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Tuesday 19 February 2019

Consultation on the introduction of catch recording for licensed fishing vessels under 10 metres in length





The MMO are seeking views on the potential business impacts linked to the introduction of catch recording for all English and Welsh licensed fishing boats under 10 metres in length.

Why We Are Consulting

We want to know your views on how the introduction of catch recording requirements for under 10 metre vessels registered in England or Wales could potentially affect you and your business.

The change in the licence condition will apply to all English and Welsh licensed fishing vessels under 10 metres in length. Scottish licensed vessels already have a licence condition that mandates recording for the under 10 metre fleet and Northern Ireland will be seeking consultation responses at a later date.

The consultation is open to everyone. It will be of particular interest to owners and operators of licensed fishing boats under 10 metres in length licensed in England and Wales.

Closes 1 Apr 2019

Marine Management Organisation (MMO)


Call for industry leaders to help shape Responsible Fishing Ports Scheme for small ports




Seafish is calling for industry leaders to help shape a new version of the Responsible Fishing Ports Scheme (RFPS) for smaller ports, as Peterhead becomes the first large port to apply for RFPS certification.
Launched in July 2018, RFPS is a voluntary certified programme designed to demonstrate responsible food safety and good operational practices within UK fishing ports and harbours. The independently audited scheme has been developed with the UK seafood industry to raise standards across the fishing ports sector and is currently open for applications from large fishing ports with an auction or direct sale function.
Peterhead Port is the first fishing port to apply to be certified under the large ports scheme. Harbour Master John Forman said “In my capacity as Harbour Master at Peterhead Port, and on behalf of Peterhead Port Authority, I am delighted to support the Responsible Fishing Ports Scheme (RFPS). The Port has applied to be audited to RFPS, which is ongoing. This bespoke certification for fishing ports and the fishing industry as a whole will implement standards in traceability, working practices, hygiene and health & safety. Peterhead Port Authority endorses RFPS and believes that this certification will benefit all of our customers and stakeholders in the seafood industry.”
The scheme's standards provide assurance to buyers and sellers of seafood that certified fishing ports are acting in a responsible manner with the seafood landed or sold through the market. 
Nicholas Donnelly of Young’s Seafood said, “As part of a modern food industry, Young’s Seafood places great value in the independent inspection and certification of our upstream supply chains. With the creation of a third party Responsible Fishing Ports Scheme, it is now possible for our UK caught products to be produced entirely within an independently audited and certified supply chain, offering greater business confidence for us, and an increased level of assurance for our customers.”
Following the launch of the large ports scheme, Seafish is now looking to develop a new version of the scheme for smaller ports. Industry leaders and representatives from small ports are invited to help by providing information about fishing port facilities and by joining a development committee which will steer the development of the small ports scheme to ensure that it is fit for purpose. The committee will also help to establish the assessment framework, which will be informed by the information gathered about facilities at small fishing ports.
Progress on collating information to support the development of the scheme is underway following a schedule of visits to small ports across the UK. Support for the scheme has been expressed by Tony Usher, Harbours Manager at Highland Council, and Kevin Quigley, Chief Executive of Northern Ireland Fishery Harbour Authority, who have welcomed the initiative as a complement to the existing standard for large ports and indicated their willingness to become committee members to help steer the project and provide information to underpin the scheme’s development.
Marcus Jacklin, RFPS Project Manager, said: “In the process of creating the Responsible Fishing Ports Scheme, it became clear that large and small ports each needed their own standard to ensure the scheme is fit for purpose and covers the requirements of all types of fishing ports and harbours in the UK.
“We are now pleased to be moving forward with the development of a standard which will give small ports an opportunity to apply for certification that acknowledges their responsible operating practices. We look forward to working with the small port sector and would encourage anyone who owns or manages a small fishing port in the UK and would like to help shape the scheme to get in touch.”
Further information about the RFPS is available on our website: https://www.seafish.org/article/responsible-fishing-ports-scheme
To find out more about getting involved in shaping the small ports scheme or applying for RFPS large port certification, contact Marcus Jacklin on marcus.jacklin@seafish.co.uk or 01472 252 340.

Monday 18 February 2019

Monday morning fish auction in Newlyn.


Time for the buyers to assemble around Stevenson's auctioneer Ian Oliver...


and a huge trip of hake from the Amanda of Ladram...


and concentrate on bidding for over 250 boxes of MSC certified Cornish hake...



along with over 150 boxes from the netter Ygraine which has taken a break from wreck netting...


all of which helped make it a very busy Monday morning market...


which included over 1200kg...


of superb large whiting...


other fish on the market included these perfect gurnards...


and prime examples of Dover sole...


plaice...


lemon...


and megrim soles....


often referred to as 'megs'...


there were good supplies of line caught mackerel in the middle fridge...


while the far end of the market held the auction for turbot...


ray...


squid...


more turbot...


John Dory


and brill from the beam trawlers that landed over the weekend...


helping to fill the market from end-to-end...


the Sapphire II being just one of four beam trawlers to land...


time for the porters to clear the boxes of fish...


while outside the netting fleet are back in port having completed fishing over the neap tide...


and, like Tristan on the Silver Dawn, are now in the process of taking off nets to be repaired or recycled...


good to see young Francis' boat Evening Star in the early morning light...


coming up for sale at the next Lane's auction is this Venetian snow scene by local artist, Ken Howard.

Sunday 17 February 2019

Bait - a necessary evil?

Bait review – hypnotic take on tourists ruining Cornwall



Mark Jenkin’s film about two fishermen coping with the influx of sightseers is intriguing for its distinct visual style

Cornish film-maker Mark Jenkin has contributed one of the most arrestingly strange movies in Berlin this year. It’s an adventure in zero-budget analogue cinema, a black-and-white film shot with a Bolex cine-camera on 16mm film, and developed in such a way as to create ghostly glitches and scratches on the print. Now, that’s a nostalgist affectation that is sometimes unconvincing: I’m often agnostic when Guy Maddin does it. But the primitivism of Jenkin’s film is the real thing – and hypnotically strange.

A drama on what might be the rather hackneyed theme of tourists ruining Cornwall becomes a bizarre expressionist melodrama. It has the huge closeups and crashingly emphatic narrative grammar of early cinema and, like home movies, it has non-diegetic sound, with dialogue overdubs and ambient noise which could well be taken from a sound effects LP. But it’s very effective, and the monochrome cinematography desentimentalises the Cornish landscape, turning it into an anti-picture postcard. The weirdness of Bait can’t be overestimated, like FW Murnau directing an episode of EastEnders.

Martin Ward (Edward Rowe) is a fisherman, a gloweringly aggressive man who resents the incomers who have taken over his village. Fishing is in decline. Where once this industry used bait to catch fish, now the whole community and the beautiful landscape are used as bait to catch tourists. Only it feels as if the tourists are the ones who have the locals in their net.

Martin and his brother Steven (Giles King) have been forced to sell their late father’s picturesque harbour-front cottage to Londoners who stay there in the summer and Airbnb the loft to other tourists. With colossal insensitivity, they have gutted the place and redecorated it in a twee “fisherfolk” style with nets and maritime memorabilia on the walls.

As Martin growls to his brother: “Ropes and chains like a sex dungeon.” Steven now uses the family’s fishing boat to give tourists sightseeing trips, including crowds of idiotic blokes on stag weekends. Martin himself is saving up for a new boat, but insists on trying to be a fisherman without one, wading out into the surf with a net for sea bass, trying to catch lobster with a single pot, and selling the meagre catch to local pubs and cafes.

In his martyred way, he almost savours the humiliation of doing this, and nurses the resentment involved. His irritation with the Londoners explodes when his ramshackle van gets clamped by the security firm for parking in the now-reserved spaces outside his former family home and a hundred other little slights add to his simmering rage.

Meanwhile, Steven’s son is more interested in learning the ways of fishing than tourist-pleasing – but his sexual attraction to the young women that arrive with the holidaymakers creates a separate crosscurrent of tension.

Jenkin adds to the disorientation by introducing little premonition flashes of events still to come. A young local woman throws a white ball at the tourists’ cottage and, before the police show up, we see a glimpse of the handcuffs still to come. We also see this same white ball superimposed on the ghostly moon.

Without the roughness and even crudity of Jenkins’ homemade effects, this “montage” gesture would not have been plausible. But within the stylised visual language he’s using, it works very well.

There are other conspicuous juxtapositions: two different scenes will be interleaved, with different characters, in closeup, yelling at each other. What an intriguing and unexpectedly watchable film. Bait is an experiment – and a successful one.

Mark Jenkin’s film Bait is shot in black and white. Photograph: Early Day Films

Funding for Safety Training



Funding may be available to support experienced commercial fishermen undertaking training to develop their knowledge, skills and qualifications above and beyond minimum legal requirements. A wide range of training can be supported, ranging from refreshing your basic safety training to undertaking a Deck or Engineer Officer Certificate of Competency.

Eligible Courses:

Funding is currently available to support a wide range of courses, including:


  • New Entrant Training - our three-week Introduction to Commercial Fishing course is designed for people interested in starting a career in the fishing industry.
  • Refresher Safety Training - this can be undertaken by experienced fishermen who completed their mandatory safety training more than three years ago. The courses cover sea survival, fire-fighting, first aid and safety awareness.
  • Under 16.5m Skipper's Certificate – comprising short courses in Navigation/Bridge Watchkeeping, Engineering/Engine room Watchkeeping, Stability Awareness and GMDSS radio operation. Additional funding is also available for fishermen who already hold the Seafish Under 16.5m skipper's certificate to undertake further advanced courses.
  • Certificates of Competency - grant support is available for experienced fishermen undertaking MCA (Fishing Vessel) Deck and Engineer Officer Certificates of Competency.
  • Other short courses - other eligible courses may include a higher level GMDSS radio operator certificate, an Electronic Chart Display and Information System (ECDIS), Approved Engineering Course (AEC) or Human Element Leadership and Management (HELM).
  • Funding is only available for new entrants wanting to enter the fishing industry and experienced commercial fishermen who are fully compliant with Basic Safety Training requirements.


Funding Deadlines
Current deadlines for EMFF/MCA funding are as follows:


  • England - 31 March 2020
  • Scotland - 31 December 2019
  • Northern Ireland - 31 March 2019
  • Wales - 30 September 2019

Please note: Available funding is allocated on a first come first serve basis so funding up until the final dates cannot be guaranteed.

How to Apply

For refresher training or voluntary training courses towards our Under 16.5m Skipper’s Certificate, contact your local Seafish Approved Training Provider (ATP) and they will offer you the course free of charge, providing you satisfy the eligibility criteria. If you wish to undertake training with anyone other than a Seafish ATP, then you will have to fill out a training grant application. Funding for more advanced qualifications, such as a Certificate of Competency, can only be obtained by submission of a grant application form. See the Downloads section at the right of this page to download a copy of the grant application form.

Saturday 16 February 2019

Safety at Sea survey - pfds - do you wear one? If not, why not? Your comments and ideas needed!

Safety at Sea survey - PFDs - do you wear one? If not, why not? Your comments and ideas needed!


Click here to take the survey:

With the introduction of new safety standards introduced by the MCA on January 1st this year this survey comes at a timely moment. The new legislation includes the necessity for all fishermen to wear a PFD while working on the deck unless it has been specifically identified as not necessary - and written into the vessel's risk assessment




Dear participant,

Have you fished commercially or professionally in the last year? Then please take this survey on your thoughts and habits as a commercial fishermen wearing personal flotation devices (PFDs) while working at sea.

This study is conducted by Jennifer Pickett and Joeri Hofmans of Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium.  This survey will take approximately 12 minutes.




The goal of this questionnaire is to better understand a bit about you and the reasons why commercial/professional fishermen do or do not wear a PFD while on deck. The survey is anonymous and participation is voluntary and you may stop at any time without giving any reasons. I appreciate your honest answers! 

Stay safe & good fishing.

EU Landing Obligation meeting - one for the diary!



The first public hearing to discuss the impact of the Landing Obligation since full implementation is due to take place on the 19th February from 14:30 - 16:30 next week. You can sign up for alerts and updates to these meetings using this link here:

Landing obligation is a long-standing policy goal of the EU Common Fisheries Policy that requires fishers to bring all catch ashore eliminating discards at sea. The policy has been phased in gradually over the years and is fully implemented starting this year, 2019. The speakers’ profiles combine first-hand industry expertise with scientific analysis. The audience would receive the most recent overview about the implementation of this important component of the fisheries policy.