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View Full Version : Angling businesses told: Save the fish to save your trade



Jimbo
28th March 2006, 09:57
Monday 13rd March 2006

Seaside tackle shops and hundreds of businesses serving sea angling are being urged to protect their own trade by helping restore Britain’s seriously depleted fish stocks.

Ted Tuckerman chairman of the National Federation of Sea Anglers (NFSA) said:
“Unless fish stocks recover there will be no anglers, so no customers for the sea angling trade. Having fish in the sea keeps anglers on the beach and on the water.”

Lobbying by unpaid NFSA volunteers has convinced the government that fish
stocks must be allowed to recover from years of commercial over fishing.

In an open letter to the Angling Trades Association and hundreds of other sea angling businesses which together support 19,000 jobs in England and Wales, Mr. Tuckerman says: “We need your support to capitalise on our achievements, secure the future and increase your turnover.”

Recognition by the environment department that angling was part of the fishing industry to be considered equally in future legislation, had been a dramatic change.

The department’s inshore waters policy group had a specific responsibility for the million sea anglers who annually spend £1 billion. The views of sea anglers were constantly sought by ministers, MPs and civil servants and more anglers were now on the sea fisheries committees which regulate local fishing.

British sportfishing, he said, had the opportunity to follow the US example where fishing tackle and boat sales had rocketed with the regulation of striped bass fishing. “The bass population increased from five million in 1981 to 35 million today, creating seven million angling trips a year worth over $1 billion.”

Dr. Bruno Broughton of the Angling Trades Association told Fishing News, commercial fishing’s weekly newspaper, that the depletion of many fish stocks in Britain had made trading difficult. He said recreational angling’s 19,000 livelihoods were “just as real as those of commercial fishermen.”

http://www.nfsa.org.uk/

mag-man
28th March 2006, 10:22
The tackle shops already taken a knock from auction websites and I bet we gonna have to have rod licences too.

Lucky Rich
28th March 2006, 18:21
:smilie12: allways seems to come back to us to solve the fish stocks prob...won of my old school freinds turned traitor & worked on the trawlers :frown: i spoke to him 2 years ago (he is a builder now cos the fishin went bad) & he said to me if all the shore fishermen allong our bit of coast kept every thing that they caught ,,,,it still wouldent be as much as the waste thats dumped from 1 trawler trip from a medium boat,,,,,,,,,,,,

Lin
29th March 2006, 00:38
Hi all
Just had to post something on this subject. When Mikee and I fish, we very rarely keep anything, mainly cos we like to see the fish go back to swim another day, its amazing to see a smoothie swim off on a calm day. We do keep some mackeral in the summer, but only enough for bait for that night. We fished Abbottsbury on one occasion not last summer but the one before, starting our session when everyone was spinning for mackeral. Two men walked off the beach with at least 3 carrier bags full of freshly caught mackeral. When we finished fishing early hours of the morning, we went to the bins to get rid of our rubbish. When we opened the bin, all the carrier bags full of the fresh mackeral had been dumped in there !!! What a waste of freshly caught fish. Wouldnt have been so bad if they had been taken home to be eaten, but a senseless waste to catch them only to dump them in the bins, and I wonder what on earth they were thinking when they did that??
So, yes I agree that there is over fishing by the trawlers, but as Anglers and sensible people we do have to think ourselves, and do what we can topreserve the fish stocks in our seas
Lin