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Saturday, 7 February 2015

At the end of the day


At the end of the day for Newlyn's biggest crabber the Emma Louise...



it's time to tie up and head for home...


leaving the harbour set for the weekend.

Project Fishface



“Project Fishface - Taking advantage of cheap HD video cameras to allow fishers to improve local stock assessments, to demonstrate sustainability and food quality handling to open new markets and ~ ultimately ~ have better tools to analyse their own data, compare this anonymously with the typical performance of others, optimise gear working and maintenance, and keep ownership of their data and the commercial use thereof forever …”

Cornish boat builders - Treeve Boats, Hayle


Truro College film student's first try at documentary with great support and help from Cornwall Film Festival and Truro College. 

Treeve are renowned locally for their care and attention to detail when it comes to building small boats for inshore fishermen.

Friday, 6 February 2015

Live from UEA tomorrow - Introduction to Oceanography

Introduction to Oceanography


An great Introduction to Oceanography workshop and conference is being run this weekend at the University of East Anglia. Led by renowned resident oceanographer Carol Robinson and of interest to fishermen and many others the weekend course will be livestreamed - using the timetable below watch and listen to the presentations as they happen:

https://portal.uea.ac.uk/learning-technology/studio-technology/uea-live-streams/introduction-to-oceanography


SATURDAY 7 February 2015


09.00 Course introduction and aim Carol Robinson

09.15 Development of oceanography & marine technology Carol Robinson

10.00 Introduction to physical oceanography Rob Hall

13.30 Introduction to chemical oceanography Tim Jickells

14.15 Introduction to biological oceanography Carol Robinson

15.15 ‘“How good was the vis?” –  the science of underwater light, and a start on DIY by oceanography Rodney Forster

16:00 How to be a scientific diver Rodney Forster



SUNDAY 8 February 2015


09.00 Marine biology: from plankton to fishes and fisheries  Simon Jennings

09:45 Effects of increasing temperature and carbon dioxide Carol Robinson

13:30 Antarctic oceanography & marine biology Simon Morley

14.30 Seasearch East  Rob Spray

15.35 Marine conservation Simon Jennings

16.20 Open forum / course evaluation Carol Robinson


Those taking part include:


Carol Robinson

I am a marine biogeochemist working at the University of East Anglia. My research focuses on how the growth of marine plankton affects the cycling of oxygen and carbon dioxide in seawater and the atmosphere. I learnt to dive with Newcastle University Sub-Aqua Club in order to see for myself the underwater environment that I was learning about in lectures. I later became a BSAC National Instructor, and have also undertaken some scientific diving in the Antarctic, Aegean and Atlantic. Although now a mere ‘armchair diver’, I’m still passionate about understanding and conserving the marine

environment. My professional webpage is : https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/carol-robinson carol.robinson@uea.ac.uk @CarolRobinson8

I am a physical oceanographer working at the University of East Anglia. My research is on internal waves and internal tides, their interactions with complex topography such as submarine canyons, and their effect on turbulent mixing, biogeochemical fluxes, and primary productivity. I learnt to dive in Fiji during my gap year before going to university. Although I haven’t dived in a few years, I am a keen kayak fisherman and have spent many hours adrift on the seas around Norfolk and Hawaii.

https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/robert-hall


Tim Jickells

I am an environmental chemist whose research particularly involves work on the scale and impact of atmospheric deposition on the oceans and on coastal nutrient cycling. I’ve been involved in field work from Iceland to Antarctica. I began my working life in Scotland with the Clyde River Purification Board (now part of SEPA) before moving to Bermuda for 7 years working on coastal pollution and ocean biogeochemistry. I learnt to dive in Bermuda and was involved in both recreational and scientific diving. I returned to the UK and UEA in 1985 and have been here ever since, and have never returned to diving in our temperate waters! 

https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/t-jickells


Rodney Forster

http://www2.hull.ac.uk/science/iecs/about-iecs/staff/dr-rodney-forster.aspx


Simon Jennings

I‘m a marine scientist and adviser on marine environmental management working at the Centre for Environment, Fisheries and Aquaculture Science in Lowestoft. Most of my work focuses on marine ecology, fisheries and biodiversity. I learnt to dive in the turbid Firth of Forth with the Scottish Sub-Aqua Club and later became a BSAC First Class diver/ Advanced Instructor before moving into scientific diving, especially fish census work, as well as some cave diving. Although no longer active as a diver I keep a keen interest in the topic and a lot of increasingly obsolete gear in the garage. My professional

webpage is : https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/simon-jennings

Simon Morley

I am a marine biologist working at the British Antarctic Survey. My research focuses on how marine invertebrates have evolved to different environments. By understanding the mechanisms by which changes in temperature, light and food availability affect these animals, I aim to predict their vulnerability to future conditions. My professional web page is:

http://www.antarctica.ac.uk/about_bas/contact/staff/profile/SimonMorley/personal/

Rob is an active conservation survey diver with Seasearch and runs courses on marine life identification and underwater photography. He has recently retired from BT Research after 24 years in TV and Cinema technology. Rob regularly gives talks on Seasearch diving around East

Anglia, as well as diving and marine life around the world. See http://www.1townhouses.co.uk/

It's a ffffffffffffffreeeeezing #FishyFriday here in Newlyn!


#FishyFriday 's market is full of fish...


keeping the data collection team busy on the market...


more tall tails...


the eyes have it...


won by a short nose...


and staying in the black as the cuttle catches drop away...


the biggest landing of the day reserved for the 180 boxes...


of hake...


from the Govenek of Ladram...


with good prices keeping the buyers on their toes and warm...


with a good mix of whitefish to go with the hake...


a good mix of sizes...


with the bulk of the hake catch around the 2-3 kilo range...


a bit like the woman of sailors of yore, a box in every port...


those cuttles leave their mark and a few hours work washing down every day...


down the quay the latest boat in the fleet is nearly ready to sail...


while visiting Brixgam beamer Harvester takes shelter overnight...


with her 3m trawls for close inshore work...


there's a full moon setting this morning over Chywoone hill...



Sapphire II, one of the big beamers that landed this morning.


Wednesday, 4 February 2015

Missing Belgian fishing vessel wreck located

The missing Belgian fishing vessel, which lost comms in the channel last week (Wed 28th January), was located today by a survey vessel. The Dutch authorities have sent a Royal Netherlands Navy warship the ‘HNLMS Luymes’ to the fishing vessel wreck location. On board the warship is a diving team and a Dutch police officer, which is standard procedure for missing people. Two officers from the Belgian shipping inspection, which is in charge of the investigation, are also on-board the warship. HNLMS Luymes is expected to arrive on scene tomorrow morning.



The Belgian fishing vessel that went missing last week with the loss of four lives was located off the Hastings coast by survey vessel.  HNLMS Luymes has arrived over the position...



 of the wreck today...


and is reported to be using ROV devices to survey.




Inshore fisherman tracked across the Channel! #eatlessfish ;-)


Which canny inshore fisherman was tracked over the course of 282 days?  Not content with just fishing the inshore waters off Holland, Belgium and France but traversing the channel to fish the coasts of Kent, Essex, Suffolk and even as far north as Norfolk.

Was he English? Dutch? Belgian French? - this pirate of the Channel holds no passport and operates blissfully unaware of the CFPO's quotas for all the species that he catches and often discards all but the best part of the fish he catches despite fishing well inside the 12 mile limit of four EU countries!


His latin name would be Halichoerus grypus, translated to English as the 'Hook-nosed sea pig' - known to fisherman the world over as the common grey seal. On average they consume 5Kg of fish per day unless breeding.