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Sunday 27 October 2013

#stormwarning From the Met Office



27 October 2013 - A major Atlantic storm is set to move across the UK over the next 24 hours, bringing some heavy rain and very strong winds to parts of England and Wales.
Coastline battered by storm
The storm is set to deepen rapidly just to the south west of the UK late today, before moving into western areas in the very early hours of Monday morning.
It's then expected to track rapidly across the country, moving off into the North Sea by late morning - by which time the strongest winds will have passed.
Gusts of 60-70mph are expected in southern parts of England and Wales, with gusts of 80mph or more in places - particularly around southern and south western coasts.
Heavy rain will accompany the storm, with a chance of some localised surface water flooding.
The Met Office has issued Severe Weather Warnings for potential disruption from both the strong winds and the rainfall.

#stormwarning #stormaggedon andf the last of the Breton boats that were fishing now head for calmer waters


Look like all the frogs are making a run fpr shelter now - though  the aptly named La Houle seems to be headed fpor home - 100 mile with the weather beam-on - lovely!

#stormwarning Today's shipping forecast at 1200 - not so good - but some boats fish on!

Humber, Thames, Dover, Wight, Portland

Southwest 7 to severe gale 9, becoming cyclonic severe gale 9 to violent storm 11 for a time, perhaps hurricane force 12 later. Rough or very rough. Rain or squally showers. Moderate or poor

Plymouth

Southwest 7 to severe gale 9, increasing severe gale 9 or storm 10 for a time, perhaps violent storm 11 later. Very rough or high. Rain or squally showers. Moderate or poor

Sole, Lundy, Fastnet

West or southwest becoming cyclonic 7 to severe gale 9, increasing severe gale 9 or storm 10 for a time, perhaps violent storm 11 later. High or very high, becoming very rough or high. Rain or squally showers. Moderate or poor, occasionally good

Of course there are still a few fishing boats still at sea, though none from Newlyn...

including these four Breton trawlers working off Land's End!...


and in aun un-precedented move the Scillonian III instead of sailing back to Penzance afterher Saturday morning run to the Scillies has been diverted to Falmouth!...


though the wind speed is slowly climbing as per the forecast...


thought the wave height at the Sevenstones Lightship has not reached the height being recorded...


at the moment like this weather buoy off southern Ireland!


an explanation courtesy of Magic Seaweed.



Saturday 26 October 2013

#stormwarning


"Rain before wind
Sheet your sails in

Wind before rain
Set your sails again"

It's raining.

#severeweather The Met Office's Winter collection



Not often you see three lows as deep as this lined up!

Friday 25 October 2013

'Ark me 'ansums, 'ave some Cornisih Sole!


Looks like James Martin heeded the call!

Josh Barrie, who covers the fishing industry for the Cornishman and other west country papers penned this excellent article in today's Independent:


If you’ve heard of megrim sole, you’re already one-up on a lot of people. It’s hardly a popular fish. Its cousins, meanwhile, the lemon and Dover, have been on menus across the land, piled on fish counters and featured on cookery shows for years.

Granted, the megrim is not quite as delicate, not quite as easy to work with or refined in texture. But to most palates it still holds flavour and it remains a pleasant flatfish to pan-fry in lemon butter, perhaps, or serve on the bone – my favourite way – in a rich tomato-and-caper sauce.

But megrim may be about to have its moment. Its key attractions are low price, ready availability, and – that ever-potent word when discussing food these days, indeed more so from the sea – sustainability. Megrim is abundant in Cornwall’s surrounding waters, making it cheaper than lemon and significantly more affordable than the revered Dover.

You may say cost reflects quality, but at a time when consumer buying habits often lead shoppers to walk straight past the fish counter – despite a growing understanding and knowledge of cooking in the UK – perhaps it shouldn’t be so overlooked.

And yet it so often is. Many of the big players don’t stock it. A fishmonger at Morrisons in Penzance, for example – known for its reasonable championing of local, fresh produce – said the store hadn’t sold it in the six years he’d worked there. Only Tesco and Sainsbury’s – the latter of which included megrim in its “Switch the Fish” campaign to try to push lesser-known species – have it on ice. According to Sainsbury’s, 84 per cent of customers hadn’t heard of it before the drive.

Most importantly of all, though, is that sadly, due to lack of demand, megrim sole has even been thrown back because fishermen can’t get a fair price. The majority of the fish end up in Spain, with around 95 per cent of stock exported, reports Andy Wheeler, of the Cornish Fish Producers Organisation. “It’s been as low as 50p a kilo,” he explained. “For 20kg of fish, fishermen have been getting only £10. I’m sure some of the fish have been thrown away. Dover goes for around £4 or £5 a kilo. It’s 10 times as much. Even if megrim was £2 a kilo, it’d be a sufficient but still a cheaper alternative.”

Today, the UK is eating more fish and sampling a greater variety. Yet megrim still lurks in the shadows; it’s ugly, unfashionable. Wheeler agrees it should be brought more into play, citing the positivity that it would have on the market, if nothing else.

Still, the fact remains that because of culinary fashions, usage continues to lag behind its more tenderly named relatives. So how could suppliers reverse the trend? A recurrent theme in Cornwall’s ports, renaming, or rebranding, has worked in the past.

Rolls of megrim sole. The fish is delicious when cooked properly (Alamy) Rolls of megrim sole. The fish is delicious when cooked properly (Alamy)

With apparently dwindling cod stocks in recent years, the now- incredibly-popular hake is eaten all over, even by the more discerning, less adventurous seafood fans. Its ethical tag, lower price but similar flesh paved the way for it to achieve acclaim. Hake opened up the UK market, too – and where had it been going before? Spain, of course.

Before hake, it was pilchards, newly dubbed “Cornish sardines” to boost sales. The move was a success. Ten years ago, The Independent noted their resurgence, which brought them back into the likes of Waitrose and Marks & Spencer by simple, albeit savvy, marketing.

Now, there has been a half-hearted attempt at such an endeavour for megrim. “Cornish sole” is on the agenda – but it needs more of a push. I shall do my bit and henceforth refer to it as such.

Laurence Hartwell, a Newlyn fishing blogger and media lecturer at the nearby Penwith College, believes the rebranding could take off with the right ingredients. He said if the public were to see the likes of James Martin, perhaps with guest Rick Stein, cook Cornish sole on Saturday Kitchen, an influx would surely follow. Ben Tunnicliffe, a past Michelin-star holder in Penzance, agrees – though he has admitted in the past that even he has decidedly looked to other fish in the kitchen. His reasoning was business-minded, but he that accepts he’d be inclined to give it more of a chance if it were to move into the spotlight.

“It’s offered to me nearly every morning,” he admits. “It’s always on the list. As a fish, I don’t really use it; customers don’t always go for it. But it can be a good fish if cooked properly. I’d be behind it coming in.”

Indeed, with an emphasis on accessibility and potential, Cornish sole could follow hake’s suit – certainly when we’re in a foodie sphere constantly reiterating the necessity to vary buying habits, to ensure we don’t bleed our seas dry of the supermarket-omnipresent cod, tuna and haddock.

But as Tesco and Sainsbury’s have proved, Cornish sole is not steeped in absolute obscurity, and The Fish Society is one of the smaller suppliers offering it to the public. What’s more, recent figures highlight even more a of reason to give the fish greater scope to appear on dining tables.

“Megrim is a very underexposed fish. On our site, Dover soles outsell megrims 30 to one, and lemon soles outsell megrims by 15 to one. However, in the first six months of this year, recorded catches [by UK boats] of megrims exceed lemons, and are three times higher than Dovers,” the society’s Alistair Blair says.

So, despite Cornish sole being scorned by some, sustainability, price and Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall’s ambition to deliver a more future-minded sector are on its side. Indeed, perhaps it could be the next hake? Or even monkfish – now a coveted gastronomic prize that couldn’t be given away in past years (and also a fish that’s as ugly as sin). Yes, the sole could turn the tide.

At least it’s trickling into the fray: Turl Street Kitchen in Oxford had it on the menu fairly frequently over the past month, while it appeared as a special at Jamie’s Italian in Bristol recently, too. I’ve seen other restaurants cooking it elsewhere, certainly around Cornwall.

If top fish chefs were to give it more of a presence and supermarkets were to buy it in at a fair price, the species might have a chance at bolstering the industry. With the likes of fish fingers and tinned tuna weekly staples, buying cheaper – yet delicious – fresh fish, as many have preached, should be more ingrained in us. And it is flavourful, by the way. Ask Mark Puckey, the head chef lecturer of Rick Stein’s Padstow Seafood School: “Megrim sole, perhaps not as pretty as its Dover and lemon counterparts, is nonetheless extremely tasty and very good value. It is sustainably fished and is in plentiful supply off the Cornish coast for most of the year.” Cornish sole, like the sardines and hake before it, deserves more. Could this floundering sole be the next fish to come into its own? I do hope so.

Bit of a blow! #poorforecast #watchingpoints


With 48 hours to go before this Catherine wheel of a low hits the Western Approaches...


there are only a handful of local boats are at sea...



keeping a weather eye - that's from sailing days where it paid to keep a good look out on the side of the boat from where the wind was coming from - hence the weather side...


48 hours from Friday night brings us to Sunday evening by which time any boats at sea in the Western Approaches will be feeling the full force of the wind sure to be howling in the rigging though hopefully, not experiencing the low moaning sound so dreaded by sailors around the world signifying winds of extreme force...


though this could well be a low (depression) to watch as it is predicted to break with tradition and instead of maintaining its North Easterly course, after hitting the west coast looks like it will head south instead - one of the worst storm some twenty five years ago followed just such a path and seemed to pick up even more energy when it made its way back round and head north east for a second time!