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Observations at Sea and in the Markets
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 May 2009
Extract
At Grimsby there are a number of trawlers—some steamers and some sailing vessels, which are locally called Cleethorpers, and regularly fish on the grounds near the Humber, returning to port at the end of the week. I went out in one of these, the S.S. Rhine, on July 22nd. My object was to examine the grounds near the mouth of the Humber and the Wash, in order to compare them with the grounds off the German coast. We shot the trawl at 2 p.m. the same day, having steamed 55 miles by the log from the Newsand Lightship, at a position a few miles west of the Coal Pit or N.E. Hole, as it is named on the chart illustrating Mr. Holt's description of the Grimsby Trawl Fishery. The depth during the haul was 13 to 18 fathoms. The temperature at the surface was 58° F.
- Type
- North Sea Investigations
- Information
- Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom , Volume 4 , Issue 2 , May 1896 , pp. 108 - 112
- Copyright
- Copyright © Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 1896
References
page 125 note In the Inspector's Report for 1894 it is stated that 10 steamers were working from Yarmouth. Probably several of these act as carriers for the fleets.