Boat Stories
  • Home
  • News
  • Films!
    • Fishing for Clovelly Herring
    • Salmon Netting on the Taw & Torridge
    • A Life in the Day of a Young Fisherman
    • Lobster Potting and Berried Hens
    • The Bideford Pilot
    • Living and Working on Lundy Island
    • Fishing for the Long Haul? >
      • The Ray Box and Sustainable Fishing
    • Life's Journey on the Torridge
    • Every Dive is an Adventure
    • Winner Takes All
  • Fish
  • Boat Trips
  • Heritage
  • Our Crew
  • Events
  • Contact
  • Shop
  • Home

Back In Business

1/4/2014

2 Comments

 
Picture
Watching the boats safely inside Ilfracombe harbour, begin to play a gentle dosey-doe with their moorings as the evening tide slowly rises, it’s difficult to imagine that only a few weeks ago this was the scene of “a dangerous nightmare” as crews battled to save their boats. Ilfracombe inner harbour walls are shaped like a pair of outstretched arms – ready with a welcome hug to offer a safe haven. But in the worst of the storms surges, giant swells rolled around inside these walls, bucking and jostling these same boats, lifting them right to the top of the wooden palings, bashing them against the walls and causing some serious damage. “We would have moored the boats in Bideford,” Scott Wharton owner of ‘S & P fish’ who runs a small fishing fleet from the harbour told me but “we didn’t get a break in the storms to move them. So his crew manned the boats “night and day using incredible skill to keep them safe” with the only respite at low tide.

The fleet is still counting their losses out at sea with about 200-300 crab and lobster pots missing and others “tangled and rolled up into a giant ball.” All along the harbour wall, each boat has a tale to tell of the storms. John Balls who runs a potting boat from Clovelly harbour described the force of the sea “smashing pots and rolling them together like a bunch of grapes.” When he was able to get out (the sea piled up a load of shingle partly blocking Clovelly harbour) he searched for his pots, ‘grappling’ with a giant hook on a long pole, to salvage them from the sea bed. He lost 25% and when Boats Stories found him he was in his shed “mending and making new pots.” There was pressure on the fishermen to get out in the lull between the storms but it wasn’t that simple because the fishing grounds were affected by the constant pounding. I met one young fisherman in Appledore who had just come ashore from several days on a trawler which came home “practically empty.” Fishing crew are on a percentage of the catch and a percentage of nothing is nothing!

“So what was it like during the storms for the fish?” I asked the fishermen. “You know when you walk barefoot on the beach, sometimes the falling tide has sculpted hard ripples in the sand,” Bideford based, trawler owner Dick Talbot, explained patiently. “Now imagine those sand ripples rising over 70 feet high into giant sand banks, that’s what much of the seabed is like out in the Bristol Channel.” Dispersed amongst these giant sand waves or hugging the coastline are patches of gravel or mud and weed. And then imagine as Scott said “a washing machine constantly churning everything round and round.” Add in the mud and silt which came down the rivers, as if you are adding laundry liquid through the dispenser and you create an entire water layer full of silt, sand and weed. Some predatory fish which rely on sight may have headed further out to sea. Geoff Huelin who runs a potting boat from Ilfracombe thought that lobsters might have trundled slowly into deeper water, whereas “crabs or whelks would bury in deep to sit out the worst.” I realised it was perverse to continually ask people who’d earned nothing all winter what it was like for the fish. “I reckon fish in the Bristol Channel are used to wild tides and stormy seas – if they didn’t like it rough they’d be living elsewhere,” one salty dog, who’d spent nearly seventy years, facing the waves off the North Devon coast, twinkled at me.

Happily during the last weeks of calmer weather, the tide has begun to turn. The boats are finding fish. Boat Stories was out researching films in Appledore and took this picture (above) of the Sparkling Star heading to the fish dock to unload her catch. In Ilfracombe even as I write, the boats have risen on the water and the Olivia Belle is preparing to cast her moorings and head out to sea. Meanwhile

Scott said it could take his business three or four months to recover and others fared far worse. So now is the time to buy fish and support your local fishing industry. Geoff will be shooting his first pots tomorrow, planning to have lobsters and crabs ready for Easter. S & P wet fish shop and cafe, just across the harbour from where I’m sitting, plans to open tomorrow: April 1st for business. Head to Ilfracombe to watch the boats rise or fall gently with the tide, or the harbour at work, while you eat a crab sandwich, at the licensed café, out in the sunshine.

A big thank you to all those fishermen and women who took time to speak to Boat Stories while they were trying to get their businesses back on track after the storms. See our fish page for a list of suppliers selling locally landed fish and seafood. We will be adding to it and talking about different types of sustainable fishing, seasonal fish and the fishing grounds our local fishermen voluntarily protect as the project progresses.

Jo Stewart-Smith March 31st 2014

2 Comments

    Boat Stories Blog

    All the latest news and stories from Jo Stewart-Smith, Boat Stories Producer

    Archives

    February 2016
    December 2015
    September 2015
    August 2015
    July 2015
    May 2015
    April 2015
    March 2015
    January 2015
    December 2014
    November 2014
    October 2014
    September 2014
    August 2014
    July 2014
    June 2014
    May 2014
    April 2014
    March 2014

    Categories

    All
    Appledore
    Appledore Instow Ferry
    Bideford Bridge Trust
    Bideford Cinema
    Bideford Pilot Boat
    Boat Charters
    Boat Stories
    Bristol Channel
    Camera Crew
    Celebration
    Clovelly
    Clovelly Herrings
    Commercial Fishing
    Crab
    Documentary
    Dolphins
    Event
    Ferry
    Fishermen
    Fishing
    Fishing For History
    FLAG
    Flag Funding
    Geoff Huelin
    Herring
    Ilfracombe
    Instow
    Jo Stewart-smith
    Lobster
    Lobsters
    MARINElife
    Marine Traffic
    Museum Of Barnstaple And North Devon
    North Devon
    North Devon Moving Image
    North Devon Plus
    North Devon Theatres Trust
    North Devon Trawler
    Northern Devon Flag
    Paul Stone
    RNLI
    Salar The Salmon
    Salmon Netting
    Screening
    Seadog
    Seafood
    Sea Ilfracombe
    Sheila Taylor
    Short Film
    Short Films
    Sparkling Star
    S&p Fish Shop
    Squid
    Stephen Perham
    Stephen Taylor
    Sustainable Fishing
    Tarka Trust
    Torridge
    Trawlers
    Uk Storms 2014
    Verity

    RSS Feed

[email protected]
SITE MAP:  
Home 

News
Films

Every Dive is an Adventure
Fishing for Clovelly Herring
Fishing for the Long Haul?
Life's Journey on the Torridge
Living and working on Lundy Island
Lobster Potting & Berried Hens
Salmon Netting on the Taw & Torridge
Winner Takes All
Fish
Boat Trips & Charters
Appledore & Instow Ferry
The Ilfracombe Princess
To Lundy Island
Swimming with Seals
Up the River Torridge
Heritage Boats
Contact
Guest Book
​Shop
Thanks
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Project part financed by the EFF: European Fisheries Fund – investing in sustainable fisheries