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Sunday 10 April 2016

Mount's Bay in a gale - Penlee lifeboat makes a dash through heavy breaking seas off Newlyn.


An hour after high water on one of the biggest tides of the year and the slip-road leading to the Abbey Hotel is still awash...


the netters will be grateful for once they are not at sea in some inclement weather...


likewise, a good day for the Scillonian III not to be sailing for the Scillys...


as Penzance wet dock gets a good soaking from another anonymous but damaging storm...


that lashes the promenade in Penzance...


though for a change there are no wave-dodgers today...


though the gulls on Nelwyn Green have taken to the air as another heavy gust lifts them high over the beach...


it's not all spray from the heavy seas as the St Georges gets a good powerwash...


all hands mustered on the afterdeck of 17-34, Penlee's relief lifeboat as it prepares...


to head out through the gaps on Sunday morning exercise...


with a quick blast of the exhausts past Mousehole island...


the strong wind keeps the Penlee lifeboat station flag stiff in the southeasterly breeze...


bringing heavy seas to the back of the quay...


that wash away and meet the incoming seas...


giving them extra lift...


before they rush ahead...


and pound the harbour wall...


again and again...


local film, poet, visual artist and photographer Adam Gibbard lines up for a shot of the...


lifeboat as she heads...


for the gaps...


just before another huge sea crashes against the harbour wall...


spilling into the harbour...


probably a good day to fly a big kite - or stay indoors with the fire lit and a hot mug of tea or something stronger.

Saturday 9 April 2016

Art and other constructive creativity in Newlyn.


Enjoy chronically addictive coffee in the Newlyn Gallery cafe with a view better than Tom's...



imbibe some of Newlyn's best and purest art from portraitist, Jason Walker and seascapistPaul Lewin...



and son of a fisherman and Newlyn Art School tutor, Sam Basset's whose work harks back to his childhood days 'up Consuls' playing with boats (what else?)...



quay damage, much like the 'cement box' repair used to stop a ship from sinking...


the new shellfish shed down the Stone quay is in full flood...


Scillys boats in town for a day or two...


once upon a time there was a harbour crane in Newlyn, now you would neer know it was there.

Friday 8 April 2016

April #FishyFriday showers


 Myghal made ready to dry out on the hard so that she can have her hull cleaned of weed which can take 2-3 knots off the speed of a boat owing to the increased drag in the water...


a couple of beam trawlers and a handful of day boat inshore fish on the market this morning as big tides prevent many boats from working safely...


just the one bass for the Lisa...


along with a good selection of lemons and monk...


big Spring tides mean no fishing for the netters...


so the buyers are busy at the other end of the market with fish from the Sapphire II...


and her monk tails...


there's something missing from the harbour skyline this morning...


the Galilee rides high at high water...


as do the Nowell girls...


and Girl Kim of course...


well and truly out of the water is the beam trawler St Georges now up on the slip - she can only go on the slip over the bigger Spring tides...


looking east...


one of the netters waiting for the tides to drop...


sporting her new company colours...


the Innisfallen inshore trawler...


the three Ns...


all set for a bass-free angling season...


the dawn peepeth through...


better safe than sorry...


the work of master craftsmen...


keeping things quiet...


just a few more planks to go...



all that is left of the iconic harbour crane...


great skies for any watercolourists this morning...



enjoy a panoramic view of the pontoon berths this morning - might take a while to load!

Wednesday 6 April 2016

New blueprints for managing Europe’s fisheries

The EU-funded MYFISH project has created economically, socially and environmentally sustainable multiannual management plans for Europe’s fisheries.

The EU’s Common Fisheries Policy pledges to provide EU citizens with a long term, sustainable, secure and healthy food supply. But managing Europe’s fisheries is a complex task that must meet the challenge of making fishing environmentally, economically and socially sustainable.



One EU project – MYFISH (Maximising Yield of Fisheries while Balancing Ecosystem, Economic and Social Concerns) – has helped tackle this challenge by defining the required measurements and setting out plans that can be used in effectively managing Europe’s fisheries.

The project worked on the concept of the Maximum Sustainable Yield (MSY) of fisheries which has been used to manage fisheries for 50 years. MSY refers to the largest average catch that can be captured from a fish stock under existing environmental conditions.

MYFISH addressed the lack of agreement on the terms ‘sustainable’ and ‘yield’. It also tackled concerns on how achieving a sustainable approach - or MSY - for one stock, may affect other stocks and the broader socio-economic and ecological system.

New MSY indicators

The project has developed new MSY indicators that can ensure high levels of fishery yield whilst respecting ecological, economic and social sustainability. These indicators subsequently inform its new multiannual implementation plans.

MYFISH has also created new user-friendly guides to help fisheries stakeholders make decisions on how much fish can be caught whilst taking economic, ecological and social aspects into account.

The new indicators were defined with the involvement of a wide range of stakeholders from across industry. MSY now encompasses both maximum economic yield and sustainability criteria, such as the desire to maintain and preserve sensitive species, as well as support employment.

In particular, MYFISH found that the principle of MSY can be expanded from an approach focussed on just one species of fish, to multiple interacting species and fisheries.

Meanwhile, the project concluded that management strategies focusing purely on boosting yield when they might compromise ecosystem or social sustainability should be avoided. MYFISH also argues that the implementation of management plans must be flexible. Variations in ecosystems and in economic and social aspects must be taken into account.

So too must the specific characteristics of individual fisheries. Moreover, management plans need to outline choices and explain the trade-offs in a way that is easily understandable to users. Plans should ideally allow users to experiment with different choices, the project said.

One other finding of the project was that decreasing fishing pressures for spawning fish stocks would increase catches and income.

MYFISH concentrated on the five main areas for European fisheries: the North Sea, the Baltic Sea, the Mediterranean Sea, western waters (Celtic Sea, Irish Sea, Bay of Biscay and Iberian Sea) and widely ranging fish.

Next steps

With the end of the project in February 2016, the MYFISH consortium has noted that further work will be needed to further develop different MSY ranges.

In particular, the project advocates more consideration over creating the concept of a Pretty Good Yield (PGY). PGY is defined as sustainable yield of at least 80 % of the maximum sustainable yield. Such yields are generally obtained over a broad range of stock sizes (20-50 % of unfished stock abundance), and this range is not sensitive to the population's basic life history parameters, such as natural mortality rate, somatic growth rate, or age at maturity.

MYFISH received nearly EUR 5 000 000 of EU funding.

For more information please see:
MYFISH project website