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  • Another converted captain...

    By deploying bird scaring lines (tori lines) from trawl vessels, seabirds are prevented from colliding dangerously, and often fatally with the trawl cables. To assess the performance of the tori lines in the Namibian fishery we are carrying out trials onboard commercial vessels and demonstrating their...
    Posted to Albatross Task Force by Kaspar Shimooshii on 11-20-2009
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  • Going back to school

    I was recently invited by the International School to give a talk to their students about my work - a brilliant opportunity as many of the kids have parents involved in the fishing industry. In fact, my invitation came about because two of the senior students had done a project about a year ago on seabird...
    Posted to Albatross Task Force by john paterson on 08-07-2009
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  • A Namibian first

    The big news from Namibia is that we have now begun our research project, and flown the first ever bird-scaring tori lines on a trawler in Namibia. This honour fell to the MFV Fisherbank belonging to Hangana, a Namibian company that has been very supportive of our work. The crew were fantastic, and really...
    Posted to Albatross Task Force by john paterson on 07-20-2009
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  • Ready to go!

    It's a great pleasure for me to tell you what is going on in Namibia at the moment, especially on the side of the longline fleet. Since February 2009 I have been organising a trip with one of the hake longline vessels so that we can get a better idea of the contact this fleet has with seabirds. I...
    Posted to Albatross Task Force by Kaspar Shimooshii on 05-18-2009
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  • Keeping busy

    We have been operating for a year now and have a made some progress on getting a handle on what is happening in the Namibian hake trawl fishery. I have not been out to sea recently, but am hoping to rectify this soon as the office becomes tedious compared to life at-sea! 2009 got off to a brilliant start...
    Posted to Albatross Task Force by john paterson on 04-14-2009
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  • From hot and land-locked to the high seas

    My name is Kaspar Shimooshili; I have studied a Bachelor of Science in Natural Resources specializing in Fisheries and Aquatic Science at the University of Namibia. I am the second Albatross Task Force Instructor in Namibia tasked to work with the hake longline fishery. Previously, I have worked for...
    Posted to Albatross Task Force by Kaspar Shimooshii on 10-25-2008
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  • A bang and a fizzle in Namibia

    Hi everybody. My name is John Paterson and I am the first Albatross Task Force Instructor to be based in Namibia. I have been tasked to work with the hake trawl fishery in Namibia and a second Instructor is to be recruited to work with the hake longline fishery. This is all new and exciting for me as...
    Posted to Albatross Task Force by john paterson on 07-24-2008
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  • One year on and still growing

    It seems ages ago now, but it was in April last year that Samantha Petersen and I sat down one evening to draft the proprosal to set up an Albatross Task Force (ATF) in Namibia. The death rate of seabirds in Namibian waters is unacceptable. Last year, a report, The Benguela Current Large Marine Ecosystem...
    Posted to Albatross Task Force by barry watkins on 04-03-2008
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  • Namibia helping conservation

    There are only two commercial harbours in Namibia: Walvis Bay to the north and Luderitz in the south. Sandwich harbour, a former fishing port, is now a proclaimed Ramsar site (i.e. a site designated for international protection due to its wetland wildlife importance). But, Walvis Bay is where we are...
    Posted to Albatross Task Force by barry watkins on 05-14-2007
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  • Black harriers and korhaans

    Barry and I spend the next few days working on the brochure, and visiting various contacts in the trawler industry. The Task Force team have recently started looking at the Namibian fishery, and Barry introduces me to the head of the largest trawler company up there. Meanwhile, the chances of getting...
    Posted to Albatross Task Force by peter exley on 01-12-2007
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  • Continuing where we left off

    After the trip to Namibia in October where we learnt from interviewing skippers that seabird bycatch may be a problem, we decided to head back and continue what we had started. Now it was time to go to sea and see what really happens there. I spent four weeks in the town of Luderitz in southern Namibia...
    Posted to Albatross Task Force by meidad goren on 12-11-2006
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  • Looking for skippers

    At the moment I am in between two trips. I have just spent a week in the wonderful town of Walvis Bay, Namibia. Walvis Bay holds the biggest fleet of hake longliners in Namibia, along with a large number of trawlers and open-sea long-liners operating from there. Namibia has adopted a National Plan of...
    Posted to Albatross Task Force by meidad goren on 10-31-2006
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  • Never a dull moment

    We have 75 confirmed attendees for the hake longline workshop this week, which includes boat owners, skippers, crew and representatives from Marine and Coastal Management. I’m looking forward to building a relationship with this group. Currently, this type of longline sinks very slowly, and the...
    Posted to Albatross Task Force by maria honig on 05-18-2006
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