Gloucester Seafood Display Auction

image_1, originally uploaded by captjoe06.

Here is a link to the Gloucester Seafood Display Auction’s Website

It is such an efficient way to move fish that a great majority of the product that was unloaded at docks such as ours, Mortillaro’s, Old Port Seafood, John B Wright and other piers no longer unload fish at those piers.

With the consolidation in the fishing industry it is a good thing that the industry is for the most part based out of the auction so that it can prosper well into the future. The folks that run the auction say they can handle ten times the amount of fish that is currently being landed. So IF fish ever come back in greater numbers and IF the government allows boats to catch an unsustainable amount of landings in the future then the Auction will be there and able to handle those fish. A good thing.

What needs to be preserved around the harbor is places for fishermen to tie boats. The way to make sure those boats have good places to tie their boats while their fish gets unloaded at the auction is by giving waterfront property owners financially viable alternative options for the upland portions of their property that would allow them to make enough money to reinvest in their piers where they tie up commercial fishermen.

In the old days you would tie up commecial boats at your dock for reduced rents because they unloaded fish with you at your dock. Now the Auction unloads a majority of the fish that comes into Gloucester and the City and State charge below market dockage prices at places like The State Fish Pier, Saint Peter’s Park and I4-C2 (rates that wouldn’t pay our taxes never mind upkeep or a simple profit) but those public facilities are publicly subsidized. So this is the failure with the current zoning.

Gloucester Seafood Display Auction

Here is the room where fish prices are bid. Note the laptops, phones and fax machines.

Gloucester Seafood Display Auction, originally uploaded by captjoe06.

Galley and Living Quarters Aboard The Western Venture Herring Boat

Click The Arrow To View Video

Western Venture Herring Boat

The video taken in the above post was taken here in the wheelhouse of The Western Venture.

Western Venture Herring Boat, originally uploaded by captjoe06.

Offloading Nets on The Western Venture Herring Boat

This Power Block is attached to this truck on a boom. The power block is hydraulically powered to rotate and pull the net up and over the rail of the boat. This type of work used to be done by hand.

Once offloaded the net can be transported by truck to an open space where it can be stretched out and worked on.

Another technological advance which lends marine work to not need to have such a wide footprint on a harbor. That space that used to be needed along waterfronts to repair nets can now be done in covered buildings in industrial parks like Swan Net does up at The Blackburn Industrial Park in Gloucester.

View From The Western Venture Wheelhouse

Here is a view from the wheelhouse of the Western Venture looking down at the herring net being offloaded from the boat. You can see the net travel up through the boat’s power block, over to the power block on the boom attatched to Swan Net’s truck, and then into the bed of Swan Net’s truck.

The net will then be transported up to the Blackburn Industrial Park where it will be repaired, worked on or stored.

Many traditional seaside business have moved away from the waterfront, like Good Harbor Fillet. With modern advances in the seafood industry like The Gloucester Seafood Display Auction and Power Booms, and the Internet, much less a footprint of Gloucester’s Harbor is actually used for offloading fish compared to when every part of the seafood chain occurred on the waterfront.

At The Gloucester Seafood Display Auction, there are a couple dozen fish buyers who bid on fish in one room. Those buyers in that auction room represent thousands of seafood buyers who buy through them. The Auction handles much of the fish that used to be unloaded at places like Mortillaro’s, Captain Joe’s, John B Wright’s, Old Port Seafood, Fisherman’s Wharf and other piers around town. The Auction and their very advanced electronic bidding system doesn’t even necessitate the buyers be present to purchase that fish.

One of our former customers dropped in to say hi last summer at 7:00AM. He was wearing shorts and sandals. I asked him why he wasn’t busy buying and selling fish. He told me that he had already bid for the fish he needed from home and that the Auction trucks would be delivering the fish he purchased directly to his customers.

Technological Advances In Seafood Distribution

He won’t even touch a fish! But that fish is going to get exactly where it is supposed to go. I consider myself pretty knowledgeable about the seafood industry but even that kinda took a little while to grasp.

My cousin and I and a crew of four guys used to go to the dock at 3:00AM to try to get boats unloaded, the fish packed in ice and on trucks on their way into Boston for the morning markets. Now this guy that I used to sell fish to is getting all that work done without even touching a fish.

Innovations like this and power blocks, the fish being processed at Gortons coming in frozen on trucks instead of boats have occurred throughout the industry but there are many people that have no idea and cling to the idea that the fishing industry operates the same way it did 10, 20 or even 50 years ago think nothing should change at all on the waterfront.

Hydraulic Pump Controls Aboard The Sunlight

These control the flow of herring aboard The Sunlight Herring Boat.

Western Venture Herring Boat

Western Venture Herring Boat, originally uploaded by captjoe06.

Peter Mullins and I took a stroll around his Western Venture Herring Boat where I got to take some pictures and video of it’s wheelhouse, the living quarters, and enormous engine room.

Unbelievable. Upcoming pics and video over the course of the next few days.

To get an idea of how big this boat is, check out my large truck in the bottom right of this picture.  It is dwarfed by The Western Venture.

The Providian -Herring Assassin

The Providian Herring Assasin, originally uploaded by captjoe06.

That’s a whole lot of steel.

Wysteria on East Main

 

Wysteria on East Main, originally uploaded by captjoe06.

Some kind folks on Cape Ann Online had mentioned that they really love the wysteria that grows on the hill across the street from our dock so I took a pic for them.

Teresa Marie Getting Painted Up at Rose’s Marine

Filming For The History Channel, Dave Jewell

Filming For The History Channel Aboard The Lady J