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| This illustration from the XOCEAN website is possibly a clue as to the purpose of the voyage off the Scillys. |
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| This illustration from the XOCEAN website is possibly a clue as to the purpose of the voyage off the Scillys. |
No chance of missing the harbour's big all-white bollards at the start of a rather chilly, dull day...
first up on the auction this morning, JDs from the Crystal Sea...
monk from young Brackan...
JDs from the Still Waters...
and soles, but not your normal Dover...
a box of black bream...
along with plenty of big silver fish like these mullet...
and bass...
and more...
always take a chance and try one of these cracking tub gurnards of you ever see one on your lcal fishmonger's slab - bake whole for best results...
plenty more Dovers heading for the door...
and some lovely lemons...
and no doubt these mackerel will make amazing money...
Silver Dawn heads for the gaps..
pile them high...
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| The key extract from the letter which admits that Defra has known for 37 years that pollack stocks were on the decline. |
Ed. ICES picture of pollack is here - based on landing figures - in the last 25 years many boats have been removed from the fishing effort that would have contributed to higher landings going back that far - for a start, the Breton fleet that would have fished extensively in Area VII is a shadow of its former self and these days there is only one >12m trawler from Newlyn capable of catching pollack in any quantity.
Time to head off to sea for breakfast...
as the handliners land at the market...
while others get ready to take on a few cuttle pots...
that last, long look ashore as the boat heads for the gaps away on another trip...
full steam ahead...
on a morning that for once is only mildly hinting at rain...
that's the landing sheet updated for Monday's market...
early season yellow-welly visitors...
some things are just not meant to be used as moorings...
Emi-Lou, all set to go back into the water after her paint-up...
at last the north quay is devoid of boats after a week of incessant strong winds and big tides...
once these little fellas begin to get those rusty-coloured feathers in their plumage they look to head west, for Canadian waters...
Sheila T looking good.
Following this week's announcement on compensation for pollack fishermen - those for whom most of their fishing activity being the most affected - and in light of the drastic intervention by ICEs - the Cornish ish Producers Organisation has produced a paper seeking a pragmatic solution to what many would describe as an unwarranted management disaster.
Chris Ranford, Chief Executive of the Cornish Fish Producers Organisation, said:
"It is positive to see the continued government attention on finding solutions to the ongoing challenges as a result of the current restrictions on the pollack fishery. Creating some financial support for part of the fleet will no doubt be welcomed by those eligible for compensation and we await to see the full details of the scheme before offering further thoughts. "In our efforts to improve the long-term management of the pollack stock, we have since been working closely with the UK government and - as it is a jointly managed stock – the EU. Earlier in the year the CFPO co-hosted a workshop with a diverse range of CFPO members, fisheries managers and scientists to discuss the necessary science and data needs to improve the understanding of the stock. The CFPO remains proactive in finding pragmatic solutions to managing the pollack fishery."
Let's just give this disastrous news further context. Of the entire UK fishing industry, 80% fish from boats, over 4,000 in total, that are less than 33ft long (10m). A huge number of those are worked singlehanded, a handful from large ports like Newlyn and Peterhead but the vast majority from tiny harbours, coves and even beaches around the entire UK coastline.
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| Just a few of the handline fleet fishing for mackerel off Lands End in 1981. |
Many producer organisations, like the Cornish Fish Producers Organisation and the South West Handline Association, were created back in the 1970s to fight for and protect the livelihood of inshore fishermen.
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| Almost the entire Scottish pelagic fleet anchored in Mounts Bay, 1980. |
In the case of those two, both were formed during a time when a huge fleet of mid-water boats, the UK's biggest trawlers and the entire fleet of Scottish purse seiners fished for mackerel in the Western Approaches - mackerel being the mainstay of inshore fishermen for a huge number of boats from Weymouth to Milford Haven at the time.
When Jerry Percy, founder of NURFA says, as in his statement below,
So now we have a situation where, as he points out, the very existence of the industry in the country is in danger of a free-fall into decline. The main reason is the inability to attract new recruits - traditionally many of these would come into the industry via the family or friend's boats - and more often than not starting before tey were even in their teens - now you cannot step aboard the smallest boat in the fleet with mandatory courses and aged 16. Many boats over 10m in the fleet are crewed almost exclusively by migrant crews on temporary contracts. Who and how are the skills needed to go out and catch fish going to be passed on to? Go to your local or even university library, you won't find a single book on how to be an 'inshore fisherman' - they just don't exist."I think it is a tragedy that 60% of the fleet have been treated so shabbily by administrations going back decades. Ignoring the fleet has resulted in a lack of fish on the inshore grounds, ineffective management of larger vessels and the deafening sound of cans being kicked further down the road, such as the unacceptable delay in controlling the ravages of the fly-seine fleet in the Channel"
No-one has fought harder or more passionately than Jerry for the cause of an industry faced with threats to its very existence coming from every conceivable quarter, be it totally disproportionate and ill-conceived legislation on grounds of physical health or vessel safety to fish stock quotas that also disproportionately punish fisherman who catch less in a year than a single big boat catches in a single haul. Without NUTFA, the adage, 'divide and rule' will never have been more apt.
Here is Jerry's NUTFA closure announcement in full.