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Home arrow News arrow Economic Impact arrow New Bedford scalloper: 'It looked like a city on the ocean'
New Bedford scalloper: 'It looked like a city on the ocean'
NEW BEDFORD — The city may have slumbered in the pre-dawn hours Friday, but down on the docks it was all rattle and hum.
 

Lights blazed and diesels growled the length of New Bedford's South Terminal as scallop boats returning from closed-area trips jockeyed for space at the long wharf behind the fish houses.

The Miss Maude, the Apollo, the Ocean Queen and the Nordic Pride were among the first boats home from the closed areas on Georges Bank that opened to scallop fishing at midnight last Sunday.

The decision by fishery regulators to allow entry on Aug. 1 sparked a mass exodus from the waterfront last weekend, with practically the entire fleet leaving port. Friday's intense activity on the waterfront will continue as the remainder of the boats are expected to land their catch over the next several days.

Read the complete story from The Standard-Times.

 

 

 

 

 

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JESSICA HATHAWAY: 'National Fisherman' editor says New York Times misrepresented catch share support

May 18, 2012 - The New York Times heralds catch shares for saving summer flounder and Northeast haddock, which is like crediting a freshman class for the seniors' high college placement rate. By the same token, we could blame catch shares for the demise of Northeast cod stocks. But we don't.