Daily Archives: February 12, 2022

Latest New-Generation Beamer

The seventh new beam trawler for Belgian owners to be delivered in the space of two years, F/V Avanti Z-26 is largely identical to Franson Z-91, which was has been fishing since last year. Avanti has been built for Steve Depaepe of Rederij Devan, whose family has a long connection with fishing. His father Freddy Depaepe was a well-known trawler owner and also a director of Belgian vessel operator’s federation Rederscentrale. In 1979 he ordered Van Eyck Z-53, which joined the fleet in 1981, and which is now alongside in Stellendam as it waits for a buyer. Photos, >click to read< 20:50

Ghost of seal hunt haunts Canadian trucker blockades over COVID-19 testing

Canadian cattle and pigs fed grain from the United States are going hungry. Some cattle and pigs en route from Canada to finishing and slaughter in the U.S. may be stuck aboard trucks. Behind the chaos lurks the ghosts of past political impasses over cod fishing quotas and the Atlantic Canadian seal hunt. What the long depleted Atlantic Canadian cod stocks and the nearly moribund seal hunt have to do with horn-honking truckers, cattle and pigs mooing and oinking with hunger pangs, and widespread public and political exasperation,,, You see where this is going, eh? >click to read< 19:36

Critics rip feds’ “half-baked” plan to save California salmon

Fishing groups and water suppliers fought the Biden administration’s proposed drought rules for California’s water system, telling a federal judge Friday the emergency plans won’t stop the demise of endangered salmon. The rules call for new water temperature targets and improved collaboration between federal and state officials on the management of California’s two main water conveyance systems. But the Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermen’s Associations and other conservation groups cast the “interim operations plan” as a half-baked measure that will lead to a third consecutive year of salmon die-offs. >click to read< 17:36

“It was a mad scramble!” Dungeness crab season in Oregon reaches record-breaking value

The commercial Dungeness crab season opened up and down the Oregon coast on time last year. It’s the first time in years the season wasn’t delayed. And crabbers have been reaping the benefits. Kyle Retherford is the captain of the fishing vessel F/V Excalibur. “It was record-breaking for us,” he said. “Financially, it was the best year we’ve ever had in comparison to previous years. Last year was really poor.” Listen to the conversation, >click to read< 12:13

Journalistic Failure: Calling them out for missing the real story

Your piece on American Aquafarms’ new propaganda videos reads like a company press release instead of a news story in a serious newspaper. For some reason the EA abandoned all journalistic principles and allowed American Aquafarms (which is neither American nor an operator of a single fish farm) to hype its massive, polluting, job-destroying fish farm scheme without any standard journalistic examination. There was no context, no questions, no investigation and no acknowledgement of the overwhelming grassroots opposition to the project. The “story” is such a lame love letter that it would be funny if the situation weren’t so tragic. By Jed West, Prospect Harbor >click to read< 10:31

Full-on #FishyFriday in Newlyn

The repairs to the Fishermens Arms must be taking longer than when they built the place. Mordros looking good in the morning sunshine. some classy curves on the crabber Francesca’s revamped wheelhouse. A lot of fantastic photos of fish and other interesting happenings in Newlyn, Cornwall on #FishyFriday. Enjoy! >click to read< 09:28

The charm of a quiet fishing village in Aripeka, Florida

Mullet fishing has been a part of the region as far back as the Calusa Indians settlements. Iconic stilt houses were built as fish camps to store the catch. Boats were emptied quickly to ensure a prompt return to fishing. The stilt houses stand today as reminders of the once thriving Mullet fishing industry. The gulf coast of Florida has been responsible for close to 88.2% of the nation’s mullet harvest since at least the 1960s. Some of the harvests was from the shores of Port Richey as commercial mullet fishing was a very popular industry locally. Video, photos, >click to read< 08:29

Restorative justice to be used in resolving charges in ransacking Nova Scotia lobster pound

Restorative justice is being used to help resolve a case involving 25 people accused of ransacking a Nova Scotia lobster pound at the centre of a dispute over Indigenous fishing rights. The Pubnico pound was storing lobster caught by members of the Sipekne’katik First Nation, which angered commercial fishers because the harvest was conducted outside the federally regulated season. Reached for his reaction to Friday’s development, Sipekne’katik Chief Mike Sack expressed surprise and called the referral to restorative justice a “cop out” and a way for the accused to avoid consequences. Video, >click to read< 07:38