfished, along with five out of seven fish stocks in the Baltic.(1) It is estimated that by allowing overfishing of EU stocks, governments are tacitly consenting to waste more than €3 billion of potential landing value every year, which could support more than 100,000 additional jobs.(2)

The EU is legally bound to restore fish populations to sustainable levels under the 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS, Articles 61.3 and 119.1(a)). It also committed in 2002 to do so “where possible not later than 2015” (Article 31(a) of the Johannesburg Plan of Implementation of the World Summit on Sustainable Development). Your head of government recently agreed to intensify not slacken efforts to achieve this goal at the Rio+20 Summit and to do the utmost to protect marine biodiversity.

You will be aware that recently, the European Parliament agreed by 502 votes to 137 to include a target to end overfishing by 2015 with a view to recovering and maintaining European fish stocks above levels that can produce the maximum sustainable yield by 2020. Without such an ambitious yet achievable objective for the recovery of fish stocks the CFP is a policy without purpose. We deeply deplore that Council rejected such a goal in its General Approach.

However, the upcoming negotiations between Council and Parliament provide a perfect opportunity for you to show personal leadership and do all in your power to ensure that Council now endorses the Parliament’s approach. Similar stock recovery targets in Australia, New Zealand, Norway, Russia and the USA have resulted in a consistently improved state of fish stocks. We urge you to now build on their experiences and ensure the CFP becomes an effective tool for sound fisheries management, for the restoration of our common heritage, and for providing a sustainable and profitable future for fisheries dependent communities.

Yours sincerely,

Südwind

11.11.11.

Natuurpunt

Děti Země

Česká společnost ornitologická

Koalice pro řeky

Hnutí Duha

Nireas Marine Reasearch

BirdLife Cyprus

People Uniting and Generating Aid for Development (PUGAD)

Danish Society for a Living Sea

Danmarks Naturfredningsforening

C-CONDEM Ecuador

Estonian Sportfishing Federation (ESFF)

Eesti Ornitoloogiaühing

BirdLife Finland

Finnish Association for Nature Conservation

Bloom

SOS Grand Bleu

Centre d'Etudes pour le Développement d'une Pisciculture Autonome (CEDEPA)

Réseau Cétacés

Collectif Bar Européen

Noé Conservation

Ailerons

Association A l'écoute de l'Océan (AALÉCO)

Ligue pour la Protection des Oiseaux (LPO)

Souffleurs d'écume

Observatoire des Requins de Polynésie

Tendua

Association pour la Protection des Animaux Sauvages (ASPAS)

Mediterranean Shark Research Group

France Nature Environnement

Institut Océanographique Paul Ricard

Shark Angels France

Surfrider Foundation Europe

Expédition M.E.D (Méditerranée En Danger)

Gesellschaft zur Rettung der Delphine

Deepwave

Naturschutzbund Deutschland e.V. (NABU)

MEER e.V.

Sharkproject Germany e.V.

Slow Food Germany Brot für die Welt Pro Wildlife Forum Ökologisch-Soziale Marktwirtschaft e.V. (FÖS) EuroNatur Reef Check Fair Oceans Bund für Umwelt und Naturschutz Deutschland e. V. (BUND) Gesellschaft zum Schutz der Meeressäugetiere e.V. (GSM) Deutsche Umwelthilfe (DUH)

Archipelagos Institute of Marine Conservation

Professional Fisheries Association of Fourni Korseon “O Glaros”

CleanUp Greece

Samos Divers

Development Center of Oinousses- Aegean

Aegean Network of Ecological Associations

Scientific Association of Young Lawyers

ARCHELON

Mediterranean Association to Save the Sea Turtles (MEDASSET)

Iceland Nature Conservation Association (INCA)

OCEAN2012

Green Budget Europe (GBE)

Greenpeace

BirdLife Europe

Oceana

The Pew Charitable Trusts

Coalition Clean Baltic

Seas at Risk

The Fisheries Secretariat

Coalition for Fair Fisheries Agreements

ClientEarth

Youth and Environment Europe (YEE)

Black Sea NGO Network

Slow Food



Fish2fork

Sea Shepherd Conservation Society

FishFight

BirdWatch Ireland

National SEA LIFE Centre Bray

Woodcock Smokery

Galway Atlantaquaria

Irish Wildlife Trust

Irish Seal Sanctuary

Liffey Valley Park Alliance

Voice of Irish Concern For The Environment

HD Interactive Publishing

An Taisce (The National Trust for Ireland)

Coastwatch Europe

North West Traditional Fishermen

MedSharks

OCEANUS

Posidonia MED

Tethys Research Institute

LIPU-BirdLife Italy

5 Terre Academy

Legambiente Onlus

Federazione Italiana Pesca In Apnea (FIPIA)

Fondazione Cetacea

Gruppo Ricercatori Italini sugli Squali razze e chimere (GRIS)

Marevivo

Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn

Centro Turistico Studentesco e Giovanile (CTS)

Green Life

The Bottlenose Dolphin Research Institute BDRI

Latvian Anglers Association

Lithuanian Fund for Nature

Lietuvos Ornitologų Draugija

Fish4tomorrow



Nature Trust

BirdLife Malta

Greenhouse Malta

Sharklab-Malta

Sharkman's World Organization

Norwegian Society for Conservation of Nature

Sociedade Portuguese para o Estudo das Aves (SPEA)

PONG-Pesca

SCIAENA (Associação de Ciências Marinhas e Cooperação)

Observatório do Mar dos Açores (OMA)

Quercus

Grupo de Estudos de Ordenamento do Território e Ambiente (GEOTA)

Liga para a Protecção da Natureza (LPN)

Associação Portuguesa para o Estudo e Conservação dos Elasmobrânquios (APECE)

Naturalists' Club

Fundacja Sprzątanie Świata-Polska

Fundacja Nasza Ziemia

Ogólnopolskie Towarzystwo Ochrony Ptaków

Polish Ecological Club (Polski Klub Ekologiczny Zarząd Główny)

Towarzystwo Przyjaciół Rzeki Łeby

Klub Gaja

Fundacja Z Naszej Strony

Fundacja Zielony Instytut

EKO-UNIA

Towarzystwo Przyjaciół Rzek Iny i Gowienicy

Asociatia pentru dezvoltare durabila „Prut-Dunare” Galati

Centrul Gifted Education

OZ TATRY

SOS/BirdLife Slovakia

CEPTA

Živá Planeta

CEEV Živica

Eco Vitae

Ecologistas en Acción

Agrupació per a la Protecció del Medi Ambient (APMA)

Asociación de Amigos de los Humedales del Sur de Alicante (AHSA)

Associació de Naturalistes de Girona

Submon

Coordinadora per a la Salvaguarda del Montseny

Fundació ENT

GEN-GOB Eivissa



FUNDECOL, Fundación de Defensa Ecológica

Grup Ecologista Les Agulles

Marea Azul, Movimiento Alterno de Recuperación de Ecosistemas Afectados

Associació Catalana d'Oceanografia (ACOIO)

Institut de Medi Ambient (Universitat de Girona)

Observatorio del deute en la Globalització (ODG)

Grup de Medi Ambient de Montcada i Reixac

Iberian Biodiversity (IBBIO)

Instituto Internacional de Derecho y Medio Ambiente (IIDMA)

Fundación Lonxanet para la Pesca Sostenible

Xarxa de Custòdia del Territori

Grup de treball de Custòdia Marina

Mare Nostrum

Asociación Defensa Derechos Animal (ADDA) AEMS Rius amb Vida

Amigos de la Tierra

BIOSFERA Associació d'Educació Ambiental

DEPANA, Lliga per a la Defensa del Patrimoni Natural

Foro Social de Canjas

Gent del Ter

Kenna Eco Diving

Oceanográfica: Divulgación, Educación y Ciencia



Plataforma “El Chorlitejo” para la defensa del Litoral del Sureste de Gran Canaria

Verdegaia

Redmanglar Internacional

L’Ateneu Juvenil, Cultural i Naturalista de Girona

Marefondum

Submarinistas en Acción

Asociación el Muellito del Roque

Animal Latitude

SEO/BirdLife

Ben Magec

Associació Salut i Agroecologia (ASiA)

Asociación Ondine

Xarxa de Consum Solidari

Swedish Elasmobranch Society

Swedish Society for Nature Conservation

OceanCare

Nederlandse Elasmobranchen Vereniging

Sea First Foundation

North Sea Foundation (Stichting De Noordzee)

The Black Fish Foundation

New Economics Foundation

Paint a Fish

Fishlove

Moshimo

Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB)

Blue Ventures

Sustainable Fish City

Women’s Environmental Network (WEN)

The Royal Society of Wildlife Trusts (RSWT)

Sustainable Inshores Fisheries Trust (SIFT)

Marine Conservation Society (MCS)

The ART of Science

Sea-Changers

Salmon & Trout Association

Marinet

Moshi Moshi

Zoological Society of London (ZSL)

Scottish Creelers and Divers

The Gaia Foundation

Shark Trust

Share The World's Resources

Pisces Restaurants, Fishers & Retailers CIC

Frankie’s Fish & Chips

Community of Arran Seabed Trust (COAST)

Shark Research Institute



(1) EU Commission (2012), communication from the commission concerning a consultation on fishing opportunities for 2013, COM (2012) 278 final. (2) Nef (new economics foundation) (2012), Jobs Lost at Sea

Full document (0 pages): English Contact: Mike Walker mwalker@pewtrusts.org +32 476 622575

Ex-Audierne trawler, St Pierre BM547

Photo courtesy of MaskedMarble's Flickr pages.

Here's a request from a Through the Gaps follower, can anyone help Alain in his quest?
"I was wondering if you had a friend or a correspondent in Brixham that could make me some pictures of a boat.

She is an old boat Audierne ( France ), her name is now Saint Pierre, registration number : BM 547" If you can or know someone who can, please email any any pics via this link: 

Filleting at its finest!



When it comes to achieving perfection, nothing it seems comes even remotley close to the extent to which the Japanese will go.  Go compare examples of swords from Great Britain's finest blade makers Wilkinsons to examples of the art from Japan. 

In this video however, the blade wielding skills are not those of the samurai warrior wrecking mayhem and destruction but those of Sushi chef Jiro flawlessly flaying fresh fish in the form of Japanese culinary high art.

Sunday 14 April 2013

Its not just the same story in the UK - here's a conversation between Scotland and a Canadain fisherman fishing for shrimp!



20 ton for a day of looking


@shrimpfisherman lot of shrimp


@eugenecap yes 20 is a lot ....but we only need 780 ton more is the sad thing


@shrimpfisherman lord that's a fair amount I wish you good fishing


@eugenecap thanks we will need it....need about 40 t a day.....are u out now


@shrimpfisherman yes but we are on guard duty used to line but we don't anymore


@eugenecap yes...I read ur bio....your boat tho?


@shrimpfisherman myself and another guy own it we were stopped from fishing by idiots


@eugenecap yes lots of them around to try and destroy an industry.....then they would wonder there is no fish to eat


@shrimpfisherman yes ur right makes my blood boil


@eugenecap they want to make everything here a Marine Protected Area....no fishing but u can drill for oil


@shrimpfisherman it's so sad what they are doing we need to fight it

@eugenecap they want us all gone.....small boats first then the big ones....its a crime worldwide....any pics of ur boat


@shrimpfisherman yes I have some pics

@eugenecap can u tweet one?