Thursday, December 5, 2013

Stanley Paris - 76 y.o. round the world attempt

I get interested in competitive round the world races - like the Volvo (formerly Whitbread), and Vendee Globe (single-handed, no outside assistance, non-stop).  But the oldest, the youngest, etc. don't catch my eye.  But Stanley Paris (who hopes to be the oldest) caught my eye.  His boat Kiwi Spirit was built at Lyman Morse, just across the river from Jeff's Marine, Thomaston, Maine where my power boat is maintained.
Paris - an endurance athlete (Ironman, etc.) can be followed at his blog.  Right now he is nearing Bermuda where the attempt (Bermuda - Bermuda) will start.Home

Star Sailors League Championships

The Olympics have ditched the Star in favor of extreme sailing events.  I don't object to kite sailors, and windsurfers, and multi-hulls.  But that's not a reason to ditch the Star - a great 100 year old keel boat one-design with the best sailors in the world - skippers like Paul Cayard.  This is sailing - at the Star Sailors League championship in the Bahamas this week. Or follow them on their Facebook page. - gwc
Paul Cayard - Whitbread champion, AC veteran - and Star sailing star

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

2014 winter shrimp season canceled


We won't be waiting for the Margaret E to come in, low in the stern, heavy with shrimp on a snowy winter evening.  Not this year - and perhaps not for several years to come.  We will be waiting to see if the shrimp reproduce in the Gulf of Maine, or move to different waters. - gwc
ASMFC Northern Shrimp Section Establishes Moratorium for 2014 Fishing Season 
Portland, ME – The Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission’s Northern Shrimp Section approved a moratorium for the 2014 northern shrimp fishing season. The results of the 2013 Assessment Report for Gulf of Maine Northern Shrimp indicate the northern shrimp stock is overfished and overfishing is occurring. 
Northern shrimp abundance in the western Gulf of Maine has declined steadily since 2006. Current biomass (500 mt) is the lowest value in recent history, estimated at 5.2% for the biomass reference period (1985-1994), and well below the biomass threshold of 9,000 mt and the biomass limit of 6,000 mt.   Additionally, there has been recruitment failure for the past three years. The Northern Shrimp Technical Committee considers the stock to have collapsed with little prospect of recovery in the near future. 

“Given the overwhelming evidence of recruitment failure and stock collapse, and continuing unfavorable environmental conditions, the Section felt it was necessary to close the 2014 fishery to protect the remaining spawning biomass and allow as much hatch to take place as possible,” stated Northern Shrimp Section Chair Terry Stockwell of Maine. “When environmental conditions are poor, the ability of the stock to withstand fishing pressure is reduced. With the stock at all time lows and only failed year classes to come, there is even greater loss of resilience for this stock.” 

The 2013 season, which was classified as a “do no harm” fishery, still resulted in a fishing mortality rate (0.53) above the target (0.38). This was despite the fact that only 49% of the total allowable catch was harvested (307 mt of 625 mt). Since the fishery targets 4- and 5- year old females, the 2013 fishery targeted the 2008 and 2009 year classes. Projecting this forward, the 2014 fishery would fish on the 2009 and 2010 year classes, with the 2010 year class representing the first year of failed recruitment in the fishery. The Section noted that due to this recruitment failure, it is possible that the moratorium could extend beyond one year. 


Sunday, December 1, 2013

A North Atlantic Mystery: Case of the Missing Whales by Rebecca Kessler: Yale Environment 360

A North Atlantic Mystery: Case of the Missing Whales by Rebecca Kessler: Yale Environment 360:

Endangered North Atlantic right whales are disappearing from customary feeding grounds off the U.S. and Canadian coasts and appearing in large numbers in other locations, leaving scientists to wonder if shifts in climate may be behind the changes.

by rebecca kessler

Every summer and fall, endangered North Atlantic right whales congregate in the Bay of Fundy between Nova Scotia and New Brunswick to gorge on zooplankton. Researchers have documented the annual feast since 1980, and well over 100 whales typically attend, a significant portion of the entire species. Only this year, they didn't. Just a dozen right whales trickled in — 
Breaching North Atlantic Right Whale
New England Aquarium
Right whales were not found in their usual numbers this summer in the Bay of Fundy.
a record low in the New England Aquarium's 34-year-old monitoring program. And that comes on the heels of two other low-turnout years, 2010 and 2012. 

Numbers of the critically endangered marine mammal have been ticking up in recent years just past 500 individuals, so no one thinks the low turnout in the Bay of Fundy augurs a decline in the species as a whole. The right whales must have gone elsewhere. But where? And more importantly, why? 

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Thanksgiving in Maine


Back River
Elwyns wharf, Salt Pond Road

Elwyn's traps

More on "The Mortal Sea - Environment, Law, and History

Another review of Jeffrey Bolster's The Mortal Sea - which restructures the ecological history of the north Atlantic in a sophisticated and careful analysis of the ideological and material matrix that led to the disastrous state of our ocean fishery. - GWC
More on "The Mortal Sea - Environment, Law, and History:



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Thursday, November 28, 2013

Buzzards Bay - G 1 Can - Pescadotes

The latest from Joe Warren at Pescadotes. The tide rips in Buzzards Bay, throwing up a steep chop when the ebb meets the summer sea breeze.  Joe Warren captures that here.  My boat - a Buzzards Bay 14 - has 750 lbs. of lead at the bottom to push the 17 foot sloop through such a chop. - gwc

onecanFINAL.jpg (1600×891):



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Saturday, November 23, 2013

Seamus Heaney's - Favorite Songs for a Desert Island

A week ago we went to Favorite Poems: In Tribute to Seamus Heaney, presented by the Irish Arts Center at St. Ann's Warehouse in Brooklyn.  The evening began, as the crowd gathered, with songs the great poet said he would want to have with him if he were a castaway stranded on a desert island.  The original was broadcast in 1989 on BBC's Desert Island Discs.

Paul Brady – “Arthur McBrideThumbnail
Joe Heaney – “Roisin Dubh
Luke Kelly/Dubliners – “Raglan RoadThumbnail
Declan O’ Rourke – “GalileoThumbnail
Lisa Hannigan & the Chieftains – “My Lagan LoveThumbnail
The Wailin’ Jennys – “The Parting GlassThumbnail
McGarrigle Sisters – “Hard Times Come Again No MoreThumbnail
Paul Brady – “The Lakes of Ponchartrain
Joni Mitchell – “Both Sides NowThumbnail
Iarla O’Lionaird  – “Taimse Im’ ClodladhThumbnail
Cat Power – “The GreatestThumbnail
David Hammond – “My Aunt Jane” can't find it so try Ardboe HeritageThumbnail
Gillian Welch – “April 14th Part 1
Julie Feeney – “Just A Few Hours
The Cake Sale (Gary Lightbody & Lisa Hannigan) – “Some Surprise
Joe Heaney – “An Buinnean BullBuinneán Buí, An
Iris Dement – “Our TownCover of Infamous Angel
Cara Dillon & Paul Brady – “Streets of Derry

Readings from Favorite Poems in Tribute to Seamus Heaney
Intro: Gabriel Byrne IN A FIELD
1. Elise Paschen, BLACKBERRY PICKING
2. Meghan O'Rourke, MID-TERM BREAK
3. Colum McCann, MOSSBAWN (SUNLIGHT and DIGGING)
4. Colette Bryce, A SOFA IN THE FORTIES
5. Conor O'Callaghan, CLEARANCES #4
6. Alice McDermott, ST KEVIN & THE BLACKBIRD
7. Bernard O'Donoghue, AT THE WELLHEAD
8. Marie Howe, from SEEING THINGS
9. Matthew Sweeney, THE TOLLUND MAN
10. Nick Laird, STATION ISLAND Sec VII 
11. Kevin Holohan, SINGING SCHOOL #4 SUMMER 1969
12.  Henri Cole, OYSTERS
13. Craig Morgan Teicher, SQUARINGS
14. Mark Doty, from FROM THE REPUBLIC OF CONSCIENCE
15. Nuala Ni Dhomhnaill, reading her own poem newly written for Seamus
16. Enda Walsh, CLEARANCES #3
17. Paul Muldoon, KEEPING GOING