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Monday, 9 June 2014

Picture Puzzle




Through the rectangular window today - but which boat?

Magnifique Monday mainly megrim and monk





Anatomy of an inshore trawl - the two heavy rubber discs or 'bobbins' are the beginning of the trawl footrope - they provide the heavy protection for the rest of the trawl as it is dragged along the bottom...



plenty of big blondes (ray) on the market this morning...



pristine white underside of a turbot, to fish for the top table...



sometimes turbot have the upper side pigment on their underside...



the little know Lapin fish is a rare visitor to Cornish waters...



many monk...



and megrim made up a huge trip for the Twilight III...



including a few boxes of langoustine meaning she must have been fishing to the north east of the Scillies...



the paint job is looking good on the little girl of the port.

Sunday, 8 June 2014

Sunny Swanage by the Sea


Maybe not so sunny on this farm...


first job in the morning for the deck chair attendant is to tempt the trippers into hiring deck chairs...


very popular with the motorcycle and scooter clubs especially from London...


and a mecca for diving in very clear water...

while some take the easy option, bare feet and a good book on Swanage Pier.

Saturday, 7 June 2014

Launching Swanage style


With strong easterly winds piling seaweed up in Swanage Bay in previous days most of the boats were pulled up the slipway out of the water. To get the boat back requires a long rope, a single pulley block and a land rover in 4 -wheel drive mode.

Friday, 6 June 2014

#FishyFriday in Newlyn




Demonstrating its position as the provider of more variety of fish than any other UK port...


lovely langostine...


controversial conger...(see the stamps debacle)...


hooray for the ray...


best banging bass...


even lobster...


always popular with the media...


not forgetting the 'ansum 'ake...


even more rays of sunshine...


delicious Dory...


pristine blondes...




magnifique megrims...


caught by these guys...


not forgetting the even more controversial cod of course...



getting the measuring treatment...



last but not least the mini-monk tails...


and at last the Council have set the diggers at work to restore Newlyn Green!



#FishyFriday Fishy facts indeed - to use a well worn cliche #eatmorefish

"Andrew Hammond, a Royal Mail spokesperson, added: “With the majority of the world’s fish stocks currently fully-exploited or over-exploited this is a key issue of concern. We hope this stamp issue goes some way to helping people make informed choices about sustainability and contribute to the discussion about the conservation of UK fish stocks.”
 Alongside the new stamps, Royal Mail will be releasing the findings from research to understand the attitudes and gauge the knowledge of sustainable fishing amongst the British public."
Quite how the Royal Mail thinks a set of stamps will inform - as in 'educate' - a largely ignorant public (of the true nature of fish stocks and fish stocks assessment) must be beyond the ken of most fishermen in the UK. In the minds of most people, stamps are primarily used to indicate that the correct revenue has been paid in order for the Royal Mail to deliver items for postage - not to reliably indicate whether or not that fish supper they were just about to purchase is from sustainable stocks or not - and since when did anyone in the UK shop for sturgeon or wolffish? Neither Tesco, Morrisons, Lidl, Sainsburys, Asda, M&S or the good old Co-operative offer either of these fish on their fish counters within easy reach of Newlyn - the port that lands the widest variety of fish in the UK on a regular basis bar none!
Barrie Deas, @NFFO_UK chief exec of the National Fishermen's Federation was incensed by the stamp issue - and rightly so as the organisation was not even contacted by the Royal mail or the group tasked with coming up with selecting and designing the stamps - good to see the 'Royal' warrant applied so vigorously in support of our British fishing industry - sadly, even more ironic given their role on this historic day 60 years on from D-Day.
The newly privatised company said the stamps were issued to celebrate, “the beauty of marine fish as well as providing guidance and encouragement to consumers on how to conserve UK fisheries”
The dreary dab
Let's hope the stamps achieve great value as collectors items rather than finding their way into the public conscience as educational tools - though quite how the dab ever met the designer's brief for a displaying the 'beauty' of fish will only leave fishermen doubly perplexed - for dab read drab - probably the drabbest fish in the sea!

Royal Mail fish stamp set issue - but who is more threatened - the fish or the fishermen?


Three of the fishy stamps that went on sale yesterday to the public are worthy of further discussion on how helpful or unhelpful the stamps are in informing the public as to the state of fish stocks in UK waters - if that was the intention?






Skate along with spurdogs were taken off the catch register a while back - "The Commission has proposed setting total allowable catch (TAC) for spiny dogfish (or "spurdog") and porbeagle sharks at zero and prohibiting fishermen from keeping angel sharks, common skates, undulate rays or white skates."

In the mixed fisheries of the waters off Cornwall these fish and others currently banned will soon gain prominence when the 'nil discards' rules are introduced and boats are forced to keep them on board and land them.

Several Newlyn boats including the Govenek of Ladram have been involved in stock assessment for skate - the results are a long time in making their way to the quota discussion table however...




Conger eel are a case in point - landings in the UK are almost non-existent with good reason - the price fetched by these fish in the UK is very low despite its great eating qualities - and for that reason boats do not fish specifically for conger eel - they are caught and landed on the market in Newlyn mainly by beam trawlers fishing near to wrecks and patches of hard ground - the preferred habitat of these boisterous fish - there are now no boats that specifically fish for conger at any time during the year as there once were - hard to see how eating onger caught off Cornwall is in any way a threat!