Tuesday, 6 September 2022
Monday, 5 September 2022
First 2022 September #FishyFriday fish for Newlyn.
even the local gull population are taking time out to enjoy the scene...
meanwhile, Lionel proving yet again that there is nothing a little gaff tape can't fix...
a trio of big brill...
and a tub gurnard from the beam trawler Billy Rpwney...
blonde ray wings from the Padstow registered Golden Lancer...
more big flats ...
megrim...
and a few conger from the Rowney...
head-n monk...
and a big trip of hake came courtesy of the visiting seiner Acionna...
line caught bass, with tags to prove their provenance...
were landed largely thanks to Cap'n Cod...
a handful of grey mullet...
and some cracking red mullet topped off the inshore fish...
were all happily picked up by the buyers that morning...
the sardines boats had been busy the previous evening...
spot the difference - if you look closely you can see evidence that the shoals they fish are made up of two slightly differing species of sardina pilchardus.
Wednesday, 31 August 2022
RiP Mitch, the Innovator.
Cadgwith Cove skipper, Ian Mitchell or 'Mitch', one of Newlyn's most innovative skippers has recently died.
where he bought the St Ives Girl Sharon from Eddie and Sam Bassett - this was when netting was in its infancy and multi-mono net was the name of the game - a method of fishing that Mitch took to like a duck to water - it was not long before he felt the need to go bigger so he headed far north...
and so he bought the Harvest Gold from the Watt family in Shetland, which he re-named Golden Harvest. She proved hugely successful, so much so that Mitch became the first skipper in Newlyn for a generation to order a new-build of any size and in 1989 he ordered a Halfish 60 and named her Sowenna - Cornish for Success. As a gillnetter based on the largest GRP hull built in the UK, she proved an immediate success -carrying most of her nets in the aft net pounds meant the crew were able to handle different mesh sized tiers much more easily than larger converted ex-trawlers that had become so common in the Newlyn fleet.
of course, John Dory.





























































