Archive for the 'News' Category

August 10th 2007
In Missouri, fishermen catch catfish by hand, toes as bait

Posted under News by Tim Yang

In the wild, wild Midwest, people who call themselves “noodlers” are catching massive catfish with their bare hands, using their own fingers and toes as bait.

A seasoned “noodler” from Missouri, Howard Ramsey, proudly displays his scarred arms and digits, called “river rash” by insiders.

“Yep, that’s right, ” he beams, “You gotta bleed.”

Noodling, which began with Native Americans, is the art of catching catfish with your bare hands. People like Howard Ramsey have done it for years without rod, hook or bait. Instead, they quietly grope the dark undersides of rocks or stumps in riverbanks, where catfish nest, until they feel the sandpaper-like teeth of catfish clamp down on their hands.

Then, the noodler grips the jaws and triumphantly yanks the writhing fish to the surface. Ideally, that is.

Sometimes, noodlers poking around the mossy, underwater crevices are also vulnerable to the painful bites of snapping turtles, snakes and beavers that may hole up in abandoned catfish nests.

Noodling old-timer Ramsey quipped to ABC News’ John Berman, “Webster’s [dictionary] describes a noodle as ‘a crazy person.’ Just about anybody you talk to thinks you got to be crazy to do this.”

The idea of noodling may be laughable, but hand fishing enthusiasts say it’s usually a fair fight. Fish can weigh up to 100 pounds, and many say what they like most about the sport is meeting the fish on its own turf and terms.

Noodling is legal in at least thirteen Midwestern and Southeastern states, including Louisiana, Mississippi and, recently, Georgia. The greatest homage to the sport, however, takes place in Nigeria at the Argungu Festival, where 10,000 fishermen jump into opaque, coffee-colored streams to wrestle giant freshwater perch.

Though Missourian noodlers claim they are being singled out, a Department of Conservation FAQ sheet explains that hand fishing targets the largest of the breeding fish, as well as their nests. Snatching a parent may leave thousands of catfish eggs vulnerable to predators.

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August 9th 2007
21 DVD set about Cousteau now available for USD$300

Posted under News by Tim Yang

Jacques Cousteau DVD

This is the ultimate pig-out for couch divers - 3,820 minutes of Cousteau and friends from the 80s and 90s.

This period takes us through a resurgence in Cousteau film-making, with his two sons Philippe and Jean-Michel playing increasingly important roles in the process. If you want to see the historic Cousteau films of the 1950s and 60s, you’ll have to look elsewhere, though this set does include two documentaries that look back on the Captain’s earlier career.

Cousteau is deservedly a legend, though he remains a complex character - the family man with two families, the spearfishing environmentalist, the engineer-poet. Here, we see Cousteau with an eye on the history books, tutting at Indonesian dynamite fishers and conveniently forgetting the fact that his team had blown a channel into more than one atoll system to keep the Calypso safely moored.

There are between two and four documentaries on each of these discs, and the team cover a remarkable set of stories, both land and sea-based. To give you an idea, it includes: Cousteau’s search for the wreck of the Brittanic; the lost Pacific atoll of Clipperton; a journey along the Mississippi; Australia and Tasmania; South Africa and great whites sharks; dolphins and whales; the discovery of Papua New Guinea… and that’s less than a tenth of what’s on offer.

The standout films are those covering the discovery of Sipadan, Clipperton Atoll and Lake Baikal - the first two show Cousteau as ambassador of the sea, while ‘Baikal’ was produced after Cousteau’s death in 1997, and features no family members. While the underwater footage by Didier Noirot is spot-on, the pretentious commentary is just silly, and nearly ruins the whole thing.

Documentaries can date all too easily, and the dive team’s red hats and silver wetsuits do seem very amusing post- Steve Zissou’s Life Aquatic. Still, most of this holds up, and there is plenty of meat for diving historians and fans of the Cousteau oeuvre.

Available on Amazon.com at RRP £149.99.

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August 9th 2007
Monster thresher shark caught off Isle of Wight

Posted under News by Tim Yang

Thresher sharkA MONSTER shark - one of the biggest ever hooked in British waters - has been caught off the Isle of Wight.

The beast, weighing an estimated 500lb (226kg), was the “catch of a lifetime” for Danny Vokins, who has been chasing sharks for the past 30 years. It took the amateur fisherman more than two hours to reel in the 14ft (4.26m) thresher shark.

Using live mackerel as bait on an 80lb line, the “freak” shark struck at 1.45pm about five miles south east of St Catherine’s, the island’s most southerly point.

As the battle raged between man and fish, he even had to call other fishermen to help him haul it to the side of his boat. The marathon fight lasted two and a quarter hours and left the 58-year-old exhausted.

The property developer said it was the culmination of three decades of chasing the monsters of the deep. “This shark was a freak,” he said.

Linda Reynolds, from the Shark Angling Club of Great Britain, said only sharks that are killed and then weighed on the shore go into the record books. “It is a massive fish and it would certainly have broken the British record for the biggest thresher shark,” she said.

Mr Vokins, of Bembridge, Isle of Wight, who releases every fish he catches, said he didn’t fish for records: “I am not about killing sharks, there’s not enough of them in the ocean, so I am not bothered about any record.”

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August 8th 2007
Interview with underwater sculptor

Posted under News by Tim Yang

Underwater sculpture

Scubaherald has a really cool interview with Jason Taylor, a British artist who makes cement sculptures and sinks them in underwater galleries in Grenada. Taylor talks about his works and also about how fish and coral have started interacting with his sculptures.

In a very short space of time I have seen incredible marine growth and colonization from life. Grace reef has a octopus living under one of her shoulders, along with peacock flounders lying in the sand next to her. La Diablesse has a green moray living inside the frame work and a permanent squirrel fish under her hat. It moves around the hat according to which angle you approach. When I first submerge the pieces they get covered in algae which in turn is grazed by sea urchins and parrot fish. The stainless steel dress on la Diablesse is covered by teeth marks from these fish. The lost correspondent has a community of banded coral shrimp living in one of the drawers and damsel fish inside the type writer. Much of the design of the pieces has been to provide shelter for marine life.

Sienna

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August 1st 2007
Rotting whale corpse causes stink in Norway

Posted under News by Tim Yang

Whale corpse turned whiteThe rotting cadaver of a dead whale was floating in a Norwegian west coast fjord on Wednesday, sending a foul odor over the area while officials worried it could explode at any time.

“Well, I wouldn’t exactly call it an explosion, but it can be like an enormous fart,” said Tore Haug of the Norwegian Marine Research Institute in Bergen.

He warned emergency crews trying to tow the cadaver out of the fjord that gases built up in the dead whale’s stomach could cause a blowout.

“It would be quite unpleasant if the stomach blows up,” Haug told web site bt.no. “It’s not very nice to have rotten whale parts showering over you.”

No one knows where the whale came from, or how long it has been dead. The 10-meter-long creature weighing several tons is believed to have drifted into the fjord between Bergen and Sotra.

“There’s a stink over the entire area from the whale that’s floating around 800 meters off Korsneset,” Per Stiegler, operations leader of the Hordaland Police District, told new bureau NTB. “We don’t want to risk having it wash ashore under any circumstances.”

Frode Vindenes, a volunteer with the Bergen Sea Rescue Corps, was among those trying to keep it away from land. “The whale is completely white and it smells intensely,” he told Aftenposten.no. “It’s almost deteriorated. There are seagulls all over it.”

The police, Coast Guard, Bergen officials and marine researchers tried to sink the whale and managed to do so early Thursday, in the Korsfjord at a depth of 600 meters off Skorpo.

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July 25th 2007
Diver killed by lightning strike on his tank

Posted under Medical and safety & News by Tim Yang

Stephen Wilson, 36, was struck and killed by lightning while diving in the Atlantic Ocean off Deerfield Beach, South Florida, on Sunday afternoon, authorities said.

The incident took place during an afternoon of severe thunderstorms that pelted the region, from Miami to West Palm Beach, with torrential rains, strong winds, pea-sized hail and hundreds of bolts of lightning.

At the time of the strike, at about 3 p.m., two divers were on a 20-foot boat and two were in the water, said Deerfield Beach Fire Division Chief Gary Fernaays.

When one of the divers in the water surfaced, “lighting struck his tank,” Fernaays said. “He was approximately 30 feet from the boat at the time.”

Wilson, who had gone into cardiac arrest, was given CPR while he was being taken North Broward Medical Center in Pompano Beach, where he was pronounced dead, authorities said.

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July 23rd 2007
Coelacanth, thought to be extinct, caught in Zanzibar

Posted under Science & News by Tim Yang

Coelacanth

Fishermen have caught a rare and endangered fish, the coelacanth, off the coast of the Indian Ocean archipelago of Zanzibar.

The find makes Zanzibar the third place in Tanzania where fishermen have caught the coelacanth, a heavy-bodied, many-finned fish with a three-lobed tail that was thought extinct until it was caught in 1938 off the coast of South Africa. Since then two types of coelacanth have been caught in five other countries: Comoros, Indonesia, Kenya, Madagascar and Mozambique, according to African Coelacanth Ecosystem Program.

“Fishermen informed us that they caught a strange fish in their nets. We rushed to Nungwi (the northern reaches of Zanzibar) to find it’s a coelacanth, a rare fish thought to have become extinct when it disappeared from fossil records 80 million years ago,” said Nariman Jiddawi of the Institute of Marine Sciences, which is part of the University of Dar es Salaam in Tanzania’s commercial capital.

Trade in the coelacanth is banned under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora.

“Zanzibar will join a list of sites of having the rare fish caught in its own waters,” said Jiddawi, adding the catch weighed 27 kilograms (59.5 pounds) and measured 1.34 meters (4.4 feet).

Four fishermen caught the fish on Saturday, Jiddawi said.

Mussa Aboud Jume, director of fisheries in Zanzibar, said that the coelacanth will be preserved and put on display at the Zanzibar Museum.

A statement of the Institute of Marine Sciences said that 35 coelacanths have been caught since September 2003 in Mtwara, a southern region of Tanzania, and mostly along the coast of Tanga in Tanzania’s north.

Coelacanths are the only living animals to have a fully functional intercranial joint, a division separating the ear and brain from the nasal organs and eye, according to an Institute of Marine Sciences statement.

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July 20th 2007
Traditional whale hunting in Indonesia is done with just ropes and knives

Posted under News by Tim Yang

Whale hunting

The Daily Mail recently published some amazing photos of fishermen from Lamarela village on the island of Lembata in Indonesia catching sperm whales using just traditional duri flensing knives and ropes made from coiled palm leaves and waru wood fibres.

The poor, rugged and stony island has very little agriculture and the population depends on the sea, which is abundant with marlin, tuna, stingray, sea-turtles, octopus and lobster. During Lefa Nue (the sea season), from May to October, the villagers hunt whales, sharks and dolphins.

However, there are fears for the future of the community, with Koteklema (sperm whale) hunts becoming less successful over the past five years. Last year, the village caught only three whales.

Hunts are led by the Lamafa (boat captains), who purify themselves during the six-month whale hunting season by abstaining from sex. They are also banned from sleeping during a hunting trip.

The Lamafa leaps from the boat holding a ‘kefa’ (a javelin-like bamboo pole with an iron-blade) which he uses to pierce the whale before swimming back to collect another pole.

The fishermen work as a team, stabbing into the whale flesh and working ropes around its massive body. The tiny boats, dwarfed by the bulk of a whale, risk being pulled under with every lurch of its huge tail.

Moving faster than a jet-ski, the whale drags the boats through the water, writhing as kefas are thrust into its flesh. The whale blubber is at least a foot thick and it takes a great effort to reach the tender flesh underneath.

More boats from other village clans will join in the desperate effort. Every leap onto the whale’s back could be the last for the Lamafa, as each wide swing of the tail could knock them unconscious into the foam.

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July 19th 2007
Two monster lobsters caught

Posted under News by Tim Yang

lobster

Two giant lobsters were caught a week ago. One off the coast of Canada, one off the coast of England.

The Canadian lobster weighs 17.5 lbs and is hanging out at the Big Fish market in Shediac, Nova Scotia. The colossal crustacean is too large to have fallen into a lobster trap. More likely, he got caught on the outside of the cage and was hauled in.

The fish market owner is not selling the lobster. If he was, it would fetch about $1,000. It is estimated that the lobster to be about 100 years old. The owner plans to have the lobster stuffed and mounted on the wall so that people can see him for years to come.

The British lobster is faring a lot better. He was caught near his home, a boiler once used to power steam cranes in a harbour off the South-West coast. He is almost 1m long (3ft 3in), three times the size of a normal lobster, and is named “Lemmy” by Chris Hovard the diver who caught him, after the singer from Motörhead because ‘It was very aggressive, ugly and massive’.

Fortunately for 4.5kg (10lb 4oz) Lemmy, who is thought to be 50 years old he is too big to fit in a cooking pot. Instead, he is settling into his new home – a tank at Weymouth Sea Life Centre.

 

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July 17th 2007
Women Divers Hall of Fame

Posted under News by Tim Yang

WDHOFHave you been to the Women Divers Hall of Fame (WDHOF)?

WDHOF Members are the pioneers, leaders, innovators and world record holders throughout the international diving community. These areas of diving and undersea endeavors include: the Arts, Science, Medicine, Exploration & Technology, Marine Archeology, Business, Media, Training & Education, Safety, Commercial & Military Diving, Free Diving, and Underwater Sports. There are currently one hundred and forty-six Members in the Women Divers Hall of Fame, hailing from twenty-nine U.S. states and Territories and eleven countries worldwide.

Even Philippines president Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo is a member. Just joined this year.

I was just curious who has already been inducted into the hall of fame and their achievements. But nowhere on the website is the list. I figure there must be plenty of worthies. So the webmaster must be really behind.

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