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Thursday 27 September 2018

Sketching at Botallack.


You never know what will pass by when sketching on the cliffs over looking the Crowns engine house at Botallack...


close to shore, the IFCA fisheries patrol, St Piran and away in the distance the Rowse crabber Harriet Eve...


a few moments later the St Piran framed by an arch in the old mine works - passing outside a container ship bound for Bristol and on the horizon the Scillys can clearly be seen.



Statistics show where UK vessels fish and what is landed from our waters




Today the Marine Management Organisation has published analysis showing where fish were caught before being landed. This includes activity by UK vessels and other EU Member States’ vessels in North East Atlantic waters.
Torquay devon fishing
The landings by Economic Exclusive Zone (EEZ) document is a supplementary report released alongside the main annual Sea Fisheries Statistics publication which can be found on the MMO website. The report covers 2012 to 2017.

Where does the UK fleet catch its fish?

In 2017, UK fishing vessels landed the majority of their catch from UK waters; 80 per cent by quantity and 83 per cent by value. The waters of other EU member states were the second most important region for the UK’s fleet; accounting for 13% by quantity and 9% by value of the UK’s total landings in 2017. Landings from third country waters (such as Norway) and international waters made up the remainder.
Out of the seven other EU Member States' waters that the UK landed fish from the most valuable for the UK fleet were (avg. 2012 – 2016):
  • Ireland (65,000 tonnes, £66 million)
  • France (14,000 tonnes, £17 million)
  • Denmark (7,000 tonnes, £10 million)
The most valuable fish caught by UK vessels in other EU member state waters were: mackerel, plaice and monks/anglers.

How much do non-UK fishing boats land from the UK EEZ?

Of the fish landed by other member state vessels from North Atlantic waters, 35 per cent of the quantity and 23 per cent of the value originated in UK waters. The North Atlantic area includes all of the seas around the UK. 
The three other EU Member States landing the most value from UK waters were:
  • France (120,000 tonnes, £171 million)
  • Netherlands (177,000 tonnes, £92 million)
  • Denmark (237,000 tonnes, £90 million)
The most valuable fish for other member states in UK waters were herring, mackerel and sole.
For context the UK fleet landed approximately 581,000 tonnes with a value of £811 million from UK waters in 2017. In the same year, UK vessels landed around 94,000 tonnes (£88 million) in total from other member state waters.
mackerel

How much fish is landed from quota stocks in UK waters?

As part of this report we also introduced an estimate of the landings of quota stocks from UK waters for UK, non-UK EU and Norwegian vessels. This publication expands and updated the list of quota stocks that was included in the Government’s “Sustainable fisheries for future generations” white paperreleased earlier this year.
We show that the most valuable quota species landed from the UK’s EEZ was mackerel. Approximately 72% of the total landings of mackerel stocks by UK and OMS vessels in the north east Atlantic were landed from UK waters. After the high volume widely distributed pelagic quota stocks like mackerel, West Coast Nephrops, was the most valuable quota stock landed from UK waters (~£35 million per annum). From this new analysis we were able to estimate that 99.9% of all West Coast Nephrops landings were from UK waters.

How did we estimate these statistics?

To reach our conclusions we assigned landings of fish to different EEZs using the reported statistical rectangles, a spatial division of the NE Atlantic waters established by International Council for the Exploration of the Sea (ICES) for use in fisheries statistics.
We used UK data on vessel activity to produce detailed information on where fish were caught and landed. We also made use of publicly available data from the European Commission to produce the estimates of landings made by non-UK EU Member States in NE Atlantic waters. More detail on the methods is given in the report itself.

For further information

The full report is available on the MMO website. Detailed underlying data sets covering UK fleet landings by ICES Rectangle from 2012 to 2017 by EEZ of capture and the spatial factors used to assign landings between EEZs are available for download should you wish to look in more detail at these statistics.

Open welcome to see Newlyn Harbour Development Plans for the area known as Canners Slip.





From today until Saturday 29th September fishermen, harbour users and local residents can go along to the inshore lifeboat house and see a range of detailed plans and scale models for the area known as Canners Slip.







After the public consultations held two weeks ago in the harbour office boardroom NPHC are keen to hear more input from the fishing community - from fishermen to residents.



The full range of plans and a number of models have been made to facilitate further discussion on this important development.





The scale models include one based on the outline plans submitted as detailed in the submission to the MMO...






and another that will allow visitors to the consultation to put make known their own ideas and thoughts.

The Inshore Lifeboat building can be accessed from the Canners Slip end of the harbour opposite Trelawney Fish.

Wednesday 26 September 2018

Wednesday morning's market.


Only at this time of year do you get morning light like this when two complementary colours blends seamlessly, the deep blue of the night sky with the orange glow rising from the horizon...




and, as J.M.W. Turner observed in this watercolour sketch, as the two colours meet, being complementary they cancel each other out and the light between them appears almost white...



just as it is in the newly modernised fish market in Newlyn where the new lighting system continues to dazzle...



as Colin checks out possible boxes to bid on from the inshore boat Imogen III...


like this brace of red mullet and red bream...


which were both keenly contested as young Ryan kept the bidding going until the fish made well over £12 a kilo...


yet more mackerel hit the market tis morning...


along with the odd bass...


while all the inshore trawlers like the New Venture enjoyed a late harvest of John Dory


along with the Shiralee...


who also picked up a few stone of squid...


and the nearly re-named Imogen...


Dovers were thin on the ground this morning with no beam trawlers landed...


though there were a couple of blues...


and some Lennons, sorry lemons...


it won't be long before the second phase of the market is completed...


which will no doubt please Mr Cripps...


half an hour after the auction started light in the morning sky is even more intense...


as the sale ends the buyers make their way to the office...


as the dawn lightens the sky...


a loud protest...


sends this gull on its way...


the Harvest Moon is just beginning to wane now...


as a handful of punts and toshers fish for mackerel just off the Gear Pole...


there more red and orange in the harbour...


as Jeremy takes the Nazarene away to sea...


maybe one day the Pilot's Office will be brought back into use - it was needed years ago when Penlee Quarry supplied Blue Elvin granite down the South pier...


boats continue to draw photographers in the early hours...


especially when the light is so good...


as it bathes a select few properties along the seafront in penzance...


along with the newly installed solar panels being fitted to the fish market roof...


two more boats head out for a day's work...


as the moon is about to fade in the face of the rising sun...


hopefully the local gull population won't find the solar panels provide the perfect ledge on which to nest, time will tel...


the Harbour Office now flies the re-designed flag...


as Tom surveys the scene out in the bay...


enough funding has been raised - partly through generous public donations...


supported by local businesses like the PZ Gallery...


for the geothermic energy contractors to move in and make a start on providing a heated pool...


seems the water is the right temperature for the mackerel as the fleet, though hardly reminiscent of the mackerel heydays in the 70s and 80s when a fleet of over 100 small boats fished the winter mackerel fishery here...


glasses are always handy to have by the sea...



the sun is warm enough to cause a slight sea mst to rise...


as it towers over the Mount and the Scillonian III as she prepares to sail...


rush hour in PZ...


though there is no work in the dry dock at the moment...


it's all at the Co-op now, well it will be when the Gry Maritha after she has loaded makes her way to the Scillys...



yesterday morning was equally as calm and light as the beam trawler Cornishman headed into port.