CATEGORY: Mackerel

Goodness Gracious Great Balls of…

Mackerel!

What can I say, it’s been a very long and boring Tuesday!

Millions of Dead Fish Crowd California Harbour

Much as the title suggests, literally millions of dead fish including anchovies, sardines, and mackerel were found floating on the surface of King Harbor Marina. Authorities are investigating the causes, but so far signs point to “oxygen depletion” and have stated that no oil slicks or contaminants have been found.

City Manager Bill Workman said city officials with the help of marine experts would help determine if there was any environmental issue involved. Tests are now being performed on the water as officials begin removing the dead fish, which city officials estimated to be in the millions.

“There are no visible signs of any toxins that might have caused [the die-off] and our early assessment is that this was oxygen depletion,” Workman said. “This is similar to what we experienced five years ago but that was distinctly a red tide event but there’s no discoloration of the water, no associated foaming in the waves, Workman said. “There are no oil slicks or leaking of substances into the water.”

via LA Times Blog

* UPDATE: A toxin may have contributed to why the fish congregated in the same marina, but the cause of death is still pointing at oxygen depravation.

via Yahoo! news

Thanks to member ST on the forums for linking us to the original story.

Fishing St. Margarets Bay, NS

St Margarets Bay view

I finally had the chance to do some saltwater fishing here in Nova Scotia. I met up with my buddy Craig who lives out on Black Point in St Margaret’s Bay around noon on Sunday. I’ve been listening to Craig talk about the bucket fulls of mackerel he’s been catching this summer, so I figured I should check it out before it gets too cold. We launched from the shore of his uncles house and headed out toward deeper water. The map doesn’t really justify how massive the bay is, especially when you are sitting in a 14 foot aluminum boat.


View Larger Map

Craig didn’t waste any time, catching a small mackerel on the first cast, which was released after a few photos. Its not uncommon to catch 3-4 mackerel at a time when you can find a big school of fish, but we really had a hard time finding them. We covered a lot of water drifting and then we headed out to fish around the small islands within the bay. We’d heard reports of mackerel being caught in the area yesterday, but as fate would have it, all the fish had moved on. It wasn’t until we were heading back to the launch that we came across some more fish. I thought I had snagged some sea weed, but it turned out to be three good size mackerel, at the same time, including the biggest of the day. Craig also caught a couple more fish before we motored back. It wasn’t the best day of fishing, but a great time was definitely had by all. I’ll definitely be heading out again as soon as I can.

Craig launchng the boatlobster-shackClive's mackerel

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2 Dans Fishing and Rex Hunt Adventures

I found two more solid programs to add to our list of best online fishing shows2 Dan’s Fishing, and Rex Hunt’s Fishing Adventures. There are only four episodes of 2 Dan’s, but there are more then 30 episodes of Fishing Adventures. Both shows are well done and feature some of the crazy fishing opportunities available in Australia. Be warned, Rex Hunt’s show features the worst intro music in any fishing show. Ever.

2 Dans Fishing
Click to watch!

Rex Hunt Fishing Adventures
Kiss a fish, and click to watch!

via My Outdoor TV

In other news, don’t forget to tune in the next episode of Hooked tonight!

Fishing News That Fell Through The Cracks

Here is a quick recap of some fishing related stories from earlier this week.

Fishermen ordered to pay back almost £1 million from illegal landings

THE skipper and mate of Britain’s biggest fishing boat have been given two weeks to pay back almost £1 million gained from illegal fish landings in Denmark.
John Peter Duncan, aged 57, and Jerry Ramsay, aged 51, both of Ollaberry, Shetland, must pay £495,000 each as compensation for landing more than 7,600 tonnes of herring and mackerel in the most serious black fish scam ever to reach court.

Earlier this year both men had admitted breaking European fishing regulations by landing the fish in a Danish port and altering their logbooks to conceal the true figures. The matter came to light when Scottish Fishery Protection Agency (SFPA) officers raided the offices of their Lerwick agents LHD and seized records, comparing them to those held in Denmark.

Grouper fishing in gulf is banned until 2006

The government has put a stop to fishing for red grouper in the Gulf of Mexico for the remainder of 2005 because the year’s quota of 10.1 million pounds has already been caught. That means restaurants will have to start importing their grouper, probably from Mexico.

The demand for red grouper – the most popular commercial and recreational Gulf of Mexico catch – is so great that the federal government put annual quotas on the harvest several years ago.

This is the second year in a row that the season has been shut down because the quota was reached.

Experts recommend cod fishing ban

The marine experts from the International Council for the Exploration of the Sea (ICES) say cod stocks in the North Sea remain well below minimum recommended levels and are advising zero catches of the fish in 2006.

Their report advises further reductions in North Sea plaice and sole and a ban on catching deep-sea sharks as part of a complete overhaul of deep sea fisheries.

During a visit to Scotland last month, EU fisheries commissioner Joe Borg warned that Scots fishermen could be among the hardest-hit when the new quotas are introduced.

Overhaul Deep-Sea Fisheries, Sharks In Trouble, Good And Bad News For Other Fish Stocks

This Friday, scientists from ICES will release a report calling for a complete overhaul of deep-sea fisheries. Scientists will recommend that all existing deep-sea fisheries should be cutback to low levels until they can demonstrate that they are sustainable. They will advise zero catch of depleted deep-sea sharks, and they will recommend that no new fisheries for deep-sea fish should be allowed until it can be demonstrated that they are capable of being sustainable.

Since the 1980s, dwindling resources on the continental shelves of the North Atlantic have encouraged the development of fisheries in deeper waters – greater than about 400 m. There has been a tendency for fisheries for species such as anglerfish and Greenland halibut to extend into deeper waters, and new fisheries have developed to target the “new” deepwater species that have been found there. Deepwater species such as the argentine or greater silver smelt (Argentina silus) and roundnose grenadier (Coryphaenoides rupestris), which were previously bycatch species have been targeted within the ICES area for the last two decades. Orange roughy (Hoplostethus atlanticus) has been a target species since the early 1990s. Deepwater sharks such as the leafscale gulper shark and Portuguese dogfish have been targeted since the 1980s.

‘Illegal’ fishing boat caught

WARNINGS shots fired by a navy patrol boat and customs vessel have been ignored by an Indonesian fishing boat suspected of illegally fishing in Australian waters.
The fishing boat was boarded yesterday by navy and customers personnel after a chase of several hours.

“The (customs vessel) Roebuck Bay first spotted the vessel,” a Customs spokesman said. “It then began pursuing the vessel, which refused to stop.

The boat, with nine Indonesian crew on board, is being towed back to Darwin where the Australian Fisheries Management Authority will conduct an investigation into its involvement in possible illegal fishing.

Arrested Russian fishing trawler flees for home with two detained Norwegian Coast Guard inspectors

A high-seas cat and mouse game was played out in the Arctic waters of the Barents Sea near Northern Norway on Monday after a Russian trawler resisted a Norwegian Coast Guard arrest order and fled with two Norwegian inspectors who had come on board to inspect it.

Two Norwegians from the Coast Guard vessel KV Tromsø, an officer and a crew member—whose names have not been released by authorities—were still on board when the Elektron refused to follow the Norwegian Coast Guard’s orders to proceed to the northern Norwegian city of Tromsø. The captain of the Norwegian Coast Guard ship, according to Russian news outlets and the Norwegian daily Aftenposten, considered firing upon the Russian trawler.

The Russian trawler Elektron had been stopped and boarded by the Norwegian Coast Guard on Saturday morning in the Svalbard Archipelago in the Barents Sea, near the border of an area where fishing rights are between Russia and Norway are disputed. Norway has in the past claimed that it has full sovereignty over these waters. Russia has claimed the opposite.

Norwegian coast guard happy over Russian trawler settlement

A spokesman for the Norwegian Coast Guard said Thursday that the organization is glad that the five-day incident involving the Russian trawler detained for alleged fishing violations and two Norwegian inspectors held on board it has been settled. The inspectors boarded the Elektron as the Norwegian Coast Guard tried to arrest it for violating the fishery protection zone, unilaterally set up by Norway off the Svalbard Islands, north of the Arctic Circle.

At the height of the drama Monday night, the Elektron captain called for Russian ships to come to his aid and said the trawler could take radical action against the Norwegian boats, including deliberately colliding with them.

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