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  • #16
    Herring they are feeding on, you would be suprised how many herring are off our coast in the winter months...if you look back in history to when we had the herring fleets up and down the NE coast they used to fish almost 12 months a year from ports like Craster and Seahouses and such.

    seals will eat owt they can catch mind i for one love seeing the wildlife even if it does spoil the fishing a tad
    ................__................................ .............................
    ____[ ~ \_____
    [__On-A-Roll__/
    ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
    P.B
    SKATE 204lb
    COD 51lb
    LING 32lb
    TOPE 40lb
    CONGER 25lb
    HADDOCK 10lb
    HALIBUT 37lb
    COALIE 16lb
    BLUE SHARK 55lb

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    • #17
      [QUOTE=northeast1;527068]Herring they are feeding on, you would be suprised how many herring are off our coast in the winter months...if you look back in history to when we had the herring fleets up and down the NE coast they used to fish almost 12 months a year from ports like Craster and Seahouses and such.

      seals will eat owt they can catch mind i for one love seeing the wildlife even if it does spoil the fishing a tad[/QUOTE
      Have to agree love seeing the mall out there when fishing
      target of 10 codling this season and gonna try for a pig!!!!1

      Cheers Justin

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      • #18
        same time last year me n scotty had them (dolphins) swim past us a few rod lengths out, at st peters basin of all places, we seen gulls taking flatties off the top behind them tho dont know what that means.
        Last edited by ozzy37; 08-03-2013, 04:55 PM.

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        • #19
          There was actually a Seal on the free stretch at Durham last year,thats 12 mile from the sea.
          We now have the largest colony of Grey Seals in the world around our shores.In 2000 there was estimated to be 130,000,no doubt there will be a lot more now.
          Just imagine how many fish and other sea life they are eating.
          And everyone blames commercial boats for the lack of fish around our shores.

          Its about time the powers that be should be thinking about a cull......

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          • #20
            it took years to get salmon using the tees again. lots of time and effort at great cost to clean up the river and create a ladder for them.

            the seals now wait at the bottom of the ladder and pick off any salmon waiting to go up.

            we have more seals now living in the tees estury than there ever was. i,m realy supprised that someone hasnt decided to have a cull.

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            • #21
              Originally posted by Bushwhacker View Post
              There was actually a Seal on the free stretch at Durham last year,thats 12 mile from the sea.
              We now have the largest colony of Grey Seals in the world around our shores.In 2000 there was estimated to be 130,000,no doubt there will be a lot more now.
              Just imagine how many fish and other sea life they are eating.
              And everyone blames commercial boats for the lack of fish around our shores.

              Its about time the powers that be should be thinking about a cull......
              I was doing a bit of reading up on seals a few weeks ago, the last pup-count in 2008 in the north sea was about 45,000 - apparently figures for the total population are hard to come by but allowing for adolescents plus the breeding adults, 150,000 or so is probably not far away. There are periods when they don't feed, especially around breeding time, but it is estimated that the best average figure for food, per seal per day, is around 5kg of sand eel or 7kg of fish. So thats between 750,000 & 1,050,000 kg of sand eel / fish every day - an average of maybe 900 or so metric tonnes every day, or 328,500 tonnes or so every year. I'm not sure how this stacks up against what the boats are taking, but the seals obviously stick a lot closer to the shore & don't travel as far afield as the commercial fleet.

              Gary
              ....fishin' accomplished......

              Whitley Bay Angling Society
              on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/groups/whitleybayanglingsoc/

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              • #22
                Originally posted by dabcatcher View Post
                it took years to get salmon using the tees again. lots of time and effort at great cost to clean up the river and create a ladder for them.

                the seals now wait at the bottom of the ladder and pick off any salmon waiting to go up.

                we have more seals now living in the tees estury than there ever was. i,m realy supprised that someone hasnt decided to have a cull.
                Your right there Bill.
                I have stood and watched them at the barrage,sometimes there can be 20 of them eating every fish that comes up.
                Just becuase there,s a ladder there doesn,t mean the Salmon will go up it when the river is low,they like some flood water to run.
                So its easy food for the Seals.

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                • #23
                  Originally posted by g-force View Post
                  I was doing a bit of reading up on seals a few weeks ago, the last pup-count in 2008 in the north sea was about 45,000 - apparently figures for the total population are hard to come by but allowing for adolescents plus the breeding adults, 150,000 or so is probably not far away. There are periods when they don't feed, especially around breeding time, but it is estimated that the best average figure for food, per seal per day, is around 5kg of sand eel or 7kg of fish. So thats between 750,000 & 1,050,000 kg of sand eel / fish every day - an average of maybe 900 or so metric tonnes every day, or 328,500 tonnes or so every year. I'm not sure how this stacks up against what the boats are taking, but the seals obviously stick a lot closer to the shore & don't travel as far afield as the commercial fleet.

                  Gary
                  Some of the big Bulls have been seen down to 100 meters around the rigs eating big Conger,thats a canny way offshore.
                  Have a look at this.

                  Grey seal (eastern Atlantic population) videos, photos and facts - Halichoerus grypus - ARKive

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