There is fresh water via the hand-held sprayers. Waste is discarded in the center area, where it drops to a holding barge that is towed away regularly and dumped.
Announcement
A commercial fishing announcement is a bulletin issued by the State of Alaska Department of Fish & Game that changes (usually opens or closes) a fishing opportunity. Among fishermen this is usually called “an announcement” (sometimes called “an opener’) although technically it is an “emergency order”. Here’s the state of Alaska page for Releases of Announcements. Below is a screenshot of an example, from 2017 and further down you can download the actual PDF.
Cost Recovery
Alaska Statue 16.10.455 describes cost recovery for fisheries. The common explanation is that hatcheries and the organizations that run them have costs and wish to make money to pay for those costs. A fishing area may be designated specifically for cost recovery purpose. The practice, in Lower Cook Inlet, is for the aquaculture association to contract with a fish processor to harvest fish designated as ‘cost recovery’. The processor then hires a few boats to do the work of catching those fish, for a fraction of their market value. In the local industry, this is called “cost recovery fishing”. No one else can fish commercially in an area designated as/for ‘cost recovery’ and although any permit holder should be allowed to fish for cost recovery, that’s not the practice at this time.
While cost recovery fishing (in some areas) pays a fraction of the value of commercial (common property) fishing, it’s better than no fishing at all, which is what everyone not hired to fish under cost recovery is subjected to.
The issues are complicated and involve the state, hatcheries, aquaculture associations, sport and commercial fishermen (of multiple gear types) and the charter-fishing industry. The impacts are upon the natural fish, the ecology and the balance of resources. From other fish to birds to humans, interfering with the salmon cycle has far-reaching consequences.
Common Property
“Common property” is used in commercial fishing to describe fish that are available, legally, to fish.
Cannery Dock
An unusual sight: the cannery (fish processing plant) dock with not a single boat in it.
Seiner Controls
View from the deck (looking forward) on this seiner, from left to right:
- alongside the cabin is a narrow walkway to get to the bow
- the three rung ladder going from the main deck to the flying bridge
- the orange hose is a wash-down hose that forces pumped seawater through, for washing the deck or fish hold.
- (not shown on this boat) there is often a rain gear locker with hooks inside for hanging bibs, jackets, and gloves
- the rusty-looking circle with the teal rope is part of the deck winch, used to bring the net in
- the levers next to the cabin door are the controls for the power block, boom winches, wash-down pump and other gear
- the cabin door: may be one solid door or may have two separate parts, upper and lower
- the side roller is on the far-right and it’s used to bring in the net
- hanging from the main boom is a rope-hauler. The winches attached to the boom are used to move the boom, using hydraulics
- the aluminum hatches in the bottom, with a slider opening, cover the fish hold, below it