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Thursday 23 March 2017

Getting to sea in a lull!



Getting to sea in a lull before the next blow! The inshore trawler Elisabeth Veronique with her beautifully signwritten name is seen here leaving Newlyn early on Wednesday morning. There is still plenty of movement in the water as she heads out to sea owing to a heavy swell still running from the previous day's little blow that whipped through from the west.

For more fishing videos and links, please subscribe to Through the Gaps YouTube channel - in the near future there will be livestreamed video straight from the boats!

Brexit fishing debate on BBC Daily Politics Show

Aneurin Bevan put his finger on it. “This island is made mainly of coal and surrounded by fish,” he said. “Only an organising genius could produce a shortage of coal and fish at the same time.”



Although, in reality, the UK fishing industry contributes but a fraction of the GDP its place in the public psyche cannot be denied. For an island nation, fishermen represent all that has put the great in Great Britain - independence of thought, creativity, resourcefulness, guile, the crew working as a team and above all grit and determination to take whatever is thrown at them. So it came as no surprise when the industry became a figurehead to represent leave campaigners.


BBC2 Daily Politics show sent reporter Adam Finn was sent to Peterhead fish market to talk to Aaron Brown the mastermind behind the Fishing for Leave campaign that organised the Thames Flotilla during the Brexit campaign. 



Copies of the plan can be obtained from the Fishing for leave website by clicking here.
Later in the show, SNP's MSP Stuart Stevenson and Hull MEP and UKIP Fisheries spokesman Mike 'fisticuffs' Hookham discuss their vision for the industry post-Brexit along with feedback from Conservative, Lord Dobbs.

Listen to the report from Peterhead and studio debate in full:




If ever there was a bigger test of the government's resolve to deliver what they promised during the Brexit campaign then surely fishing must be right there at the top - remember the words that summed up their campaign, 


'We will take back control"

Watch this space.


For a flavour of how the general public (well, FT readers) view the forthcoming negotiations read the aruicle and expand the comments form today's Financial Times article:

EU fishing fleet urges post-Brexit access to UK seas.

British fish exports could face tariffs without deal to keep rights for vessels









Wednesday 22 March 2017

More efficient and reliable data in fisheries-EP adopts new regulation



The new rules for data collection in fisheries which will result to more efficient and reliable data was adopted by plenary on Thursday. The new rules will result to better and more comparable data helping making better decisions in fisheries based on scientifically proven evidence. The revised regulation was informally agreed by the Parliament and the Council in December 2016.

“We are happy we have obtained a good text that will help us improve fisheries policies. You can't make good decisions without reliable data, and thanks to this data collection framework we will have these data. It has been a lot of hard work so far, but it is not over yet, as we must now apply the new regulation in all member states. Along with the upcoming rules on technical measures, the data collection framework represents the basis for fairer and more sustainable fisheries policies”, said the rapporteur Marco Affronte (Greens/EFA, IT). EP approved the new rules with 535 votes to 38 with 48 abstentions.

Multiannual Union programme

The European Commission will establish a multiannual Union programme for the collection and management of data, taking into account, inter alia, the need for relevant and reliable data, costs and benefits and the need to avoid duplication of data collection. The multiannual programme will include:


  • thresholds below which it will not be mandatory for a member state to collect data or carry out research surveys




  • biological data on all stocks caught or by-caught in Union commercial, and recreational fisheries in Union and outside Union waters
  • data to assess the impact of Union fisheries on the marine ecosystem in Union waters and outside Union waters
  • data on the activity of Union fishing vessels in Union waters and outside Union waters
  • socio-economic data and sustainability data on marine aquaculture to enable the assessment of the socio-economic performance and the sustainability of the Union aquaculture sector, including its environmental impact
  • socio-economic data on the fish processing sector to enable the assessment of the socio-economic performance of that sector

National work plans

Member states will prepare detailed work plans, in close cooperation with other member states. These work plans will include data to be collected in accordance with the Union programme, the spatial distribution and the frequency by which the data will be collected and the format and timing when data will be made available to end-users.

Regional coordination groups

 In order to facilitate regional coordination (regionalisation is one of the core objectives of the reformed Common Fisheries Policy), EU countries will establish “Regional Coordination Groups” for each marine region. These Groups will consist of experts nominated by member states, national correspondents -designated by member states to serve as the focal point for exchange of information between the Commission and the member state- and representatives from the Commission.

The Groups will develop regional databases and may also prepare draft regional work plans to be submitted to the Commission for evaluation. These regional plans will replace or supplement the relevant parts of the national work plans of each member state concerned.

Next steps

The new regulation will enter into force on the twentieth day following its publication in the Official Journal of the European Union.


Background information

Data are needed to evaluate the state of fish stocks, the profitability of the different segments of the sector and the effects of fisheries and aquaculture on the ecosystem. Data are also needed to evaluate EU policies.

For this reason, an EU framework for the collection and management of fisheries data was established in 2000, and then reformed in 2008 resulting in the Data Collection Framework (DCF).

Fishy tails in Newlyn


Yesterday produced a storm of hailstones of rare proportions and this morning's clouds also look full of vigour...



two of the biggest beam trawlers along with the James RH landed for this morning's market...



with the Cornishman targeting megrim...


and monk...


from the 'deep water', meaning anything around and over 50 fathoms sou'west of Newlyn...


which is why her trip only produced a handful of Doversole...


and over 160 boxes of megrim soles...


and monk tails...



talking of tails, how many fish can you ID from just the tail?...


an easy one to start, but which mermaid's purse laying beast is this...


bigger and flatter...


and flatter still...


still flat...


but which one is this...


just can't place this one...



by now you should be a dab hand at this...



a little rounder...


easy one to spot...


not so this...


or this one...


a few clues in the pic...


maybe bigger eyes needed for this one...



a slippery customer...


don't be fooled by the colour...


almost too easy...


as is this one...


no one will get this one wrong...



but maybe this distant cousin is a little harder...



a break for the black, the James RH...



who in contrast to the Cornishman, fished the cuttlefish grounds...


where they would be unlikely to catch any of these...


showing signs of age...


not what you want to see when swimming, but which toothy predator does this belong to...


not remotely related to this guy...


or this...


not what you might think...


missing off the landings board, bigger fish MSC Certified hake from the Govenek of Ladram...


the old and the new, looks like some serious gear maintenance work for the boys aboard the James RH today...


a season's pots awaiting dispatch to the deeps...


a rare visitor to the port, IFL's Admiral Grenville...


the port beam is ready for repairs on the James RH...


Lionel exchanges a few words with Rob McCabe, skipper of the beam trawler Louisa N while giving a group of youngsters one of his most excellent guided tours hoping to engender a love of fish in them...


work continues apace to get the newest, biggest sardine boat ready for the forthcoming season... 


as it does aboard the crabber, Harriet Eve complete with her recent £5000 nose job...


they might be made of chain but they are often still referred to as end-stones...


these big crabbers need plenty of deckspace to cater for strings of fifty pots, when they can work over twenty strings in a day...


Dreckly Fish's Francis aboard the Guiding Star gets a royal cygnet fly-past this morning...


out one, in t'other....


are these for?

  • a new boat build
  • lugger masts
  • pier fenders
  • the new lifeboat house
  • none of the above