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Thursday 19 October 2023

Newlyn Harbour Marine Skills and Resource Centre and £3.9 million worth of seafood industry projects through UK.


The Newlyn Marine Skills & Resource Centre, a project that started three years ago, aims to improve and greatly contribute to training and skills development for Newlyn’s fishermen, and all who work at sea or in the wider maritime industry.

The planned Marine Skills & Resource Centre also aims to replace and improve the current training facilities scattered around Newlyn by consolidating them in a single state-of-the-art building within Newlyn Harbour’s curtilage.

The initial designs by Poynton Bradbury Wynter Cole (PBWC) Architects, were appointed by Newlyn Pier & Harbour Commissioners to work on the project. PBWC is a Cornwall-based and multi-award-winning firm that specialises in environmentally-responsive design.



Martin Tucker, Chair of the Penzance Town Deal Board said: “The new Marine Skills & Resource Centre project is a fantastic opportunity to revitalise the local marine industry and reaffirm Newlyn’s reputation as a centre of excellence. The proposed building will provide high quality training, foster collaboration and innovation, and help to create and sustain jobs in the fishing and marine sectors that have faced challenges in recent years.”



“Newlyn Harbour has been at the heart of Newlyn and Cornish fishing for centuries,” comments Chair of Newlyn Pier & Harbour Commissioners, Rob Wing. “As skills and technologies have developed and changed, so has Newlyn Harbour and the community we are a part of. Newlyn Pier & Harbour Commissioners are honoured to continue this journey and the planned Marine Skills & Resource Centre will not only provide access to modern training facilities and spaces for those working within the fishing and marine sectors, both now and in the future, but also enable them to continue to develop and change, keeping Newlyn at the heart of Cornish fishing and the wider maritime industry.”



Thalia Marrington, Cornwall Councillor for Newlyn said: “Having a centre of excellence for learning and development right here; being able to recruit, train and retain a workforce locally will be of huge benefit to the local community. A resilient and agile workforce will be crucial in creating a strong and sustainable future for the fishing industry. Opportunities abound within the wider marine sector too and this new building will be the focal point to drive and lead innovation. It is great to see Newlyn firmly facing forwards.”




In other fishing industry news the UK awards GBP 3.9 million of seafood industry projects through UK Seafood Fund.

The Maritime Bridge Simulator at the University of the Highlands and Islands The U.K. Department of Environment and Rural Affairs (DEFRA) has awarded GBP 3.9 million (USD 4.7 million, EUR 4.5 million) to seafood projects in the United Kingdom.

The funding, awarded through the GBP 100 million (USD 121.8 million, EUR 115.2 million) U.K. Seafood Fund, will go to projects to improve the quality of training facilities to both upskill the workforce and promote seafood careers and to projects building new and improved fishing infrastructure. The U.K. Seafood Fund was established to support the long-term future and sustainability of the nation’s fisheries and seafood sector.

“We have already seen the great success that funding from the UK Seafood Fund has contributed to - from upgrading ports and aquaculture facilities to creating innovative training programs to attract fresh blood into the sector,” U.K. Fisheries Minister Mark Spencer said in a release.

The funding, DEFRA said, includes GBP 3 million (USD 3.6 million, EUR 3.4 million) which will go to the Scottish White Fish Producers Association to build a “Scottish Seafood Centre of Excellence” to replace the current temporary training space the association is using with a permanent facility. The new facility will include purpose-built classrooms, technology demonstration spaces, and facilities for blended training, DEFRA said.

Scotland will also receive funding for upgrading the Maritime Bridge Simulator at the University of the Highlands and Islands’ campus, located in the Shetland Islands, Scotland.

“Our members and the wider seafood sector are delighted at the award of GBP 3 million pounds from the Defra training infrastructure fund, which will allow us to build a seafood Centre of excellence at the very heart of our fishing community,” Scottish White Fish Producers Association Chief Executive Mike Park said. “The Centerwill be the delivery point and hub for both onshore and offshore training supported by classroom and virtual learning and will provide an ideal base to help stimulate recruitment to the seafood sector.”

Other projects receiving support include refurbishing training facilities in Portavogie, Northern Ireland; and refurbishing facilities in Grimsby, U.K. to create a new Seafood School.

“Today’s investment will help to support the industry so that our existing and future workforce is equipped with the necessary skills and facilities to join the sector and benefit from the brilliant opportunities that are available to them with a career in seafood,” Spencer said.

The U.K. Seafood Fund was originally slated to come to a close in 2024, but was given an extension until 31 March, 2025 in August 2022.

Wednesday 18 October 2023

Back in the day - Gallic May in Penzance dock mackerel protest - Parliamentary debate on 3, 6 & 12 mile limits much more and the shape of things to come!

 


It was 1979 and about 60 members of Mebyn Kernow, a Cornish nationalist movement, carrying slogans and the flag of St Piran (Cornwall's National flag) pictured near the Buckie registered Gallic May as they call for a 50-mile limit and six-mile fishing zone for vessels under 20m in length. This was a protest against Scottish trawlers landing mackerel. Research on the state of mackerel stocks had begin in earnest just a few years previously with the publication of this Mackerel Research in the South West paper from Lowestoft. Ultimately, mackerel fishing was subjected to the introduction of the 200-mile 'mackerel box', which still exists today and prevents   

The 'box' was instigated by one of Cornwall's much loved (and missed, as he died aged just 42 in car accident) Liberal MP, David Penhaligan - this Parliamentary exchange recorded in Hansard exemplifies his work championing the Cornish cause in the days when it was just becoming apparent what the impact of the huge Scottish and East coast fleets were having in conjunction with Eastern factory ships on the mackerel fishery - but there was much more to the debate than just that! He talks of the huge value of the fishery being taken and exploited by others. The debate is well worth reading as many of the issues - like large vessels fishing inside the 6-12 mile limit are key to the debate - are still very much uppermost in the minds of inshore fishermen to this day!

In his address, Penhaligan mentions the seabed littered with dead mackerel, something I can vouch for as these pics taken aboard the Milford Haven boat Girl Freda are testament.

The purse seiner Gallic May was built at Dieppe in 1975 for Gallic Shipping of London. Their arrival with the industrial fleets at Penzance in January 1976 started and ultimately then ended the Cornish winter mackerel season. They were amongst the first pursers to have refrigerated sea water tanks to keep the fish fresh and frequently landed 250 tonnes of mackerel. Gallic May was skippered by Forbes Cameron of Ayr and an Ayrshire crew. There were frequent problems with her Caterpillar main engine.

On a lighter note, back in the early 80s when prawning in the Clyde I remember arriving in Ayr one weekend. It was early Sunday morning and dozens of people were passing our boat (the Fern INS122) headed along the quayside to a boat astern of us. It turned out that this was the Gallic May and we were witnessing the start of an infamous Forbes Cameron Sunday 'booze crusie' to Lamlash! Little did I know that years later I would also sail with 'the big man' aboard the Dumnonia PZ310 to Rockall chasing haddock and squid!

Monday 16 October 2023

Much fish on the market this Monday morning in Newlyn



Autumn has definitely arrived in the far south west with strong winds and all the usual seasonal shipping forecast stuff headed this way, not much for the inshore guys to cheer about...


but for now, the market was chocker with fish from all sectors of the fleet...


with plenty of MSC certified fish like these hake from the Silver Dawn...


and the Ocean Pride...


like it or not, the gillnetters are still being plagued by spurdogs...


and the odd blue...


cod are never caught in sufficient quantities to keep more than a handful of local chippies supplied...


while over the last twenty five years haddock landings have increased from almost nothing historically to more than enough to make a great substitute...


and gurnard are now a firm favourite with many diners...


while ray are never off the menus locally...


another close shave with some harder ground, three boxes of congeros...


flats like plaice, Dovers, lemons and monk tails...


stacked high and ready to go...


inshore John Dory...


and still they keep coming...


they might not be worth as much as gold but these silver-skinned bass are up there with the best...


while grey mullet provide a culinary challenge for some...


two big goody bags each containing well-iced 70kg bluefin are the result of long day's work well offshore for the Prospector and skipper Adam Harvey...


get the tape measure treatment from the MMO which provides them with invaluable data on this latest fish to move from being banned to being landed...


while the Asthore was the only ring netter to catch bluefin over the weekend, a monster of a fish...


FYI, your boxes have arrived...


it's cuttle season...


there are good shots of plaice coming ashore...


and a few of these big fellas...


a sign of very fresh fish...


roast or curried, monk tails take on all kinds of cooking...


two of the remaining few local beam trawlers are up ahead this morning...


with the wind farm cat, Spectrum 3 in for shelter outside the Cornishman busy taking fuel for her next trip...


as is the St Georges...


well, Ian 'all hail the hake' Mitchell just had to one bigger in the netters', "whose got the biggest bum' competition with a re-modelled Govenek of Ladram!


 

Friday 13 October 2023

Fish of the week 36 - Porbeagle shark

 


It's been a while since any porbeagle sharks were landed on the market in Newlyn. They have been on the banned list since 2011 as a result of overfishing, mainly targeted by Norwegian longliners in the 50s and 60s. These days fishermen release any porbeagles that are taken as a by-catch - though it has been some time since any were reported.

Sharks are an interesting species - they have been around on the plant for some time - in terms of evolution, we as humans are closer cousins to salmon than the salmon is to the shark - by a considerable margin - as a species, they pre-date trees and dinosaurs by millions of years!

It's a lucky day for some, Friday the 13th in Newlyn.

This morning big, heavy, foreboding clouds pouring across the bay from the west...


inside the market there are plenty of fish like these spurdogs from the netter Stelissa...


hake from the Ajax...


saithe...


hake ...


and bull huss from the Stelissa...


brightening up proceedings are these cracking inshore red gurnard...


bass and grey mullet from another inshore boat, Two Buoys...


and red mullet from the Tizardleeon...


the port's biggest beamer landed a good run of plaice...


and a mix of other fish...


as did the other beamer to land, the Billy Rowney...


success for the blue fin tuna boat SeaBreeze with this huge 195kg fish...


a tad larger than these cousins, the mackerel...


also landing MSC Certified hake was the Britannia V...


meanwhile out in the harbour work continues on maintaining the quays...


as work starts early on the tide this morning...


one of the biggest yachts to visit Newlyn this year...



the Kamak...

just ahead of the latest boats to be laid up...


those letters aren't going to rub off...


it's that time of year again...


the odd angler trying their luck at Sandy Cove...


the jack-up rig Seafox7 is sat comfortably out in the bay this morning going nowhere.