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Friday 17 March 2023

#FishyFriday in Newlyn

These insulated tubs are now waiting for the next sardine season to start, which will be some time in July and well into the time to get the BBQs on!..


plenty of post lined up on the qauy with the port's biggest crab fleet all in port, albeit briefly...


on the market the netters Ajax and Ygraine landed hake trips...


along with a few boxes of biug white fish liike these ling...


while the Spited Lady III was the only trawler to put a trip ashore with fish like haddock...


and good examples of grey and red gurnard...


while the Celtic Dawn's whitefoish included pollack...


fish like these dogfish go for pot bait...


while whiting make for grewwat fish and chip suppers...



sweet, succu;lent cuttlefish make a great alternative to squid...

with just a handful of small boats att sea some manged to pick up a ffew grey mullet with its big flaky flesh...


many hands make light work it seems...

to help get keep George happy back in his base at Port Isaac...


the ebver-hungry residernt harbour seal who was spotted with a friend the other morning...



plansd are in hand to return the Old harbour to working order and help develop it's place as a heritage  harbour and base for luggers and other historic activities - more news soon!
 

Thursday 16 March 2023

Landing in Shetland to save fuel - skipper Peter Bruce explains.


 

Peter Bruce, skipper of the Peterhead trawler Budding Rose, explains how landing some of the boat's catches in Lerwick, Shetland, saves fuel costs. Prices at the markets in Shetland are also very good, he says.

Skippers know that Shetland is surrounded by some of the richest fishing grounds in the world. Consequently, more than half of the fish landed in the UK comes from within 100 nautical miles of the islands.

At a time of high fuel prices and growing concerns about the carbon footprint associated with food production, a campaign has been launched to inform fishermen of how landing their catches in Shetland save time, fuel, money, and carbon.

The Land in Shetland campaign is being run jointly by Lerwick Port Authority (LPA) and Shetland Islands Council (SIC), with support from other local partners.

LPA and SIC have invested heavily in state-of-the-art new fish markets in Lerwick and Scalloway, which means Shetland is not only close to the major fishing grounds but has fantastic modern infrastructure and is a suitable location for midway landings that can quickly be transported to key markets.

In addition to the main ports and fish markets at Lerwick and Scalloway, there is a designated landing port in Cullivoe. All the necessary support services, from engineering to ice, are readily available at each location, allowing for fast vessel turnaround times. Shetland is a one-stop-shop for all fishing vessel needs. Please visit Shetland Islands Council Ports Information for services available at Scalloway & Cullivoe and a Directory of Services available at Lerwick.”

More information at www.landinshetland.com

Wednesday 15 March 2023

Mid-week landing for the fleet's star ship, Enterprise.



After a tempestuous week at sea...

 

the Enterprise makes her way in through the gaps...




skipper Nathan seen looking through the window that, despite being a long way above the deck of the 44m boat was hit by a green wave during the trip,  the wave was large enough to force water into the wheelhouse...



Trigger gets to sort some quality fish and...



it's all smiles down the fishroom...




as John and Roal hook up boxes of cuttles twelve at a time...



guided by the remotely controlled landing winch...



and landed safely on the back of the lorry by M and Little Graham...




before being taken to the market for tomorrow's auction...



the turquoise fleet are all in...



boxes at the ready...



to go aboard the Billy Rowney once she gets her gear sorted.


Monday 13 March 2023

New members appointed to Fishing into the Future Board of Trustees

 

A few of FITF’s Trustees and Executive Director at the 2022 Fishing News Awards.

L-R Steven Mackinson, Hazel Curtis, Mike Park, Emma Plotnek, Hannah Fennell, Adrian Bartlett & Ashley Mullenger.


Five new industry experts have been appointed to the Fishing into the Future (FITF) board of trustees, bringing new insights to guide its charitable activities.

The industry-led charity, Fishing into the Future is an independent UK charity with a mission to deliver long term, sustainable and prosperous fisheries through collaboration, effective dialogue, and mutual understanding between fisheries management, science, and industry stakeholders. Their unique approach ensures that charitable activities are relevant and guided by industry, maintaining minimum of 2/3rds of the Trusteeship as active industry representatives.

As of February 2023, five new Trustees have joined the FITF board of Trustees, creating renewed momentum and new perspectives to guide future projects. The new trustees include Carl Davies a commercial fishermen, skipper, and Marine Science graduate from Conwy; Jenny and Karl Price, a fishing family and owners of the vessel Isobella M, fishing for shellfish out of Bridlington; Jamie Robertson, the Managing Director of the Holderness Fishing Industry Group (HFIG) and Alison Freeman, Fisheries Programme Manager at The Fishmongers'​ Company.

The Trustees are currently sharing ideas around promoting and preparing for co-management and industry participation in the science used in decision making, specifically getting involved in bringing back FITF’s popular in-person events for later in the year, with the Board of Trustees currently focused on planning learning experiences to support engagement in Fisheries Management Plans, to share knowledge and create connections to promote mutual dialogue between the fishing industry, scientists, and fisheries managers.

Emma Plotnek, FITF Executive Director said:

“We have many experienced, forward-thinking people on our Trusteeship, and bringing new people onboard shows us that they support our core values and believe in the potential we have as a charity.

David Stevens, FIFT Chairperson said:

“We are injecting new ideas and energy into the charity, and continually striving to ensure we grow and adapt in response our belief that long-term sustainability requires fishermen at the heart of fisheries co-management.”

Newly inducted Trustee, Jamie Robertson from HFIG, said:

“As the head of a shell fisherman’s trade association, also participating in industry-led research with our own research vessel, I’m keen to share my insights and guidance with the charity and looking forward to see FITF’s work can benefit the fishermen we work with."

Newly inducted Trustee, Alison Freeman from Fishmongers’ Company, said:

“I am delighted to have been accepted onto the Board of Trustees at Fishing into the Future. Having worked with Emma and the Trustees for a few years’, I know first-hand the passion and effort that goes into supporting dialogue between stakeholders and an industry-led approach to management and science.”

Jenny and Karl Price, Fishing Family from Bridlington, said:

"We are excited to be part of the FITF team, having gotten to know their work participating on a project together, we are looking forward to being able to put our ideas and knowledge into the mix and helping to bridge the gap between fishermen and science."

The full board of Trustees can be viewed on FITF’s website. If you would like to get involved with the charity you can visit the website, follow them on social media or contact the FITF Executive Director, Emma Plotnek, for more information.

It's a swell Monday morning in Newlyn.


There's a very glassy sun this morning and... 


just enough water for Richard, Still Waters skipper to up anchor on his sailboat and head back to a pontoon berth, the boat has no engine so he will have to negotiate the strong gusts of wind which are blowing straight down the harbour...


the weekend gale left a heavy swell passing the gaps which in turn creates a 'run' within the harbour, giving young Roger Nowell plenty to do to see that his Cygnus-hulled Lisa Leanne takes the bottom safely as the tide recedes...

as it is just after high water he has a chance to take on stores more easily...


before the boat grounds on the hard bottom...

this morning's arrivals are alongside the fish market...


boxes being lowered by Alan on the Kelly of Ladram guided by two of his Filipino crew...


on to pallets...


before heading for the coldstore...

most of the fish, like these megrims on the market this morning came from the beam trawler Cornishman skippered by Jimmy Barnes...


cuttles...


monk...



and lemons made up some of the trip...

along with monk tails...



plaice...

turbot...


red mullet...


and haddock from the Billy Rowney...



while a few inshore boats managed to find some sheltered coast and pick away on a few inshore cod...


and mackerel...


before they all head for the buyer's transport and process and packing tables.

Sunday 12 March 2023

Bass and the sparrow, Lord of Concarneau.

The real-life experiences of a Breton fisherman from Concarneau and some interesting parallels between fishing  and living in Brittany and coastal regions in the UK - especially with regard to second homes 

 

"In 2007, I embarked with Philippe Déru, owner of the liner in Concarneau, on his boat, Le Moineau . I film his gaze that “seeks the fish” and his enthusiasm when big bass come aboard. This day when I accompany him, happy to fish well, Philippe will say that I am “fishing”, a sign that fishing is also a question of luck.

He fishes for bass on his own with a fresh bait, sand eel, which he keeps alive in washing machine drums recycled into tanks. Philippe testifies to a great knowledge of the behaviour of fish and in particular the bass, also called "the wolf" because it is a "predator" who, when young, likes to play with the bait without necessarily eating it. During the shrimp season (September and October), which sea bass are fond of, this fish is caught "drier", almost on the surface, while the rest of the year, it frequents the sea bass the deep sandeel "nurseries". 

Philippe observes that bass adopts a gregarious behaviour, for example when he sees his congeners feeding, he is able to vomit what he has just ingested in order to eat in his turn. And when it is "shocking calm" and the bass is sunning itself on the surface of the water, it would be futile to try to capture it because it is at rest and not looking for food. It happens that the bass gets angry and kills other fish (sardines, mackerel), and in this case the fisherman must adapt to his behavior by attracting him by means of a decoy which excites it by the noise or the movement it generates. In addition, Philippe also evokes the behavior of this other fish that is the conger eel, which is not, as it is claimed, a scavenger, but requires a fresh bait that it smells, tastes, chews, and only bites please. We can thus understand the agency that fishermen give to fish, in particular through certain expressions they use where "the fish" is conceived at the same time as object and subject of fishing, for example when they affirm that "the fish fishes. ", Or that" he works ". 

Philippe's repeated gestures while fishing or when he bleeds certain fish (plaice, rays, juliennes, conger eels but not sea bas or sea bream), piercing their hearts to prevent them from suffering from death by asphyxiation and that they do not blush in order to sell them at their best price. This sailor has practiced all types of fishing, but he prefers the trap or longlines because, from an ecological point of view, it is a “cleaner” fishery, “with less waste”, compared to trawl that “cleans” the ocean, catching large numbers of smaller-than-size fish that are “tipped into the water” when they are no longer alive. He also denounces the ecological waste linked to the "withdrawal price" policy implemented for certain species by the European Union from 1983 to 2014, to have their catch noted before "putting it in the trash". As Philippe points out, “going to work knowing that the fish caught will be thrown away ” is obviously contrary to the ethics of the fishing profession and to the adrenaline that comes with it. 

He points out that the living conditions aboard a trawler are difficult, having left for two weeks at sea and sleeping only one hour out of four, the fishermen are tired and "on edge". I point out to him that the sailors that I have observed at work are always standing and hardly ever sit down, he replies that he does, including when he goes to the fishing grounds, for fear of doze off. He also explains that men smoke a lot at sea insofar as cigarettes constitute, on the one hand, a "de-stressing", helping to relieve the tension inherent in fishing, and on the other hand, an "appetite suppressant" often not having time to eat given the intensity of the work. During this filming, I would have several times the opportunity to film the face of Philippe who draws puffs of smoke from his cigarette while manoeuvring his engine or raising his line. 

Work accidents are not uncommon at sea, Philippe says that a sailor on board his boat had stuck a mule thorn in his hand while he was doing a "big blow", having pocketed in three days this what he usually earns in a month. He, himself, slipped several times on the bridge following "rolls", falls at the origin of his hip problem which made him "limp low", a problem that he would like to see recognised as a disease professionally by the doctor of the royal navy who also examines the fishermen. Without counting the number of fatal accidents, in particular on trawlers, where it happens that men are "sent to the water with the trawl". He evokes a series of shipwrecks that occurred in 1978-79, where out of seven fishermen who left the Concarneau fishing school, six in their twenties died at sea: “It was a blow! ". In such a case, a solidarity fund, formed by the fishermen from a percentage taken from their auction sale, makes it possible to collect death benefit and funeral assistance. 

He evokes the obligation of solidarity at sea, which he compares to that which exists in the desert, especially in Mauritania, which means that a sailor will come to the aid of anyone in danger, "even to his worst enemy", as well as 'a Saharan will welcome anyone who needs it, including a member of an enemy tribe. This awareness of the danger also explains why conflicts at sea are not as exacerbated as on land, a “punch” that could immediately bring a sailor “overboard” and cost him his life. 

He observes that before, in Finistère, there was almost a fishing school in each port, which trained around 150 young people per year, but today there is only the European maritime centre for continuing training in Concarneau. as well as the professional maritime school of Guilvinec. He observes that it is very difficult nowadays to become a fisherman given the cost of the boat which is now sold with a "fishing right" or PME (license to operate), the necessary recourse to a bank loan, and going before a maritime commission that assesses the merits of the professional project. Until the 1960s, in Concarneau as in other ports, the system of quirats (quirataire) allowed notables (notaries ...) or traders (seed, pharmacist) to invest in fishing by buying a part of the boat, as evidenced by the Nicot fleet - bought in 2004 by Intermarché - resulting from the investment in the 1940s by Pierre Nicot, seed producer of Melgven, in a trawler from Concarneau, the premise of a long series of acquisitions. Philippe remarks that previously a sailor built his boat in relation to his physical build and the type of fishing he practiced, and that some boats resembled real "wooden cathedrals". 

I pointed out to him that many fish have feminine names like "the damsel", or the "cod" which designates a "prostitute", and which has for male counterpart mackerel ". He hypothesises that the "mac" owes its name to this species of fish insofar as its stripes recall the "striped costume" of pimps; the ports being places of prostitution, it is indeed probable that certain fish were used as lexical referent to designate the prostitution environment. Philippe describes the role of prostitutes in Madagascar who were allowed to board commercial boats and take over cabins. Relations with the latter were not strictly economic-sexual, as it could be with prostitutes in Bordeaux or Amsterdam, insofar as they did not offer not only "sexual services" but could also wash sailors' clothes. In return, they brought them to eat and dance, offered them small gifts, and could keep a special bond with one of them during the next stopovers. As for the young boy, he was under the responsibility of an "older", the bosco in commerce, who made sure that he did not venture into too dangerous neighbourhoods. 

On the occasion of a stopover in a distant country, it happened that commercial sailors met on the spot a woman whom they married and brought back to France, like an Indonesian, whose daughter, Sabaya, was astonished to have was elected queen of the Blue Nets festival in 2004 in Concarneau: "From there to being crowned one day queen of the Blue nets. My skin was not necessarily very local colour". It could also happen that after having spent all their life sailing far from their families, commercial seamen, returning to their homes at retirement age, had some problem of cohabitation with their wives and decided to return to the country where they had left their sweetheart. Philippe brings up the subject infidelity both on the side of sailors and their wives, and homosexuality, which, according to legend, would have been allowed in the English navy after three days at sea given the "absence of women" . He underlines the importance of virility in fishermen who pride themselves on being "tough". He relates that when he sailed in the trade, talking about politics was strictly forbidden, and that anyone who broke this rule was "fined" by having to pay the crew a bottle; on the other hand, two themes remained unifying: “food and women”. 

In the 80s and 90s, with his wife and two children, Philippe lived for fifteen years, in a spartan but paradisiacal way, on the “islands”, the Glénans, where a “good atmosphere” reigned among fishermen since he was not uncommon for them to help each other and alternately fish in the winter on one or the other's boat. He then returned to fish in Concarneau, where, as in many ports, competition reigns between fishermen: "If you fish well and put your fish on the auction, another will pick up the exact point of your dhans and will take your place… He will get up earlier to go to your fishing area and put his equipment. He has the right since no sailor at sea owns an area ”. Philippe thus distinguishes two categories of fishermen, those who truly “seek” fish, He compares the sailor to a child who asks his sea-mother to be ever more generous towards him. 

He notes that in Madagascar, particularly in Evatra in the Fort-Dauphin region, fishermen forge their hooks themselves from old box spring springs and that if they drop them in the water, they are able to dive to retrieve them, while for a Westerner a hook has no such value. He observes that their canoe is often a collective good bought together, whereas in France the fishermen are obliged to contract significant debts with banks to buy their work tool. He notes with satisfaction that Malagasy fishermen have kept their living environment, when in Finistère the fishermen's houses are bought by summer visitors who repaint them according to the clean image they have of Brittany. He also criticizes the craze for "sailors' songs" found in all "maritime festivals", even though the fishermen did not have time to sing on board and the music for these songs came from most of the Wehrmacht marches. 

He notes that, despite what one might think, the fishermen of Concarneau are not originally from this city but come mainly from the surrounding peasant localities (Nevez, Moëlan-sur-mer), and sometimes from Morbihan (Le Bono). Philippe explains the difference in mentality between the Concarnois fishermen who practice more industrial fishing and the Bigouden, who are more artisanal. He indicates that the festival of Blue Nets was born in 1905 in Concarneau in solidarity with the sardineers who had made fishing as well as with the sardine plants who worked in the canning factories - which numbered only two today (Burel and Gonidec). 

It also evokes the life of dockers who could earn a lot of money when fishing was flourishing and whose work, admittedly arduous, is not, however, as important as the profession of a sailor, since "it is more difficult to fill a boat than to empty it". Philippe speaks with admiration of the few women who do this hard job, noting that they don't have hands like mine!"

Saturday 11 March 2023

From Lorient “We want to change the image of the fisherman”

 


(Translation courtesy of Google)

From March 19 to 26, the Pêcheurs du Monde Festival will celebrate its 15th anniversary in Lorient. With a selection of films affected by the crises experienced by the fishing world in Brittany and around the world.

The event Post-Brexit fleet exit plan, explosion in the price of diesel, media coverage of accidental captures of dolphins. While Breton and French fishing is going through a stormy period, the film festival Pêcheurs du Monde is launching its 15th edition from March 19 in Lorient and throughout the conurbation.

“Ficheurs du Monde is a festival that fits into the territory. However, this territory is threatened in its very soul. When we see that we break boats, it's much more than jobs that are at stake. It's the link to the sea and a whole philosophy of life, comments Jacques Chérel, president of the festival. Today, fishing in Europe is no longer as destructive as it once was. But the general public remains on this pattern. We want to change the image of the fisherman. » Bridges between people from land and people from the sea The Pêcheurs du Monde festival has always built bridges between people from land and people from the sea. time for a film, alongside fishermen from the far south of Chile (Austral, Thursday March 23, 8:30 p.m.), a French crew tempted by poaching (Les Silencieux, Friday March 24, 2023, 1:30 p.m.) or Peruvian artisanal fishermen magnificently filmed in Bruma (Saturday

French, Peruvian or African fishermen. The films presented by Pêcheurs du Monde show seafarers from all over the world. March 25, 8:30 p.m.). And lovers of female adventures and high latitudes will be able to discover Wednesday, March 22, at 6 p.m., the adaptation of the splendid book by Catherine Poulain, Le Grand marin. The author will also be present incognito at the festival. The impact of land pollution

The common thread of the festival questions the impact of land pollution on fishing activity. “The land and the sea nourish each other since the dawn of time, recalls Jacques Chérel. However, with pollution, the concreting of the coasts, the exploitation of mineral resources, this cycle is damaged by man today. And if there's no more plankton, there's no more fish. From India to Senegal, via Brazil, a selection of documentaries probes the troubled waters of the great rivers of the world. In total, 40 films on the program address all the challenges of the profession. In Lorient, the festival starts re Tuesday March 21, at 5 p.m., at the auditorium of the media library, settles Wednesday March 22, at the Cinéville for three screenings, before returning to his home port, from Thursday 23 to Sunday 26 March: the Ricœur room of the Dupuis-de-Lôme high school. 

Story by Elsa GAUTIER.

From March 19 to 26, throughout the Lorient conurbation. In Lorient, at the media library, at Cinéville and at the Lycée Dupuis-de-Lôme. More info on pecheursdumonde.org