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Wednesday 9 May 2012

Sustainability pledge from the fish friers gets thumbs up from HRH!

Salt 'n vinegar Sir?
The National Fish Friers' Federation announce sustainability pledge following meeting with HRH 


The Prince of Wales His Royal Highness The Prince of Wales today met with representatives from the National Federation of Fish Friers (NFFF), past and present Fish and Chip industry award winners of both the Good Catch Sustainability award and Young Fish Frier of the Year competition, along with senior representatives of the sector's leading fish suppliers. 


 Meeting aboard the Marine Scotland research vessel FRV Scotia, moored at Leith Harbour, Edinburgh during the World Fisheries Congress, The Prince of Wales discussed practical ways in which the Fish and Chip sector can help to ensure sustainably sourced fish stays at the top of menu and in the mind of the consumer. He heard from fish and chip shop owners, from suppliers and Young Fish Friers of the Year, Zohaib Hussain and Carlyn Johnson, presented their vision for the future of the sector. In conclusion Gregg Howard, President of the NFFF presented a pledge to ensure sustainably sourced fish in the nation's Fish and Chip shops. Realising this will mean working with suppliers, supporting well managed fisheries, educating shop owners and consumers alike. 


 Initially a Responsible Sourcing Code will be drawn up by the NFFF in conjunction with the Young Fish Friers group and Good Catch Award winners. Fish and chip shops throughout the UK will then be urged to share the good practices in fish sourcing, to help ensure that the fish they are serving has come from well managed sustainable fisheries. Another great achievement for today's modern fish and chip industry would be the ability to serve ‘conscience free' cod or haddock to their customers. 


The NFFF has agreed to work with the Marine Stewardship Council and Good Catch to support fish and chip shops wanting to gain the MSC Chain of Custody certification, and to provide a simplified process that allows more shops to become involved. The NFFF also joined over 100 other signatories from around the world, in signing up to the Prince's International Sustainability Unit's global declaration on good fisheries.

Mission message to skippers!


Could you help?

We’re appealing to boat owners and skippers to support the canteen. We are trying many ways to keep prices down but our suppliers are passing on the increases in raw materials and the cost to transport them.
How can you help?
By sponsoring the Haddock on Fridays this will hold off the need to increase prices again. If several boats could donate 15 Haddock per week, so for example if 8 boats joined in then that’s a donation of Haddock once every two months, we’d be able to keep prices down. On that Friday we’d make sure that the name of the boat and all concerned were promoted in the canteen, our website, blog and the Fishermen’s Mission magazine.
Please speak to either Superintendant Keith or Julian or Ali at the Mission.

Mini 6.50 update

It's looking like the French team will beat the Brits and the Kiwi back to Plymouth Hoe with the eponymous Maxime Salle just minutes away (screen shot taken at 0807 this morning) from entering Plymouth harbour.......
the rest of the fleet are strung out to the west, Basecamp is not so far behind given the distance sailed from Sunday's start - with Mad Spaniel just off the Lizard having run many miles off to the southard to try and get as much following wind for a long reach home.

Tuesday 8 May 2012

Mini 6.50 update


Mad Spaniel, one of the Lymington to Plymouth via the Wolf contenders is currently still trying to get to the Wolf Rock lighthouse - and at 1.7 knots things are moving pretty slowly for the Kiwi, Geff Duniam. It's bad enough for the Kiwi to discover that in the UK at this time of year the sun is hardly a source of heat! No doubt Roger aboard the inshore trawler Imogen II,  who is only a short distance away, will have spotted the tiny yacht after checking the blip on his radar against the AIS readout, small yachts were notoriously difficult to spot and identification nigh on impossible - what a difference AIS has made at sea, to the safety of all concerned.


Two other 6.50 contenders are just SW of the Mad Spaniel, unfortunately they are both now on the home run to Plymouth so sighting them running in the opposite direction will provide little for the crazy dog boys to cheer about!


Local sailmaker Woody from Solosails will be willing the boat on - they are sporting one of his sails!

Big tide, busy market

Plenty of marine art is on display at the Tolcarne Inn.......
some areas of the fish market had a distinctly blue aura to them this morning, something to do with temperature control.......
on goes a topping ice as the last of the Cornishman's fish is set out for auction......
no ifs and buts, just big bass from the Butts........
a couple of unlucky ones, the last of this year's cuttles
end-to-end with beam trawl fish this morning......
along with a handful of inshore trawl fish.......
high water on a big tide......
and someone must have put a good word in for the weather given how bad the forecast was for the week.........
time for all those jobs 'down below' to be done on the netter, Silver dawn.......
this solid looking aluminium Breton yacht - well, with a name like Gwen ar Dhu (Black and White) - suggests she's owned by a serious ocean traveller rather than someone who nips out of the marina for a spot of day-sailing.........
back to the same home again, local residents atop the net loft keep their clutch warm for this year's fresh batch of s**** hawks........
all set for the summer gold as signs of the mackerel are about at last.......
a fresh hanging at Helen Feiler's Gallery opposite the market......
in contrast.........
young Roger Nowell heads out to sea with the Imogen II......
and begins his first tow heading east.

Monday 7 May 2012

Lymington to Plymouth via the Wolf - Mini 650 update

 After all the mini yachts made it safely round the Isle of Wight overnight they headed for Swanage Bay and hugged the shore in the early hours of Monday morning......
 a coupe of hours later and the tightly bunched fleet, apart from Mad Dog who seems to be taking some very creative tacks at times, have left Portland Bill way behind......
by 10pm on Sunday evening the wind, gusting up to 35 knots has spread the fleet, and the unfortunate Mad Dog has been forced in to Plymouth with repairs big enough to put her out of contention - Jake will be gutted as he was up near the front before running into problems.......
coincidentally, a bigger fleet of similar yachts were racing from the French port of La Trnité to Plymouth, chances are that with the visibility being poor none of the boats sighted one another despite their paths crossing!

Dolly update......


The headstone erected to commemorate Dolly Pentreath, last known speaker  of Cornish, lived and died in Mousehole.
This is an extract from my book A History of Cornwall (p. 76)

"The final demise of Cornish in the 18th century was rapid. By 1735 two local scholars, Gwavas and Tonkin, could find only a few speakers in the small fishing villages and coved between Penzance and Land's End, and it was in one of these,Mousehole,lived Dolly Pentreathy.......she died in 177 but nine years before her death she was visited by the antiquary Daines Barrington who noticed that there were still other folk in the village who understood her,but could not speak the language readily. Dolly's place in the history book was confirmed in 1860 when a bilingual tombstone in Paul churchyard was erected to her memory by Prince Louis Lucien Bonaparte, a descendant of Napoleon and a keen antiquary.

A year before Dolly's death a  sixty'five year old Mousehole fisherman called William Bodener wrote to Daines Barrington saying "there is not more than four or five in our town can talk Cornish now old people four-score years old . Cornish is all forgot with young people".

Information courtesy of Ian Soulsby
Lowena Mor
PZ 47