Mỗi khi bạn nhai một miếng ká biễn, chắc bạn tưỡng là những người hành nghề dánh cá ..mang về nhiều lợi lộc lắm chớ??
Không dâu, ngoài các chuyến hãi hành như zưới dây --hãy xem hình -- dầy nguy hiễm ..tàu cũa bạn fãi ngụp lặn trong các dợt sóng kao cao kã
30 ft .. ngán lắm ..thêm vào dó ..số lượng cá -- kàng ngày kàng hiếm hoai vì dã bị săn bắt cã mấy trăm năm ni --, dánh dược kũng zãm zần.. vì thế cuộc sống cũng chỉ dũ nuôi sống cho za dình mà thôi.
Tôi đang mô tã/thão luận cuộc sống cũa zân dánh ká xứ Scotland với tàu/thuyền dánh ká tân tiến ..chớ không fãi mô tã cuộc sống cũa zân dánh ká VN ..với tàu thuyền ọp ẹp ..ngày dêm fãi lo sợ Chệt tặc fá fách .. dó là chưa kễ mỗi khi về bến thì fãi dóng hụi chết cho dám CS cs dịa fương .
For those in peril on the sea...
Terrifying images of fishing boat being battered by 30ft waves in the far
North Sea show dangers faced by our trawlermen every day
PUBLISHED: 16:16 GMT, 27 November 2012 | UPDATED: 22:36 GMT, 27 November 2012
The next time you
pop out for a cod and chips, spare a thought for the men who caught your
dinner.
These amazing
images show a fishing boat being hurled about by gale force winds in
the North Sea as the crew battles to keep control.
Caught in
mountainous 30ft waves, the state-of-the-art Harvester ploughs through
relentlessly to collect cod and plaice.
For the team, it is
just another trip - part of the daily life of the unsung heroes who harvest
the ocean, as men from Peterhead, north-east Scotland, have done for the
last 400 years.
Fortitude: North Sea trawlermen have been fishing like the
men on this boat in some of the world's most unpredictable seas for
hundreds of years
Lashed by waves: The state-of-the-art Harvester is part of
the Lunar fishing fleet from Peterhead, north-east Scotland
Struggling: The skipper is almost entirely submerged by water
as it steers through the stormy waters
Danger: The trawlermen have a daily struggle with the
elements every time they leave the shelter of their home ports on the UK's
north-east coast
Using the power of her 900hp engine, the skipper has to steer
a safe course for the 90ft-long vessel, part of the Lunar fishing fleet.
And at times, the boat almost disappears in the yawning
troughs between the huge waves.
Peterhead is one of the biggest trawler communities in the
region, where, against the odds, fishing is still the main industry
employing more than 500 men and where 100,000 tonnes of fresh fish are
landed every year, despite dwindling stocks of cod, plaice and other fish
that used to be bountiful in the area.
Earnings are just as risky as the job itself as wages are
split between the crew and the vessel depending on how great a haul of fish
they manage to bring in.
Some crews could be out at sea for long periods - months at a
time - depending on the harvest.
Against the odds: Peterhead is one of the biggest trawler
communities in the region, where fishing is still the main industry
employing more than 500 men and where 100,000 tonnes of fresh fish are
landed every year, despite dwindling stocks of cod and plaice
Making waves: Using the power of her 900hp engine, the
captain has to steer a safe course for the 90ft-long vessel
Here comes another one: Life in the fishing grounds can still
be a dangerous challenge - as these remarkable pictures clearly show
Where once a trawlerman was almost guaranteed a high gain
after hauling in tonnes of fish, these days typical earnings are
plummeting.
Hang on: The Harvester trawler hurtles straight into the
oncoming swell and takes on board a flood of seawater
Gone fishing: The Harvester is a state-of-the-art part of the
Lunar fishing fleet, seen here caught in mountainous thirty-foot waves
Despite that tragic proportion,
officially, the most dangerous job in the world is commercial fishing, with
an annual death rate of 116 per 100,000
Back on course: The ship begins to right itself as the worst
of the storm passes on
And the trawlermen's jobs are set to get even more
difficult...
Fish are likely to get smaller on average by 2050 because
global warming will cut the amount of oxygen in the oceans, according to a
study.
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