='"loading" + data:blog.mobileClass'>

Monday, 1 December 2014

Mitch Tonks looks at how fishermen can work with chefs to add value to their catch

Michelin Star seafood chef, Mitch Tonks, explains how fishermen can work with chefs to make their product more profitable on the new NFFO blog.

Fishing is a complicated and hard job and downtime off the water means no money coming in so that desire to land and return to sea must be a natural one. I wonder how many fishermen think about their product beyond the quayside and think about how they can add value to the catch by doing things differently. From the fisherman's perspective what is there that can be done?

Ex-England rugby player Matt Dawson (L) and fish chef Mitch Tonks are both contributors to the new NFFO fishing blog.

But from the chefs perspective there may be things.

I was in Australia filming a few years back and looking at how fishermen had coped with the huge controls placed on fishing and still made a living; the answer was simple, if I catch less, I need to charge more. Some fishermen worked with chefs in seeing what it is they wanted. The best example I saw was a snapper fishermen who had gone from catching big volume to very small, he got to understand that the levels of quality directly affected his price and gradually progressed to instead of landing the fish on board and icing them, he killed each one with a spike through the head (an old Japanese method) then placed the fish in iced slurry, the fish were in the best condition they could be and their prices rocketed on Tsukiji and Sydney market, other examples were crab and lobster fishermen making bespoke products for chefs like lobster medallions, their investment was in taking the time to understand and using their expert knowledge to develop specific pieces of equipment to freeze and process fish.

This progress was made by fishermen and the end user talking together and understanding better each other’s needs. It would be a good forum to get likeminded chefs and retailers together to chat and help each other see beyond and past the quayside.

To contribute to the blog, please contact nffo@nffo.org.uk.

#EatMoreFish this week - there's plenty to chose from at your local wet fish shop - just ask!


Gary M was one of three netters to land trips of big white fish...


and hake on the market this morning...


along with several beam trawlers supplying cuttles...


monk tails...


and more hake...


fish are all over the ground at this time of year...


even a few congers made the inside of the cod end...


name this gleaming fish..


the handline boats...


are still mixing it with the bass on the hard rocky pinnacles...


while the Ajax made the first of two planned landings over this tide...


not a breath in the harbour at the 'dayning' of the day as they would say over in St Ives - dimpsy being the word for dusk - which is when the sun is 12 degrees below the horizon in the evening. At this time, objects are no longer distinguishable, and the horizon is no longer visible to the naked eye - ....


just as the lights come on in the Mission building...


the watch is being kept by Tom as a contrail hangs still in the sky some time after the airliner has disappeared over the horizon...


with just a couple of stars...


 still shining down on the Bay...


work continues along the prom to replace the granite stones after the winter storms, each one has its weight marked...


cementing in work starts at 6am while the weather is fine.

Sunday, 30 November 2014

Shine on Sunny Sunday


Cats make excellent angling charter boats...



looks like the old Ygrain is getting a new aluminium top...


while she is undoubtedly Penzance's very own Christo piece...
 


work continues to dredge the entrance to Penzance dock...



over in Newlyn it's time for the Ajax to take ice after she has made her landing of hake...


some of the handliners are taking advantage of a bay full of pollack...


while the raven and the gull try and sort out their territorial dispute...


nearly set for sea...


homeward bound at the end of the day for the Guiding Light...


for two days only...


don't miss this year's Bucca Christmas sale...


once upon a time nearly every fisherman wore one of these to work in...


days of strong winds from the East have left the beach covered in seaweed.

Saturday, 29 November 2014

Is MSY an environmentalist fantasy in a mixed fishery?



On April 24-25, 2014, the University of Washington School of Aquatic & Fishery Sciences and School of Marine & Environmental Affairs co-hosted a symposium on the re-authorization of the Magnuson-Stevens Act as part of the Bevan Lecture Series on Sustainable Fisheries.

This is the third speaker of session 2, Steve Cadrin, Associate Professor, Department of Fisheries Oceanography, School for Marine Science and Technology, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth. His talk is titled, "Strengthening the Scientific Basis of the 2006 Management Requirements: Optimal Yield from Mixed-Stock Fisheries"

Video recorded and produced by UWTV.

Open Letter to UK Fisheries Minister, George Eustice from local NFFO man Paul Trebilcock

The President and Chairman of the NFFO have written a joint letter to Fisheries Minister George Eustice, warning against a one-dimensional MSY approach to setting TACs for 2015.



Open Letter to UK Fisheries Minister, George Eustice
George Eustice MP
Minister for Fisheries
DEFRA
Nobel House
17 Smith Square
London
SW1P 3JR

Dear Minister,

TACs for 2015

It would be difficult to exaggerate the sense of frustration within the fishing industry over this year’s ICES advice, especially when read in conjunction with the Commission’s Communication on how it intends to approach the December negotiations this year.

With a few exceptions, stock after stock displays low or declining fishing mortality and steadily rebuilding biomass. The advice also suggests that major cuts quota will be proposed for 2015.

Fishing mortality has been steadily falling across all the main species groups since 2000. Biomasses of commercial species in general are responding to this reduction in fishing pressure, albeit at different rates in different stocks. Despite this progress, stock after stock faces very significant reductions in quota for 2015.

There are always questions over whether the assessments portray an accurate picture of the stock abundance but the main problem here is not with the science or the scientists. ICES has been asked to present its catch forecasts and TAC options in terms of maximum sustainable yield. 

The quota recommendations in the main are the result of the rigid application of MSY doctrine, now enshrined in law, which requires TACs to be set to achieve MSY by 2015, “where possible.”

You will not find many in the fishing industry who are against steady movement towards high yield fisheries. The issue is not whether MSY, MEY, or some other proxy for high yields fisheries should be our objective; the difficulty arises because an MSY policy approach is linked by law to a rigid timetable and which ignores biological realities and economic and social consequences.

Fishermen have done all that has been asked of them in terms of reducing fishing mortality. Some stocks have responded dramatically to this change; some more modestly and some hardly at all. Incoming year classes are the key to stock abundance when fishing pressure has been lowered but recruitment success is not yet responsive to political dictat. Patience is not a very exciting call to arms but in many cases it is what is now required.

This letter is therefore a plea. Given that fishing mortalities on most of our stocks are now low; given that cutting quotas in mixed fisheries, set on the basis of single stock assessments, invariably results in discards; given that another round of TAC cuts at a time when the abundance of fish experienced on the grounds is increasing generates incomprehension and anger within the industry; our plea is for you to take the lead in arguing for a pragmatic, outcome from the autumn negotiations focused on actual outcomes rather than dogma.

A degree of flexibility must be used to soften the harsh edges of a rigid MSY policy. If fish stock abundance was going in a different direction; if fishing mortality trends were increasing; if TAC cuts didn't generate more discards, there would still be a case for a less brutal approach. As it stands we have logic, fairness, rationality and biological realities on one side and an incoherent, scientifically challenged, political obligation to apply MSY on the other. We urge you to use all your resources to persuade the Commission and fellow ministers to temper this brutal approach with common sense. Stocks are rebuilding but perhaps we need a little patience.

Yours sincerely

Paul Trebilcock
President

Tony Delahunty
Chairman

Friday, 28 November 2014

Salt of the Earth sales soar!


No wonder Ed and the boys are smiling - £14000 and rising!

It's certainly a black #FishyFriday thanks to a big shot of cuttles.



Newlyn's Black Friday bargains come in the many forms...


no prizes for guessing who's on the market this morning...


Tesco's very own Mr Fish, Gary Hooper who is also ex-president of the  National Federation of Fishmongers... 


talking turbot and other quality #FishyFriday fish like the prehistoric looking John Dory...


with the guys from FalFish...


with a market end-to-end with fish from couple of big beam trawler trips, inshore and net boats on offer...


this conger weighs in at over two stone full of chittlings - the female roe and a delicacy...


still more of those elusive cod...


many of the boats have run in to land overnight...


as the strong south-easterly winds blow down the harbour through the fish market.