Welcome to Through the Gaps, the UK fishing industry's most comprehensive information and image resource. Newlyn is England's largest fish market and where over 50 species are regularly landed from handline, trawl, net, ring net and pot vessels including #MSC Certified #Hake, #Cornish Sardine, handlined bass, pollack and mackerel. Art work, graphics and digital fishing industry images available from stock or on commission.
Friday 27 March 2015
Feast on fish because it's #FishyFriday!
Some subtle pinks in the sky first thing this morning in the Bay area...
while the harbour took on more sombre raw umber tones...
with the weather fine most of the boats are mid-trip...
with just the Lisa...
and the Trevessai...
going up for auction...
thought there were some cracking hake from the netter Stelissa...
and a trickle of fish from the inshore boats...
keeping the guys busy...
probably the top fishroom man in the port sails on the Lisa, their fish always looks stunning...
and keeps the buyers smiling...
Tom on watch at the break of day.
Met line #tubechallenge for Penlee Lifeboat is today!
There's a tenuous word connection between Newlyn and the Underground Challenge - in Newlyn the Penlee lifeboat goes in and and out through the gaps - on the underground the tube challengers will be told many times during the day to 'mind the gap' as they wait to board their next train.
We have decided to attempt this as we know it will be a massive undertaking.To visit all 270 underground stations on the day is no mean feat. Call us insane but this is not just a half hearted challenge, 18hrs running for trains, between stations and climbing many stairs, needs alot of planning and will power on the day. Most of you will still be in bed as we leave on the 5.15am train from Chesham...... whatever you can give will be so gratefully received x
We are supporting the R.N.L.I Penlee appeal as it is one close to our hearts.They need a new lifeboat station. The one they have is too old and too small.
Newlyn is thriving fishing port supplying fish all over the Country and Europe, whilst most of us don't think twice before tucking into fish and chips, the brave fishermen and women have to endure horrendous conditions to catch it! And without the help of the brave volunteers of Penlee Lifeboat there would be far more lost souls at sea.
Last year alone - 59 launches, 6 lives saved, 70 assisted, 331 hours at sea, 24 services in the dark...
This is an extremely tough challenge, but we feel this is such a worthwhile cause. Please give generously to support our 4th Emergency Service whose help ensures the sea is a far safer place for those that use it for either business or pleasure.
Thursday 26 March 2015
'St. Mary of the Sea' - mid-water trawling in the Channel
On board the trawler "The St. Mary of the Sea", off Tréport, following day and night physically demanding work and Jacky, Momo, Rudy and the other fishermen filmed by Cyril Badet.
Work is physical, rest of short duration, but the sailors of the trawler St Mary of the Sea fish well and like this job. They say in this beautiful reportage 35 minutes directed by photographer-reporter Cyril Badet, welcomed aboard for a five-day spill off Tréport.
Mackerel waves we see it, and sometimes sardines, pour the trawl. Once worked and sorted, the fish is glazed and is crated and regularly landed at the écoreur Unipêche in Boulogne-sur-Mer.
Every gesture of fishing, but also life on board (the family initially refueling, square meals, couches) are well shown through this documentary, which enjoys beautiful lights day night, and well paced plans and set to music. With direct and simple testimony boss Sebastian Sagot, captain of St. Mary of the Sea for 13 years, as his second mechanic and Jean-Philippe, Jacky and his crew, Johanny, Rudy and Sebastian.
And once will not hurt, the ship provides rewards but also the champion of safety: we like to see all the way helmets and PFDs worn by sailors! The documentary also shows that fishing is controlled with a visit on board Maritime Affairs when landing.
Sailors from Sainte-Marie has been featured in Riantec March 20 as part of the Film Festival Fishermen of the World.
How the Under 10s fare - one man's view.
On the back of the MMO's consultation on simplifying licences today are a summary of the 28 responses they received:
From the MMO to the very people for whom this has most effect - an inshore fisherman.
This impassioned plea from an Under 10m fisherman begs a number of pertinent questions for the MMO - not least of which is an acknowledgement of the role they now play in maintaining the social and economic fabric of many small coastal communities - it's as well to remember, for every one fisherman there are seven jobs dependent on that fisherman ashore.
We received 28 responses to this consultation.
Most respondents supported the proposals in the consultation. We are therefore planning to implement the changes proposed in the consultation. This means moving to a single licence category for over 10 metre vessels and another for vessels of 10 metres and under. Any under 10 metre licence that has been capped will remain capped. Where current licences hold additional permissions (for example shellfish permits) these will be carried forward onto the new licence. We will also:
- extend the lifetime of fishing vessel licences indefinitely
- remove the lifetime of entitlements
- remove capacity penalties
- remove the mismatch rule
The Marine Management Organisation will provide licence holders with further details of the changes before they come into force.
From the MMO to the very people for whom this has most effect - an inshore fisherman.
This impassioned plea from an Under 10m fisherman begs a number of pertinent questions for the MMO - not least of which is an acknowledgement of the role they now play in maintaining the social and economic fabric of many small coastal communities - it's as well to remember, for every one fisherman there are seven jobs dependent on that fisherman ashore.
"It appears that when the discard ban comes in they will increase quotas to partly make up for the discards, so why can't they increase quotas for the Under 10s who never received a fair quota allocation in the first place? Why should the Under 10s be capped with so called 'latent' capacity when they have the ability to increase discard quotas?
The Concise Oxford Dictionary, LATENT = DORMANT
So, if a fisherman is fishing on a regular basis his licence has not become 'latent'. The MMO's interpretation of Latent Capacity is to steal it off some boats and gift (monopoly) it to other boats so as to try to rectify their past mistakes
Have other EU Member States capped so called LATENT CAPACITY because they never issued or allocated the quotas correctly in the first place. LATENT CAPACITY is when a fisherman never goes fishing at all, if a fisherman is fishing on a regular basis then he is using his licence entitlement as in accordance with running his business in the way that he wants and can diversify into other fisheries when necessary.
To have some of his licence entitlement STOLEN off him under the guise of LATENT CAPACITY just so the MMO can try and rectify their past mistakes is unjustifiable and down right despicable. WHY are the over 10s and POs not having their so called LATENT CAPACITY sorted out as well?
Prejudice and discrimination towards the under 10's prevails. I believe it's just a ploy to get rid of inshore fishermen so as to glean more revenue out of aggregate, wind farm and tidal energy industries. The MMO also want to STEAL shellfish entitlement to make up for the fact that they have never introduced national quotas or pot limitations - another deplorable act.
HOW are the MMO going to take into account the Social and Economic wellbeing of small scale local fishing communities when this is set on a course for ruination and destruction?
MMO, how can you sleep at night?"
Their careers and their futures depend on attacking fishermen and fishing. What more can we expect from them?
Nils Stope's latest article from across the Atlantic - where in many respects they are ahead of us in the game - forewarned is forearmed.
@There are people who don’t like fishing. There are people who don’t like anyone who isn’t a vegan. There are people who don’t like progress. There are people who don’t like efficiency. There are people who don’t like to thoroughly research issues. There are people who don’t like technology. There are people who don’t like competition. There are people who don’t like people. There are people who don’t like the truth. There are people who don’t like whatever they’re paid not to like.
Let’s say that you shared a number of these traits and you were in search of what would be to you a rewarding career. Could you do much better than becoming an anti-fishing activist?
From the outside it appears as if the anti-fishing world is a world in which you can indulge your dislikes, inadequacies, frustrations and greed with impunity. And it appears as if the more effectively you do so, the greater your success in climbing the ENGO/foundation bureaucratic ladder.
When I was a lot younger and a lot more naïve I thought that anti-fishing activists were sincerely (though misguidedly) interested in the fish and in the fishermen, and that their goal was healthy fish and healthy fisheries. Their overriding concern with what they termed overfishing and their claimed aim of sustainable fisheries seemed, at least to the average unsophisticated and impressionable folks who are blind to what goes on under the ocean’s surface, sensible and to a limited extent defensible.
But, since “overfishing” is no longer considered to be a problem in U.S. waters, some members of the anti-fishing cadre are branching out with their campaigns in every imaginable direction. As long as it has to do with catching fish they are doing whatever they can to maintain and increase the anti-fishing momentum that they have built up, and they are doing so regardless of the cost of their efforts in terms of fishing community survival and personal economic hardship.
Emblematic of this is their purposeful confusion in the public’s collective eye of the term “sustainable,” a perfectly acceptable – though often unattainable because of anthropogenic or natural environmental perturbations - condition in which a natural harvest can be maintained year by year.
Generally sustainability is a good thing. Barring extenuating economic or social factors it is a goal that our fisheries managers should be and in fact have been striving for. Today, considering the fact that overfishing isn’t happening and the stocks aren’t being overfished in just about all of our major fisheries, one could term virtually all of our commercial fisheries sustainable (and the few that aren’t, exemplified by New England’s Atlantic cod, aren’t so not because of fishing but because of changing ocean conditions).
So the anti-fishing activists, and in all likelihood the foundations that sustain them, have been at work for years convincing the public and the pols that “sustainable” actually means something more in the neighborhood of “natural” or “undisturbed.”
Consider how ridiculous a concept that is. According to these people the world’s fisheries, which produce about a fifth of the animal protein that sustains humanity, are supposed to be conducted in a manner that has no impact on the “natural” environment. Consider the other major sources of animal protein: pigs, cattle, chicken and goats. Can you imagine any meaningful production (in terms of a world population of seven billion and still growing) of any of them without severe modifications of the environment? Yet our expectations have been raised to this level in our supposed quest for sustainable fisheries.
Why is this? We inarguably have more fish swimming around in our coastal and offshore waters than we have had in over a generation. We inarguably have a federal regulatory system for our fisheries that guarantees against overfishing and guarantees for sustainability. In spite of this, these activists aren’t moving on to other areas in ocean management where they can continue to exercise those abilities that made them – at least in their own minds – effective at solving the overfishing problems.
I certainly wouldn’t attempt to estimate how the minds of these people work or to try to suggest why they do what they do, but one of the things that I try to keep in mind is that they are all part of a very successful “save the oceans” bureaucracy, a bureaucracy which works hand in glove with an equally successful federal “manage the oceans” bureaucracy.
The ties joining these two bureaucracies today go back to the very earliest days of the Obama administration. In fact, Obama’s first inauguration was on January 20 of 2009 while on January 12-14 the Meridian Institute and the Monterrey Bay Aquarium held a workshop titled Setting Ocean Priorities for the New Administration and Congress.
From FishTruth.net, one of my websites (http://www.fishtruth.net/ ObamaPriorities.htm):
“The title says almost all you need to know. The participant list, after a little research, says all of the rest.
The workshop lists sixty-five participants and thirteen staff. Of the participants, at least 75% can be directly tied to at least one of the four mega-foundations that are leading the anti-fishing movement. All four of the participants from the commercial fishing industry are tied to at least one of the four mega-foundations as is the sole participant from the recreational fishing industry. Of the fourteen participants with no discoverable - at this point - ties to the mega-foundations, two are from the offshore energy industry, seven are from research oriented institutions which, if not receiving funding from one of the four mega-foundations at this point, will certainly have their institutional hands out in the future, one is from a California state agency (no one who is familiar with what state government is doing to fishermen in California is going to find any comfort in that - see http://www.fishtruth.net/MLPA.htm) and the other is from NOAA (ditto on a national level). Of the remaining three, one is from the travel and tourism industry, one is from the reinsurance industry and one is from the aquaculture industry. Oh yes, two participants are now in high leadership positions at NOAA.
All of the staff for the workshop are directly tied to funding from the four mega-foundations.
Is it any wonder that the Obama administration is completely out of touch with commercial, recreational and party/charter fishermen? All of the fisheries advice its members have been getting is being controlled by hundreds of millions of dollars’ worth of funding from four foundations with inarguable track records in putting fishermen of every stripe out of work and off the water.
It’s important to note here that Sally Yozell, who was with the Nature Conservancy at the time of the workshop, is now NOAA's Director of Policy and Senior Advisor to the Under Secretary of Commerce for Oceans and Atmosphere (http://www.gulfbase.org/ person/view.php?uid=syozell) and Monica Medina, then with Pew Environment Group, is now Principal Deputy Undersecretary for Oceans and Atmosphere at NOAA (http://www.noaa.gov/medina. html).
What a happy six years for so many of those folks who I characterized in the first paragraph! It doesn’t matter that overfishing in U.S. waters is no longer a concern. It doesn’t matter that increasing ocean temperatures are affecting the “sustainability” of our fisheries to a much greater extent that overfishing ever has. It doesn’t matter that they are increasingly focused on what are nothing more than token fishing issues like saving deepwater corals, saving forage fish, completely eliminating bycatch or protecting huge areas of natural ocean through Marine Protected Areas (which are generally protected only from fishing). The sum total is fewer fish landed and at greater cost to the fishermen every year.
Consider two current campaigns. One is to ban the sale of bluefin tuna in New York City. The activists who are politically pushing this ban know full well that thanks to years of stringent management measures by U.S. fishermen the bluefin tuna stock on our side of the Atlantic Ocean has recovered from overfishing and there is a healthy, well regulated and totally legal fishery for them. So their campaign has shifted to ban the sale of these fish in select markets. The other is to ban the possession or sale of shark fins on a state-by-state basis. Ostensibly this is to prevent the removal of fins from sharks at sea and the disposal/waste of the carcass. Again, the activists behind this campaign know that shark fins must be landed with carcasses by U.S. fishermen, that the fins are a part of every permitted shark fishery and that making it illegal to possess or sell the fins will do nothing more than take money out of permitted shark fishermen’s pockets. These are legitimate and sustainable fisheries and each is controlled by stringent and effective regulations. Yet this isn’t enough for the anti-fishing activists and that’s simply because they don’t have anything else to do.
The bucks keep rolling in, the misinformation those bucks buy continues to influence the public and the non-coastal politicians, the lawsuits those bucks fund continue to put our fishermen out of business, the anti-fishing bureaucracies continue to grow and the anti-fishing salaries continue to increase.
Is it any wonder that 90% of the seafood consumed in the United States is imported?
The Associated Press just ran a report on a year-long investigation into slavery in foreign fisheries (Are slaves catching the fish you buy? by Robin McDowell, Margie Mason and Martha Mendoza at http://bigstory.ap.org/ article/ b9e0fc7155014ba78e07f1a022d903 89/ap-investigation-are- slaves-catching-fish-you-buy). It’s kind of amazing but sadly understandable that when inhumane treatment of fishermen is taking place in countries that are apparently exporting fish to our domestic markets, and with our fisheries in such good shape, the ENGOs - and the mega foundations that are funding them? - remain so focused on our fisheries and our fishermen.
Spending time at regional Fisheries Management Council meetings in places like San Diego, Seattle, New York City and Charlestown, is definitely much more enjoyable – and orders of magnitude safer – than documenting inhumane treatment of fishermen in Benjina, Indonesia. And it seems like it would be infinitely easier to steam roller small domestic fishing companies than to try to deal with major U.S. corporations (from the AP article: “tainted fish can wind up in the supply chains of some of America's major grocery stores, such as Kroger, Albertsons and Safeway; the nation's largest retailer, Wal-Mart; and the biggest food distributor, Sysco”).
From: Their careers and their futures depend on attacking fishermen and fishing.
Spending time at regional Fisheries Management Council meetings in places like San Diego, Seattle, New York City and Charlestown, is definitely much more enjoyable – and orders of magnitude safer – than documenting inhumane treatment of fishermen in Benjina, Indonesia. And it seems like it would be infinitely easier to steam roller small domestic fishing companies than to try to deal with major U.S. corporations (from the AP article: “tainted fish can wind up in the supply chains of some of America's major grocery stores, such as Kroger, Albertsons and Safeway; the nation's largest retailer, Wal-Mart; and the biggest food distributor, Sysco”).
From: Their careers and their futures depend on attacking fishermen and fishing.
What more can we expect from them?
FishNet USA/October 9, 2014
Nils E. Stolpe
Wednesday 25 March 2015
Another Spring-like morning greets the Bay
Work to replace the handrail causes the prom to be shut off from the public still...
the lights having survived a winter almost free from severe storms...
away across te Bay in Newlyn the Tranquility heads out through the gaps...
past the Mount...
to steam south on her way to the fishing grounds...
it's not just the boats going south...
on the fish market there's always...
coming alongside to take on gear...
done and dusted by five past six with all of fifteen boxes on the market this morning...
the grading machine waits for another day...
as the sun finally shows its face...
looks like a good day for painting the crabber Chris Tacha...
and anyone else planning on being at sea...
on the fourth day of Spring...
the morning sun highlights the original names of some of the boats in the fleet like the visiting Dutch beamer Calypso...
and the Louisa N...
while the ex-Concarneau trawler turned giller netter still boasts her crest...
ahead of the patriotic Karen of Ladram...
with her more simple Cornish cross on her bow...
no need for the big wagon to haul FalFish's auction purchases this morning...
a few more hours and the quay will be empty again...
and give Tom something to look after.
Newlyn's old timer, the Excellent.
The fishing vessel Excellent, now the oldest in the Stevenson fleet could be bought for £1 - a real piece of British maritime history with clandestine voyages during WWII to the coast of Norway just some of her incredible past adventures.
History
Built in 1931 by J & G Forbes of Sandhaven, the EFFICIENT was a 75ft wooden fishing vessel with a cruiser stern, fitted with a 160hp Petter Atomic diesel for the Ritchie Brothers of Rosehearty. Her two stroke Petter diesel was economical and gave her a speed of more than 11 knots.
Registered at More
Significance
EXCELLENT served as part of the Stevenson’s fleet for over 70 years. She has had three major engine changes and has been rebuilt twice. The changes in her reflect the changing needs of the fishing industry over this period. She is a very good example of a vessel which has been progressively modernised to enable her to remain commercially viable.
Her wartime service has still to be fully researched but is believed to include clandestine trips to Norway. Apart from her hull with its distinctive cruiser stern little remains to show her origins.
She is the only vessel in Newlyn with a crow's nest - in fact, both for and aft masts are fitted with them - who knows why?
Previous names
- 1931 – 1946Efficient
Key dates
- 1937 Bought by Stevenson's of Newlyn
- 1941-1945 Requisitioned by the Admiralty
Bibliography
- 1932 The Motor Boat Full page advertisement by Petters of Yeovil
- 1988 Lost Ships of the West Country - Langley, M and Small, E
- 1995 Olsen's Fisherman's Nautical Almanack 1995
- 1997 The English Welsh and Northern Ireland Fishing Vessel List as at 30 June 1997 - Ministry of Agriculture Fisheries and Food
- 1997 Classic Boat High, Wide and Mighty
- 1998 Classic Boat Seven Days at the Hake
- 1998 Olsen's Fisherman's Nautical Almanack 1998
- 2001 Growing up with Boats - Stevenson, William
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