The price of fish...

Rhiann Marie - Round the World
Stewart Graham
Mon 18 Oct 2010 00:25
Monday 18th October 0923 Local 2323 UTC (17th October)
 
16:55.13S 145:46.91E       
 
Well here we are in Cairns. Having left the Whitsundays in a strong wind warning it was not surprising that we did not see a single yacht all the way up the coast until we came to Cairns. However for us (sorry me..) the winds were great. We ate up the three hundred miles and worked the boat to the Cairns channel with winds from 12 - 30 knots and a constantly changing direction from a beat through reaches to dead running - all good and very satisfying. The sailing was awesome and I thought of the line from the famous "Fyfe yachts family" - "all this, and sailing too". It summed up how I felt, the challenge, the adventure was all wonderful but sometimes just the sheer pleasure of sailing a beautiful yacht gets a little lost in all of that. It wasn't lost on me the last couple of days, I had another of many great sails.   
 
We never saw a yacht but we saw a lot of fishing boats and quite a lot of heavy shipping. Only at night though - not through the day - what's going on?
 
It was a strange feeling sailing 300 hundred miles along the coast of Australia with no other yachts around - come to think of it was exactly the same when we sailed into Australia through the reef and the Capricorn channel. Then again there was a "strong wind warning" in place then also, with 30+ knot winds.
 
Clearly most yachts, for very good reason, don't choose to go out in 30 knots, which is why the Nara inlet in the Whitsundays must have had 50 boats anchored up there the other night.
 
What we did come across when approaching the Great Barrier Reef last week and through the night on the way to Cairns was fishing boats working. While we, as yachtspeople may run to anchor in 30 knots, the hardy breed that are the worlds fisherman may very well be heading out. To work. To catch the fish we like to eat. In 30 knots they will continue to work perhaps on up to 40 knots ....... They will inevitably be caught out in far worse conditions. It is the world's most dangerous job. 
 
We chose to make our recent passages in strong winds over the last couple of weeks. We have the boat for it and the wind direction was forecast to be reasonable. But don't ever forget when we are hunkered down in a sheltered anchorage or sitting at home in front of a fire the worlds' fisherman are out there - working. Working.
 
West of Shetland, West of the Hebrides, West of Ireland, the South West Approaches, the North Sea - now these are challenging places to be at sea in a blow. So no more complaints about the price of fish anybody. For the risk these guys take and the conditions they endure, it is too cheap. A hardy breed. I just wish some of the ones fishing inside the Great Barrier Reef would show the bloody lights they should be showing so that I could give them a wide berth. Or at least answer the radio. 
 
Anyway I can report that through the night on Saturday Trish took a watch after recovering her sea legs and I got three hours of (broken) sleep - IN BED! It must be my birthday! Trish is honing her skills as a watch keeper and is becoming a dab hand at monitoring and tuning the radar and plotter along with keeping a physical watch. Good grief next thing we know she will be working out where the wind is coming from and start thinking about trimming the sails! Maybe.... 
 
Bye for now! Tha mi a'dol air ais gu Alba 'son ceala deaug an drasda. Thig me air ais ochdamh an t-Samhain.   
 
    

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