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Wednesday 28 December 2016

Belgian beam trawler capsizes off Kent coast around midnight - one rescued, one critically ill, one missing.

Z582 Assant - Photo courtesy of shiphenters.be


Off the coast of England at midnight a Belgian fishing vessel Assanat Z582 from Zeebrugge, capsized. There were three people on board. One of them was called with the English rescue helicopter of the hull of the ship and transported to the hospital. Meanwhile, there has been found a second crew member at sea. This confirms the Maritime Rescue and Co-ordination Centre in Ostend. The man is unconscious flown to the hospital. His condition is critical. It is with might and looked for the last drowning, with both English and Belgian rescue helicopter, two rescue vessels from Ramsgate on the English coast, and a merchant vessel that was nearby. Belgians were two of the three crew members.

Story translated by Google from www.hin.be

The fleet sails from Newlyn on their final trips for 2016.


One of the last sunrises for 2016 makes a stroll along Penzance promenade worthwhile this morning...


with a few lucky houses across the Bay in Newlyn bathing in the glow...


despite a choppy onshore sea berating the shoreline...


three-cornered contrail...


over the beam trawler setting sail to land her first trip in 2017...


Guilvinec registered Itasca against the ice berth...


as the sun nears the horizon dep out in the bay...


more of the fleet show signs of life with lights...


aboard in readiness for the final trips of 2016...


which should see the port devoid of boats over the next couple of days...


the light always provides the opportunity for early morning photographers...


the Itasca's trawl doors stowed in their steaming position to stop them constantly beating the hull every time the boat rolls...


flying her Breton flag...


Curtiss senior makes fast the shore line of the Elisabeth Veronique in the ice berth...


dawn breaks down the quay...


making good use of harbour land once fully covered in trawl gear when there were around 25 trawlers in the port, not the nine that there are left now!

Monday 26 December 2016

NFFO Fights Back against Appeasement

The National Federation of Fishermen’s Organisations, which represents fishermen in England, Wales and Northern Ireland, has launched a blistering attack on UK Fisheries Minister George Eustice, after he made quota concessions to appease nationalist pressure from Scotland during the annual quota negotiations in Brussels.


1500 tonnes of English quota has been taken from the Humberside based Fish Producers Organisation and promised to Scotland without consultation or notice. Also, George Eustice is “consulting” on a revised concordat between the devolved administrations. If implemented, the concordat would mean the transfer of almost the entire English North Sea whitefish fleet into Scottish administration, along with its licences and quota allocations. The NFFO regards as a bogus consultation because the Scottish minister has already announced that the concordat will be implemented as written.

The NFFO statement says, “All this is being done behind closed doors, in secret. English fishing interests are being systematically traded away to appease the clamour from Scotland. It stinks.

“This is all about high politics – the Westminster government is desperate to avoid creating conditions that would favour a second referendum in Scotland. And the nationalist government is determined to create defacto independence where it can, and also to wring concession after concession out of a government preoccupied with delivering Brexit.”

“The UK overall, will lose out as a result of this quota grab because the only European countries licensed to fish in the North East Arctic apart from England, are French, German, Portuguese and Spanish. That cod will be landed, processed and consumed in those countries with value added all along the supply chain. Apart from being opportunist, and unprincipled, this transfer makes no economic sense. The Scots would swap it away for lower value species that they catch.”

“This ministerial decision has been presented as a way of dealing with chokes* that will result from implementation of the landings obligation in 2017 but it has not escaped our notice that no Scottish quota is being tagged for this purpose – only English.”

“Devolved administrations have their individual ministers to speak up for them but the English industry has no such champion. How else can you explain this policy of appeasement? Our minister needs to find the word “no” in his vocabulary. “

The NFFO statement added: “We have as much to fear from an aggressive nationalist agenda in Scotland and our own supine minister, as we have to gain from a successful Brexit.”

The statement concludes: “Scotland’s continual demand is to sit at the table during international negotiations, when this is plainly a reserved responsibility. This shows the level of ambition that there is in Edinburgh but there is no push-back from our own minister. The opposite in fact. We can get no assurances even on this clear-cut matter.”

“Scottish ministers make much of the tonnage of fish landed into Scotland. But there are more UK fishermen’s livelihoods at stake outside Scotland than in, and a significant proportion of those landings are made by English vessels landing into Peterhead. Politically, fishing carries more weight in Scotland. We are being sacrificed as part of a wider game but we will not go down without a fight.”

NFFO 19th December 2016

Note: A choke is when one quota in a mixed fishery is exhausted, meaning that the vessel has to tie up for the rest of the year. It is a problem faced when a discard ban is applied to a quota system in mixed fisheries.

Saturday 24 December 2016

Thursday 22 December 2016

Public Comment Draft Report Cornwall Sardine Fishery

Public Comment Draft Report
Cornwall Sardine Fishery



MEC Certification Ltd (MEC) is pleased to announce that the Public Comment Draft Report for the above fishery is now available for comment on the MSC website: https://fisheries.msc.org/en/fisheries/cornwall-sardine-uk/@@assessments).

MEC is happy to receive comments from stakeholders on the report at any time during the comment period. All interested stakeholders are encouraged to contact Gavin Fitzgerald (gavin.fitzgerald@me-cert.com) or Kat Collinson (kat.collinson@me-cert.com) at MEC by email, telephone or post at the below number and address:

ME Certification
56 High Street Lymington
SO41 9AH
United Kingdom
Tel: +44 (0)1590 613007 Fax: +44 (0)1590 671573

The deadline for this consultation is 17:00 GMT 29th December 2016.
Please note that comments should be factual and should be supported by data or other evidence. Comments may remain unattributed. Furthermore, information that cannot be shared with any other stakeholder will not be referenced in the assessment and cannot be used in determining the outcome of the fishery’s assessment nor used as a basis for an objection. Information can be kept confidential if it is restricted to financial transactions about certification, the financial affairs of individual companies or information that may lead to this information being known, or information that is the subject of relevant national privacy or data protection legislation in the assessed fishery’s country.

Wednesday 21 December 2016

Last market for 2016


Sadly, the Excellent is likely to see the old year out and the New Year in in much the same place...


while the rest of the fleet are now tied up for the Xmas break...


including the entire beam trawl fleet...


apart from the sardine boats that land direct to the processors... 


even if they have to handball ice aboard!...



the port makes a huge contribution to recycling old fishing gear...


looks like the Ajax has joined in with the lights...


as the last of the fish from the auction this morning are loaded.


Tuesday 20 December 2016

Christmas present? - A tale of two pubs - and an awful lot more!


This is an up-front, in-your-face, black is black and white is white, callous-covered exposé of fishermen past and present who might occasionally be found frequenting one or both of the two most famous fishermen's pubs in Newlyn...



the Swordfish, which, in its heyday, once featured in Sky TV's Most Dangerous pubs in Britain is well worth a visit - it does great B&B and still has the best jukebox in the west of Cornwall - think Pogues to Amy Winehouse and all rocking points in between...


and the Star Inn, which has the diminutive but nonetheless, formidable Debbie at the helm and, after 24 years, there is nothing that Debs hasn't seen, heard or sorted in her time behind the heavily tarnished bar... 



fabled for the care of her regulars, she once provided the boys (and girls) with a smoker's bar outside from day one of the national smoking ban - several characters from the book can be seen here, notably Perry, in a fetching orange boiler suit and to his left, and sadly not with us any more Larry who originally hailed from Howth...




while this shot inside the Swordfish features some of the port's best known skippers in their youth, L-R Filadelfia skipper Don Liddicoat, Billy 'Saffron' Bunn, Roger Coutsubus and Devonian, Mervyn Mountjoy, now sadly in the big wheelhouse in the sky...



fishermen from ports all round the area have passed through the harbour so the book touches on the lives of many...



including fish merchant Nick Howell who created the first massive fish display that has become the hallmark of Newlyn's annual Fish Festival...


All smiles as ever, Toots and dad, sardine and shark fisherman, Mart 'Nutty Noah' Ellis

and of course the pioneering fisherman Martin Ellis from Cadgwith who with a little help from Nick re-started the Cornish sardine fishery - Martin's adventures read like a saga and chronicle the ups and downs of what fishing is like for many fishermen - pitting their wits against not only the vagaries of the natural elements of fishing and the weather but also the battle with relationships, bank managers, well-meaning but often ignorant do-gooder-environmentalists and the all-to-omni-present Common Fisheries Policy (CFP) all of which range like a big spring tide throughout the pages of the book which...

Roger Nowell mending gear on a Nowell family beam trawler with Mike, father of England rugby player Jack Nowell.

no epic poem, book or video can ever capture in an instance the lot of the fisherman - it is a way of life, something you live, breathe and feel every waking, and at sea, every sleeping moment - Roger Nowell's BBC TV series The Skipper made a good stab at the task - but the screen inevitably puts the viewer at a distance from the fisherman's heaving, entirely unpredictable world, as they strive to make sense of the weather, tides and fickle fish behaviour that confronts them before they even head out through the gaps; the sounds, the smells, the fishermen's almost coded dialogue, the intimacy and closeness of all those involved make it unique in a world dominated by those seeking to control and audit every action. As Plato said:

There are three sorts of men, 
the living, 
the dead, 
and those that go down to the sea to fish

Gavin Knight's, The Swordfish & The Star is a bucking deck of a read, every bit as colourful and raw as the contents of a freshly gutted big ling and can be bought locally in Penzance at the Edge of the World bookshop or order it online here.