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Tuesday 28 February 2017

Coping with stormy weather - the French way.


With most of the fishing fleet in the south west weather-bound in port a handful of French boats spent yesterday and overnight making their way north easterly using the land mass of Cornwall to provide some 'cut' from the ground sea and wind which had gone round more west nor'westerly.

Penlee lifeboat nightime shout.





With westerly force 7 winds gusting 8 in the squalls, coming alongside the stricken inshore boat, Bonnie Grace, and the crew of the Ivan Ellen make the boat fast to the side of the lifeboat before...




bringing her in through the gaps...



and berthing her alongside the quay. With the somewhat unsocial hour of the callout, no doubt there was a little light-hearted banter between the fishing vessel skipper under towa regular member of the lifeboat crew and Patch in the lifeboat!

Monday 27 February 2017

Make the most of Monday morning!


Poor weather and big tides saw most of the fleet land at the end of last week...



so it was down to two of the biggest boats in the fleet to put fish on the market this morning, along with the James RH...



a big trip of megrim soles from the Cornishman...



and a good run of ray thrown in...



while the James scooped up a few bass in one haul...



along with plenty of cuttles...



netters Joy and Govenek of Ladram landed trips of monk...



ray...



steady as she goes...


turbot...




a few top drawer fish...



and hake of course...



the cuttles left their mark on the market floor...



and doorway...



name this fish...



surprise, surprise, plenty of mackerel with the handline fleet working in the lee of the wind over in St Ives Bay...



while the buyers bought what they could this morning knowing that there won't be much fish on the market for the next few days with the forecast being so poor...



big white fish aplenty...



for auctioneer, Ian with that wry smile appearing on his face at times...



outside the lengthening days mean that it is light by 7am...



heralding yet another day on the quay for Tom re-setting the trawl for the Harvest Reaper...



even the Crystal Sea took a few hours extra fooff in the poor weather...



along with the big Dutch beam trawler, Martje...



time for a fuel top-up for the beamers...



yet another netter looking to diversify, maybe...



not to be outdone, the local hand;ine fleet are out in force this morning with good mackerel marks just outside the harbour...



well in sight of the two big cargo ships at anchor still waiting for orders...



the local harbour seal is doing his own fishing just off the beach...



while onshore winds have washed up some Spanish longline gear on the beach - given that the Spanish boats use these nets well over 100 miles from the coast it is a sign of just how far flotsam and jetsam can travel in prevailing winds...



which have been well in excess of the speed limit over the weekend.

Sunday 26 February 2017

Not so excellent news about the Excellent


With her name plate barely visible forside of her wheelhouse, what was Stevenson's oldest and most historic sidewinder, Excellent presents a sorry sight as she falls into ever more disrepair against the quayside...


not so long ago she still looked presentable as she waited for a buyer...


twenty years ago she spent the last few years of her fishing career rigged for gill nets under the command of 'Mad' Joe Andrews...


a far cry from her foray into mackerel trawling back in the late 1970s when shoals of mackerel off Newlyn were so heavy that even a grossly underpowered boat like the Excellent with its ageing Kelvin engine could mid-water trawl for them...


these watercolour sketches were done to commemorate ...


her visit to the classic boat Festival in Brest in 1992... 


 under the command of the late Mervyn Mountjoy when she was immaculately painted up for the event...


here she is up on the slip in 1980 when still trawling...



Watch at 5m 12s in the Excellent is involved in cleaning up oil off Gwennap Head.

which was her main method of fishing from when she was brought to the port as the Efficient when she had been built as a drifter by Forbes in Scotland in 1931.  She spent some of WW2 running clandestine operations to Norway - something tat still needs to be researched.  Perhaps her other claim to fame was that Trevelyan Richards, cox of the ill-fated Penlee lifeboat was her skipper prior to the disaster.

Time is running out to save the boat from being broken up and yet another piece of Great Briatin's proud maritime heritage ends in the scrapyard.

Friday 24 February 2017

Cornwall and Isles of Scilly FLAG



£800,000 European and government funding approved


The European Maritime and Fisheries Fund (EMFF) is funding six groups to deliver community led local development in England. These Fisheries Local Action Groups, FLAGs, will use the knowledge of local stakeholders to tackle fisheries issues at a local level. The MMO, which administers the EMFF in England recently issued funds to six FLAGS to take forward their strategies and Cornwall and Isles of Scilly FLAG tells us more about their approach below:


The Cornwall and Isles of Scilly FLAG welcomes the approval of its funding by the Marine Management Organisation (MMO).  This will invest £800,000 in the local economy from the European Maritime and Fisheries Fund and the MMO.
We are excited to have the opportunity to focus on locally identified priorities and build upon previous FLAG success, as we have a sound understanding of key partners and local contacts to turn thee ideas into quality projects that will make a real difference to our fishing communities.

Funding themes

Our priorities and themes have come from a widespread consultation process across Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly to ensure that the investment is targeted towards the needs of the industry.
The FLAG will be supported by Cornwall Development Company who will carry out the management and administration and Cornwall Rural Community Charity who will provide the animation function for the partnership; working directly with the industry.
The Cornwall and Isles of Scilly FLAG will have three local themes within its strategy:
  1. Safe working harbours
  2. Encouraging and supporting young people into marine careers
  3. Innovation research and diversification

Funding priorities

Within these three themes the FLAG has 4 priorities:
  1. Supporting innovation, diversification and micro business development. This will aim to build communities through encouraging collaboration between fishermen
  2. Developing and supporting social, economic and environmental projects which especially benefit smaller and isolated communities where the numbers of beneficiaries is low but impact is an important consideration
  3. Supporting innovation projects, by bringing forward new fish products, fish waste/bi-products and new processing methods. Such projects could be in partnerships with social enterprises, scientists and researchers
  4. Developing and supporting training to mentor new entrants. Working with skipper mentors to develop training to ensure entrants are safe and skilled in the many requirements of work. This priority has been spawned from previous FLAG projects and will look to develop a much more thorough new entrant programme with mentoring
For further information contact Chris Ranford, Cornwall Rural Community Charity on 01736 364324.

A full-on #FishyFriday in Newlyn


Two beam trawler trips were somewhat dwarfed by the volume...



of net fish landed this #FishyFriday morning...



which gave cause for as wry little smile to spread across the face of head auctioneer Ian...



bass bursting with eggs, it's that time of year when these beautiful fish head for their favourite spawning ground...



about the same time as the cuttle season draws to a close...



all the netters are landing trips of good hake...



and all of them endorsed by the MSC and certified as an entirely sustainable fish stock...



sustainability does not come much higher than handline caught mackerel, so it is good to see the guys still putting good landings ashore...



storm Doris barely stayed for a day this far south and west so this morning had a Spring-like feel to it...



as box after box of top quality fish where whisked away from the market...



leaving the local gulls buzzing the harbour for any scraps...



contrasted against the fleet of modern, steel, fully shelterdecked netters, the once proud Excellent awaits her fate...



basking in the morning sun, the Cornish Ice Company...



let it be known that it has its AGM next Thursday...



Ajax, Karen, Britannia V, Joy, four of the port's finest netters, the diversity of names reflecting the diversity of their skippers...



scalloper, Le Men Du puts in an early appearance



all hands hoping the end will be in their vicinity...



there's a few hours work still to be done on this bottom trawl...



St Ives lifeboat at rest...



the wheels on the beam go round and round - fuel saving device on the Admiral Gordon's beam trawls.