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Friday 5 September 2008

Blow passes by in the night - Cornwall gets a soaking

Just before high water, Penzance prom (unique in Cornwall) keeps the dog walkers at bay.... in Newlyn, the ex-fishing vessel, Zephyr takes shelter on passage..... amidst a crowded harbour, though there are no French boats in which means this is a quick blow.... the Ripple is kept off the quayside by the breeze....looks like someone on the verge of a new adventure as they make their early way down the quay in their new sea-boot socks and laden with sea bag and sleeping kit..... on a day when the market was almost devoid of fish..... they say a sailor has one in every port, here it seems we have boxes from every port, how many countries are represented here?.... bet the chap who invented plastic cable-ties never dreamed they would be used by fishermen to secure the fishing line to the footrope of trawls!...
the Crystal Sea II's doors provide the ideal home for a lost banana skin.

Thursday 4 September 2008

Newlyn Festival of the Arts

Coming up in November, Newlyn Festival of the Arts will celebrate art in its many guises all over the village, indoors and out, from painting and poetry to DJs and Dance - something for everyone. For more information see the flyer.

Wednesday 3 September 2008

A bit of rust

Not much local stone evident in this property overlooking the Bay....where the Geordie boys on the Valhalla are sorting out their trawl in clear water, IOS supply ship, Gry Maritha passes down their starboard side bound for the Scillies....
with the big tides this week and a poor forecast there are plenty of boats crowding the harbour....
which gives the Jacoba a chance to go through her scallop dredges...
laying outside Penzance wet dock, TN Trawler's George Lou N shows off her rust covered hull, when steel meets steel at sea rust follows within minutes so that boats working any kind of heavy gear tend to look uncared for within weeks of a paint-up.

Cape Cornwall gig 'Brisons' practice night

Looking back along the conveyor on the scalloper, Jacoba where the dredges are emptied at hauling.....
a significant safety feature, a close-up of the hydraulically operated hook bar that holds the 18m beam with its multi bars and 18 dredges and prevents them swinging across the deck while the contents of the dredges are tipped onto the conveyor during hauling....
it's practice night for the Cape Cornwall gig rowers as the Brisons is launched from the old Canner's Slip (so-called as Shippams once had a small canning plant in the building opposite where Trelawney Fish are now)....
after a few more alterations the engine has been fitted aboard the Inspiration.....
and at the end of the day its time to cover the shining new paint work......
Star of the North, one of the few boats in the area working the pollack boards, now using aluminium and not bamboo poles to avoid damage.

Tuesday 2 September 2008

Myths and legends in the port

Let's hope he hasn't, "lost his penka doon the nettie", our resident Geordie slips back to a berth with the landing gear still aloft on the Valhalla.....
fresh supplies of tooth bars and backs have arrived for the biggest scalloper around, the Jacoba...
still looking good after her annual paint-up, unlike another household cleaner Vim this one is still around....
still against the quay, PZ10....
fresh lube oil next to fresh paint means the Cornish flag-flying Sapphire cannot be far off ready to go back to sea....
stood alongside the Emma Louise and many months labour, Alistair is itching to get those pots wet...
shrouded from the rain, the new sails for the Ripple are being kept under wraps for the moment...
not very often you see the bow and stern ropes put ashore incorrectly, for the uninitiated the bow rope should be passed over the boat ahead's stern rope and not under as has happened here - in poor weather the ropes might chafe through or one could be lifted from the bollard - either way a boat could end up set adrift.....
in the rain, Jan Strick lends a hand with the trawl before it is wound on to the net drum.....
its smiles all round in Badcocks lates exhibition although in another room....
there are a few legends on display.

Monday 1 September 2008

Fisherman Mike Mahon forced to don Pirate's hat

A Tyne class lifeboat making for Newlyn passes between Gwennap Head and the Runnelstone buoy......
setting out from the UK's Westernmost fishing spot Penberth Cove an inflatable dinghy disturbs a flock of gulls....
news of Mike Mahon's 'crime against humanity' protest over the dumping of over-quota fish has attracted attention from afar, Mike is seen here with Phil Stebbings, journalist and director of the film "The Deadline" which exposes illegal fishing activities off the coast of Africa....
the Pirate's hat is worn because that is what he has been forced to become by the imposition of unworkable EU's fisheries regulations according to Mike...
an empty fish box is what he feels is the only kind of fish box Brussels wants him to put ashore....
Mike then takes the visitors off for a short trip around the harbour.

Saturday 30 August 2008

A traditional day

Shelterbox are the charity benefiting from a sponsored camp by local ATC cadets on Newlyn Green this weekend...
Fisheries skipper Shane manages to force a smile for the camera knowing that everyone else is enjoying a weekend off, he's off to sea to police the inshore waters in Mount's Bay, or maybe there's a regatta somewhere......
he lets the St Piran power past the Anglian Princess.....
tan sails on the Ripple in the morning......
Mission skipper, Keith Dixon is in the kitchen today....
while Dick Ede and David Keast offer Nick plenty of advice aboard the Inspiration.....
time to test the rigging of the for'sail aboard the Ripple.