Animal 0 Posté(e) le 21 avril 2007 Seal boats coping with ice crisis In a sudden squall, `they'd all go down, including the icebreakers,' sealer says Apr 21, 2007 04:30 AM Bill Taylor Feature Writer JOE BATT'S ARM, Nfld.-Born and bred in this remote outport on Fogo Island off the northern coast of Newfoundland, Desmond Adams has the seal hunt in his blood. So his bright-green boat, the Angela Chantell, was one of the first out last week when the annual hunt began. And one of the first back. "We had a day out there," Adams said yesterday on the windswept dock where his boat was safely moored. "We saw the way the weather was going and the ice was moving and we beat a hasty retreat. We were on the western edge of the ice and the wind died for a little bit at exactly the right time so we were able to get back. We were the only one that did." Between 300 and 400 other seal hunters on more than 100 "longliner" boats were not so lucky. Most of them remain stuck in a freak build-up of pack ice - the worst anyone here can remember - that trapped them a week ago as they headed home. There was a little light at the end of the frigid tunnel as a persistent northeasterly gale veered slowly to the southwesterly wind that will move the ice floes away. The temperature rose a few degrees, too, which will help. Two of the Coast Guard's three icebreakers also got stuck earlier this week trying to carve a path for some of the stricken longliners to follow them to open water. But they were back in action yesterday, joined by a fourth icebreaker from Quebec. Two sealers' boats were helped into open water in Bonavista Bay and were on their way back to safety, said Coast Guard Captain Brian Penney. "It's a little bit of relief," he said. "But I think it'll be Tuesday at the earliest before most of the longliners are out." Penney said that before the rescue, several of the boats had radio-telephoned food orders to a general store in Bonavista and the Coast Guard had delivered the groceries by helicopter. Et nos gouvernements qui continuent de nier qu'ils subventionnent cette chasse (avec l'argent de nos taxes bien entendu) While the freeze-up has made headlines around the world, Newfoundlanders are treating it almost casually. Some radio stations didn't even make it their top news story yesterday, going instead with a new strategic plan for Labrador. One Gander station put it ahead of a blood donor recruitment story but didn't give it as much time. The general feeling is that the situation is annoying - some stranded sealers reached by satellite phone say their biggest problem is boredom - but more a threat to livelihood than life. It's a sentiment that makes Adams angry. "Very few will admit it, but what's happening is extremely dangerous," he said. "They act like clowns about it; they just shrug it off. And I think they'll get away with it this time. But if there were sustained very strong winds, which can happen with very little warning here, then you'd have a major catastrophe. They'd all go down, including the icebreakers, with all hands lost." Though he admits that he's as bad as anyone, "and we all go out for the love of it rather than the money, which isn't there anymore," Adams would like to see the hunt in its current form stopped. First, bigger boats go out and take their share of annual quota and then small boats go to cull the rest of the harp seal pups. Frank Pinhorn estimates there are about 60,000 of this year's quota of 270,000 still to be killed. "So the big boats are out now trying to get themselves free of the ice and the hunt is at a standstill," Adams said. "But once this mess is cleared up, then they'll let the small boats go out. And this ice could come back. It could happen again. "None of these boats, big or small, is registered for ice and some insurance companies won't cover you for the seal hunt. Others, the ice-damage deductible is so high, no one ever reports damage. We just fix it ourselves. But these little boats are eggshells; they're that fragile. You could crush them like that." Adams held up his clenched fist. Coast Guard helicopters have taken the crews off about 10 of the bigger boats, mostly near the Grey Islands off Labrador because the pressure of the ice was threatening to crush them. "No one's going to stop hunting if they don't have to. We need someone to tell us, `No, this is too dangerous. You can't do it.' Newfoundlanders are good at following orders. They've told us we can't fish and we can't do this or that. And we don't." Plus con que ça, tu meurts ! No one's getting rich from the seal hunt, he said, "at least not among the hunters. The price of pelts is down to about $55, about half what it used to be." Not only that, the ice crisis means the sealers will be delayed in getting back to their main livelihood - crab fishing and shrimping. "The later you take a crab, the worse the quality. We're getting hurt." Coast Guard helicopters continued to fly food and water to longliners that are running short of supplies. There's also a fuel crisis as they keep their engines running to power generators for food and warmth. (Et c'est nous qui payons pour ça... ) Not all the boats are being threatened by ice pressure. Some are in open water, surrounded by floes. One or two are tantalizingly close to the shore. There was a report yesterday that a snowmobile managed to get out across the ice to one longliner to deliver food. Adams said on a clear night, lights can be seen from Joe Batt's Arm, a community of about 800 with white "saltbox" houses straggling along the shoreline of the ice-clogged bay. http://www.thestar.com/News/article/205683 Partager ce message Lien à poster Partager sur d’autres sites
animo-aequoanimo 0 Posté(e) le 21 avril 2007 Citation :"No one's going to stop hunting if they don't have to. We need someone to tell us, `No, this is too dangerous. You can't do it.' Newfoundlanders are good at following orders. They've told us we can't fish and we can't do this or that. And we don't." Plus con que ça, tu meurts ! A quoi s'attendre de Newfies ? Partager ce message Lien à poster Partager sur d’autres sites