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Friday, 16 January 2015

Second print run for Salt of the Earth as sales soar to over £21,000.


With a second print run needed for the book, Salt of the Earth - here's a candid look at the behind-the-scenes action in how the photographs for the 200 plus black and white images of the fishermen and their families, co-workers and friends in the book were created by master portrait photographer David Penprase and his wife Jan.

All proceeds form the book go to the Royal National mission for Deep Sea Fishermen which operates nationally in the UK with branches in all the major ports- copies can be bought im many shops in Newlyn, Mousehole and Porthleven or ordered online here.

#EatMoreFish on #FishyFriday

How is your #FishyFriday


Clean sweep of the departures board as auction ace Ian adds the latest departures and arrivals information...


with fish in short supply again some merchants have become very protective over their purchases...


with bass making top dollar this morning...


the fish need to be sent away as quick as possible...


the fleet will be looking to get away today...


so the boxes are ready to go aboard...


and the decks are clear...


away in the distance Go Fot It makes her way to the gaps...


while the HGV trucks which make up the superb network of transport link with Newlyn swing into action.



Thursday, 15 January 2015

There's weather everywhere!


This was the wind speed at the Sevenstones Lightship off Land's End last night...


and here at the other end of the country some 800 miles away is the view from the office window of the Reliance II some 8 miles north of Peterhead on her way back out to the fishing grounds - much the same story either  end of the country it seems - #EatMoreFish we say!

Wednesday, 14 January 2015

Call to prayer




Heads bowed in earnest contemplation as high prices.....


  on a market floor almost devoid of fish...



concentrate the minds of the buyers this morning...



over a few boxes of mackerel...



bass...



and hake from the Ajax...



are swiftly sold and rushed from the market floor...



while the netter Silver Dawn is lit up...



 by the searchlights of the Berlewen laying astern of her...



the harbour remains full of boats...



waiting for the poor weather to pass.

Does the size of a boat matter?

From The Journal:

THE SECOND LARGEST trawler in the world, previously banned from Australian waters, is back off the coast of Ireland – and it has some in the industry concerned.

The 143 metre long Margiris is currently sailing along the north coast of Mayo, having entered the Irish European Economic Zone on 7 January. It can process as much as 250 tonnes of fish per day. The ship has sailed under a range of names, including the Abel Tasman and Annelies Ilena, and various nationalities. The vessel is currently being kept under the watchful eye of the Sea-Fisheries Protection Authority, assisted by the Naval Service and Air Corps.

“A basic principle of the EU Common Fisheries Policy is shared access for all EU vessels to all EU waters,” a spokesperson for the authority explained.

Source: VesselTracker
“As a European registered fishing vessel, the Lithuanian registered vessel the Margiris is permitted to operate in any European waters and can fish in any area and retain on board any fish  for which it has a nationally assigned European quota.

It was the target of an Australian ban on so-called supertrawlers in 2012. The ban was extended just before Christmas to smaller ships, The Australian reports. Local fishing groups have previously expressed grave concern over ships like Margiris, which has far created capacity than many smaller boats combined, when it arrived off the west coast in March last year, soon after the ship was reportedly again refused entry to Australia.

Quotas

Francis O’Donnell from the Irish Fish Producers’ Organisation said last night there are issues surrounding the quotas assigned to these vessels.

“The enforcement agencies know that they have quota to be there, or at least they think they do, but they actually don’t know what the quota available to these ships is,” he told TheJournal.ie.
“From an enforcement perspective, it’s a real problem. It’s totally unacceptable.”

O’Donnell stressed that there is no evidence to suggest the ship has been behaving illegally. He said is believed it may be fishing for horse mackerel.

Full story courtesy of the Journal.

Newlyn boy through and through - Jack Nowell's Newlyn roots


Great rugby games are full of passion - the story of England rugby boy Jack Nowell tells of his early days on the hallowed grass of Mennaye Fields, home to what was the Penzance & Newlyn rugby team - "The Pirates" to the rest of the world!

Tuesday, 13 January 2015

Does the size of a boat matter?


Here's a great post on the NFFO website from Jersey small boat skipper, Don Thompson who discusses whether small boat fishermen get the representation they deserve - the lack of which undoubtedly led to last year's quota debacle when some inshore fishermen and fishing businesses were pushed to the point of collapse or beyond.



One comment stands out in his post:
"Few fisheries’ managers and decision makers are aware of the catastrophic impact to a small boat fisherman, of having access denied to just a single species, when that particular fish may represent his income for the next 6 or 8 weeks".
Ed comment: Sharing information and often with MMO staff at every level is a must if situations like last year are not to be repeated with blanket bans on the landing of skate, ray and other fish impacting so disastrously on some fishing communities who are totally reliant on single species at some times during the year.

For the full story read here: