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small fishing boats
small fishing boats
How to take a dump while in a small fishing boat?


I have a 10' jon boat (No motor, just oars). What should i do when i'm out in the middle of the ocean and find myself needing to take a huge dump.
Holding it is not an option..
PLEASE HURRY!

eat it or use it as bait to catch fish



No items matching your keywords were found.


No items matching your keywords were found.


Small Green D-Ring


Small Green D-Ring


$6


Reinforced fabric and corrosion resistant metal make these D-Rings a permanent addition to your boat.

Great for green 385ftg FastTrack, 285fpb and STS10 Frameless Fishing Boats.

Not for use on SE330, SE370, SE6, SE8, SE9 and 124smb boats. Includes glue.


EZ Cart (small)


EZ Cart (small)


$129


This simple to use and easy to assemble cart wheel system fits under our Sea Eagle Kayaks,SE8, SE9, PaddleSki, 285FPB, and 375FC FoldCat. It allows you to roll your Sea Eagle from where you inflated it to where you launch it. Packs down for easy transport. Not recommended for our heaviest boats or with boats carrying an 8 or more horse power engine. Weight limit 125 lbs. Wheel diameter 10" x 2.5" wide. These are not meant to be used as a trailer or with a vehicle.

**Works with 285fpb Frameless Fishing Boat**


AB285


AB285


$39


Oar Set for Frameless Fishing Boats

Small Repair Kit


Small Repair Kit


$7


Repair kit for Motormount boats and Sport Kayaks. Includes two 4 in. x 3 in. white swatches of material and two tubes of glue.

285fpb Pro Inflatable Pontoon Fishing Boat Package


285fpb Pro Inflatable Pontoon Fishing Boat Package


$899


The unique U-hull configuration of this one man fishing boat provides the maximum fishing space with the least amount of hull weight.
It can be used two ways - in it's lightest configuration, without a wooden floor using the inflatable Pro Angler Seat and rowing with the included oars or fully rigged, with wooden floorboard for standing and casting, pedestal swivel seat for 360° fishing while sitting, motor mount for small gas or electric engines. Weighing only 38 lbs, with the Pro Angler Seat this is a super lightweight, super portable fishing craft. Even when equipped with floorboard, motor mount, and swivel seat this boat weighs only a total of 72 lbs.
The NEW Hunter Green 285fpb is a stealthy inflatable boat that's perfect for fishing or hunting. It goes anywhere, sets up in just 5 minutes and can fit in the trunk of a car.

285fpb Deluxe Inflatable Pontoon Fishing Boat Package


285fpb Deluxe Inflatable Pontoon Fishing Boat Package


$649


The unique U-hull configuration of this one man fishing boat provides the maximum fishing space with the least amount of hull weight.
It can be used two ways - in it's lightest configuration, without a wooden floor using the inflatable Pro Angler Seat and rowing with the included oars or fully rigged, with wooden floorboard for standing and casting, pedestal swivel seat for 360° fishing while sitting, motor mount for small gas or electric engines. Weighing only 38 lbs, with the Pro Angler Seat this is a super lightweight, super portable fishing craft. Even when equipped with floorboard, motor mount, and swivel seat this boat weighs only a total of 72 lbs.
The NEW Hunter Green 285fpb is a stealthy inflatable boat that's perfect for fishing or hunting. It goes anywhere, sets up in just 5 minutes and can fit in the trunk of a car.

124smb Start Up Inflatable Boat Package


124smb Start Up Inflatable Boat Package


$499


The largest of Sea Eagle's motormount boats, this roomy and durable inflatable fishing platform is just a fraction of the cost of other fishing boats. The 124smb is even portable enough to pack in a car trunk.

124smb Fisherman's Dream Inflatable Boat Package


124smb Fisherman's Dream Inflatable Boat Package


$699


The largest of Sea Eagle's motormount boats, this roomy and durable inflatable fishing platform is just a fraction of the cost of other fishing boats. The 124smb is even portable enough to pack in a car trunk.

Drain Valve for Transom Boats


Drain Valve for Transom Boats


$12


Replacement drain valve for your 12.6sr or 14sr Sport Runabout.

Motormount-FPFB


Motormount-FPFB


$65


Motormount for Frameless Fishing Boats holds up to a 3hp engine or up to 55 lbs thrust electric motor. 18"x11"x11", 6 lbs.

Deluxe Fishing Seat


Deluxe Fishing Seat


$69


Our new inflatable Deluxe Fishing High Seat is bigger than our DKS and provides super comfort with great back support (17" height) and allows you to sit 10" off the floor for greater fishing and casting comfort.

Fishing Seat Kit-Paddleski


Fishing Seat Kit-Paddleski


$249


This elevated, fold down, swivel fishing seat is equipped with the versatile universal Scotty® Mount System and Scotty® Rod Holders. Includes Swivel Seat, Swivel Seat Mount, 2 Scotty® Rod Holders and universal mounting system, aluminum platform, aluminum yokes and hardware needed for assembly.

Fishing Module-Fast Track


Fishing Module-Fast Track


$299


This Swivel Fishing Seat Module for our FastTrack Kayaks gives the angler a much better line of sight when fishing and a truly stable seat that is comfortable for hours of fishing. The 2 rod-holders are conveniently located behind the angler, out of the way and within easy reach.

Depth finders, fish finders & GPS can also be mounted to the front of the aluminum seat board so they are positioned between your legs in a visible position from the swivel seat.

The nicest feature of this fishing module is that you can drop it in or take it out of your FastTrack within seconds. Weighs just 16 lbs and includes the swivel seat, 2 rod holders, release-a-seat mount and aluminum seat board.


Medium Green D-Ring


Medium Green D-Ring


$9


Reinforced fabric and corrosion resistant metal make these D-Rings a permanent addition to your boat.

Great for green 385ftg FastTrack, 285fpb and STS10 Frameless Fishing Boats.

Not for use on SE330, SE370, SE6, SE8, SE9 and 124smb boats. Includes glue.


Mushroom Anchor Kit


Mushroom Anchor Kit


$49


8 lb. PVC coated Mushroom Anchor with 25' of 5/16" rope and an Anchor Grip to hold the rope in place. This is a great anchoring system for the 375fc FoldCat and for our Motormount Fishing Boats.

375fc Deluxe Inflatable Pontoon Fishing Boat Package


375fc Deluxe Inflatable Pontoon Fishing Boat Package


$1449


Now available in a Dark Hunter Green to blend in with the waters and surroundings where fish hide most! The 375fc Fold Cat™ inflatable one or two man pontoon fishing boat with patented folding frame design is a lightweight, portable, fuel efficient, large platform fishing boat for two that packs easily into a car and does not require a trailer!
Featuring the versatile universal Scotty™ Mount System with 2-4 Scotty™ Rod Holders and the ability to attach an incredible assortment of Scotty™ accessories.
(U.S. Patent 7,240,634)

SE 370 Sport Fishing Inflatable Kayak Package


SE 370 Sport Fishing Inflatable Kayak Package


$329


The Sea Eagle 370 is the 330's big sister. Only 6 lbs. heavier (32 lbs.) with a larger carrying capacity of 3 people or 650 lbs. You can take along enough gear for that long weekend fishing trip, camping adventure or river running voyage. Form and function make the Sea Eagle 370 America's second most popular inflatable kayak.

This affordable inflatable sport kayak is as lightweight and portable as it gets, yet still remarkably stable and durable.


Small Dring


Small Dring


$8


Reinforced fabric and corrosion resistant metal make these D-Rings a permanent addition to your boat.

Note: This is the size that is standard on our Explorer Kayaks, FastTracks & PaddleSki Series for seat attachment.

Not for use with our Sport Kayaks (330 & 370), Motormount (SE-8 & SE-9) or Super Motormount (124 SMB) Boat Series. Includes glue.


SE 9 Startup Inflatable Boat Package


SE 9 Startup Inflatable Boat Package


$349


This lightweight, affordable, inflatable fishing boat holds up to 4 people, is super stable and works great with small gas or electric motors.

SE 9 Fisherman's Dream Inflatable Boat Package


SE 9 Fisherman's Dream Inflatable Boat Package


$599


This lightweight, affordable, inflatable fishing boat holds up to 4 people, is super stable and works great with small gas or electric motors.


Inshore Angler: Coastal Carolina's Small Boat Fishing Guide Inshore Angler: Coastal Carolina's Small Boat Fishing Guide

List Price: $19.95

 

Description

This book instructs anglers how to catch every major saltwater species that can taken from a small boat along the coast of North Carolina. Chapters cover rigging, selecting a small boat, catching live baits, and fishing techniques for specific species with tips about lures, baits, and gear.

Inshore Angler: Coastal Carolina's Small Boat Fishing Guide Inshore Angler: Coastal Carolina's Small Boat Fishing Guide

List Price: $19.95

 

Description

Inshore Angler gives small boat anglers the knowledge they need to become successful at catching the most popular game fish available along the coast, enabling fishermen to make the most of each fishing cycle by providing small boat anglers with detailed descriptions of the gear, bait and lures that fishing guides use...

How to Build Wooden Boats: With 16 Small-Boat Designs (Dover Woodworking) How to Build Wooden Boats: With 16 Small-Boat Designs (Dover Woodworking)

List Price: $11.95

 

Description

Written especially for the amateur boat builder, this concise guidebook contains clear, practical directions and designs for building 16 modern small boats, rowboats, sailboats, outboards, a 125-class hydroplane, and a runabout...

Tropic Hats Wide Brim Men Safari/Outback Summer Hat w/Neck Flap Tropic Hats Wide Brim Men Safari/Outback Summer Hat w/Neck Flap

 

Description

Wide Brim Summer Hat for Anytime Out in the Sun.  These Hats Look Great and Protect your Ears, Neck, and Face While Out in the Sun.  Mesh Top to Keep Cool.  3" Brim.  Snaps Up on Both Sides.  Great for Everyday in the Sun.

Captain Awesome - Fishing Boat Fisherman Flag Men's Tank Top T-shirt Captain Awesome - Fishing Boat Fisherman Flag Men's Tank Top T-shirt

 

Description

Perfect to wear at home or out on the town. The back of the garment is blank. The garment is Fully Machine Washable.

Dorfman Pacific Unisex Cotton Packable Summer Travel Bucket Hat Dorfman Pacific Unisex Cotton Packable Summer Travel Bucket Hat

 

Description

Whether you are fishing, on vacation or at the pool, this is a classic addition to any outfit. Bucket hat is made from dyed cotton twill and features brass eyelets for ventilation. This cotton bucket hat fits comfortably and looks great on both men and women.

KL Industries American 12 Jon Fishing Boat KL Industries American 12 Jon Fishing Boat

 

Description

The fisherman friendly American 12 Jon has reinforced motor mounts front and rear with battery storage locations fore and aft. Features include recessed drink and tackle holders, 4 rod holders, and oarlock sockets...

Solstice Voyager 4-Person Boat Solstice Voyager 4-Person Boat

List Price: $119.90

 

Description

Inflatable boat

Thill Wobble Bobber - 1/8 oz. Thill Wobble Bobber - 1/8 oz.

 

Description

The aerodynamic shape and internal weighting system makes the Thill Wobble Bobber the longest-casting slip float you can buy. Whether targeting a specific rockpile, drop-off, hump or brushpile a long cast from shore or throwing to various pieces of cover or structure from a boat, no other slip float gives you the distance and accuracy you can attain from the Thill Wobble Bobber...

Wide Brim Men Safari/Outback Summer Hat With Neck Flap (Small, Light Desert Camo) Wide Brim Men Safari/Outback Summer Hat With Neck Flap (Small, Light Desert Camo)

 

Description

Wide Brim Summer Hat for Anytime Out in the Sun.  These Hats Look Great and Protect your Ears, Neck, and Face While Out in the Sun.  Mesh Top to Keep Cool.  3" Brim.  Snaps Up on Both Sides.  Great for Everyday in the Sun.

Captain Awesome - Fishing Boat Fisherman Flag Men's Tank Top T-shirt (Small, CHARCOAL) Captain Awesome - Fishing Boat Fisherman Flag Men's Tank Top T-shirt (Small, CHARCOAL)

List Price: $13.95

 

Description

Perfect to wear at home or out on the town. The back of the garment is blank. The garment is Fully Machine Washable.

2 3/4 2 3/4" Wide Brim Men Safari/Outback Summer Hat w/Snap up Sides- Desert Camo Small

 

Description

Wide Brim Summer Hat for Anytime Out in the Sun.  These Hats Look Great and Protect your Ears, Neck, and Face While Out in the Sun.  Made of 60% Cotton, 40% Polyester.  2 3/4" Brim.  Snaps Up on Both Sides...

Old Fisherman or Man in Boat Fishing - WATCHBUDDY® DELUXE TWO-TONE THEME WATCH - Arabic Numbers - Brown Leather Strap-Women's Size-Small Old Fisherman or Man in Boat Fishing - WATCHBUDDY® DELUXE TWO-TONE THEME WATCH - Arabic Numbers - Brown Leather Strap-Women's Size-Small

List Price: $79.95

 

Description

WatchBuddy Deluxe Watches are the World's Most Lovable Theme Watches, they combine beauty, style and grace with functionality. The watch has a precision quartz crystal movement with three (golden) hands - hour, minute and second...

Old Fisherman or Man in Boat Fishing - WATCHBUDDY® DELUXE TWO-TONE THEME WATCH - Arabic Numbers - Black Leather Strap-Women's Size-Small Old Fisherman or Man in Boat Fishing - WATCHBUDDY® DELUXE TWO-TONE THEME WATCH - Arabic Numbers - Black Leather Strap-Women's Size-Small

List Price: $79.95

 

Description

WatchBuddy Deluxe Watches are the World's Most Lovable Theme Watches, they combine beauty, style and grace with functionality. The watch has a precision quartz crystal movement with three (golden) hands - hour, minute and second...

Intex Explorer Pro 200, 2-Person Inflatable Boat Set with French Oars and High Output Air Pump Intex Explorer Pro 200, 2-Person Inflatable Boat Set with French Oars and High Output Air Pump

List Price: $39.99

 

Description

Comfort, Size, Ease of use and Durability make this the perfect boat for anyone. Use your Explorer Pro Boat 200 with 3 air chambers including inner auxillary chamber inside main hull in your favorite lake or small river for comfortable ride.

Sangean H201 AM/FM/Weather, Digital tuned Waterproof/Shower Radio Sangean H201 AM/FM/Weather, Digital tuned Waterproof/Shower Radio

List Price: $257.34

 

Description

The Sangean Waterproof H201 Radio Allows You Can Enjoy Your Morning News, Your Favorite Radio Show, Stock And Financial News, Or Your Local Ball Games. Unlike Other Shower Radios, Most Of Which Are Just Water Resistant; The Sangean H201 Is Made With Jis7 Standard, Which Is Waterproof...

Trademark Fine Art Two Small Fishing Boats by Katsushika Hokusai Canvas Wall Art, 22x32-Inch Trademark Fine Art Two Small Fishing Boats by Katsushika Hokusai Canvas Wall Art, 22x32-Inch

List Price: $259.99

 

Description

This ready to hang, gallery wrapped art piece features two fishing boats on rough waters. Katsushika Hokusai was a Japanese artist, painter and printmaker of the Edo period. Hokusai is best known as author of the woodblock print series...

Just Here For Fishing Big Boy's Kids Tee Shirt Youth Small-White Just Here For Fishing Big Boy's Kids Tee Shirt Youth Small-White

List Price: $18.99

 

Description

Great looking 100% cotton shirt. For little boy's sizes 2T through 7T check for our Amazon listing with this logo and "Little Boy's" in the search box. Please refer to our sizing chart for measurements.

Deeper Smart Portable Fish Finder (Depth Finder) for Smartphone or Tablet, suitable for Ice Fishing, Kayak, Boat and Shore Fishing. Compatible with iPhones and Android devices. The World's most versatile wireless sonar. Deeper Smart Portable Fish Finder (Depth Finder) for Smartphone or Tablet, suitable for Ice Fishing, Kayak, Boat and Shore Fishing. Compatible with iPhones and Android devices. The World's most versatile wireless sonar.

List Price: $229.00

 

Description

Deeper - Smart Fish finder Deeper is a first of it's kind wireless fish finder that works in conjunction with your Android or iOS device. Information from the floating Deeper is transmitted with wireless Bluetooth technology negating the need for a cabled connection...

NorCross HawkEye F33P Fish Finder NorCross HawkEye F33P Fish Finder

List Price: $89.99

 

Description

Ideal for fishing expeditions and family vacations, the Norcross Hawkeye F33P offers the latest in portable fish finder technology and is guaranteed to help you come up with better fish stories than ever before...

{ 5 comments }

jdk May 10, 2011 at 4:11 am

Mirror to the second link about Kesennuma: KESEN-NUMA CITY, JAPAN – It’s 5am on the the north eastern tip of Japan’s main island of Honshu, and 75 tons of dead shark is being meticulously arranged into a neat grid of tidy piles, of twenty sharks per pile. If you thought shark finning was exclusively a Chinese problem, think again. Welcome to Kesen-numa City, Japan’s shark fin capital. Here, six days a week, small teams of Japanese workers go about the hushed business of industrial shark-finning. By 6.30am, with piles arranged, the sharks are disemboweled first. Hearts are ripped efficiently from their bodies by men wearing brightly coloured rubber boots and aprons. At 7am, the shark corpses are cleaned of their blood by workers wielding water hoses. And by 8am, small teams are silently moving up and down aisles and rows like robots in a Japanese car factory, quickly slicing off every dorsal, pectoral and tail fin from the lifeless, grey lumps. Big hungry black crows squawk in the shadows, looking for bloody morsels. And shark fins plop with regularity into small yellow plastic baskets. The baskets fill up fast, are then weighed, and finally carried to a nearby truck, where a man with a notepad strikes a deal. At 9.30am, it’s all over for another day. Fork lift trucks scoop up tons of limbless carcasses, then dump them into a high-sided truck. The process is a brutal sight to behold, and not for the faint-hearted. The fishing port of Kesen-numa City is located in Miyagi Prefecture in North East Japan, and is the country’s only port dedicated to catching sharks. Over two days in early July 2010, I saw 119 tons of blue shark (Prionace glaucaof), ten tons of salmon shark (Lamna ditropis), and three tons of short fin mako shark (Isurus oxyrinchus) landed on the dock at Kesen-numa. Not to mention several tons of endangered bluefin tuna, (Thunnus thynnus), but that’s a whole other story. Taking government transparency to another level, landed shark tonnage numbers are provided daily by the port of Kesen-numa’s Japanese only website, which is publicly, (and apparently unashamedly), available. According to the most recent data available, a Kesen-numa Municipal Fisheries report, the gross tonnage of blue sharks landed in the small fishing port dropped from 9,722 tons in 2007 to 8,200 tons in 2008, a decline of 18.6%. Only a small portion of shark fin prepared in Kesen-numa is destined for export, mostly to Hong Kong and Shanghai, where Japanese shark fin is seen as a premium brand by the new wealthy elite of China. For wealthy Chinese, shark fin from Kesen-numa is seen as a premium, or luxury, brand. Mr Hatakeyama, 45, a shark fin processor from Kesen-numa, said, “Quite a bit of shark fin is sent to Shanghai from here as there are many rich people there. Our shark fin here can command higher prices than Chinese shark fin sourced from elsewhere in Asia, the Middle East or Africa. Even though the Chinese have their own shark fin, they prefer Japanese brands”. Given the delicacy’s roots, this is hardly surprising, but what is more unexpected is that the majority of shark fin processed in Kesen-numa is for domestic consumption as shark fin soup at Chinese restaurants and expensive hotels in Japan. Like in China, shark fin soup is common place at weddings, company banquets and all sorts of other special occasions where the paying host wants to show off their wealth. And much of the shark fin produced at small food factories dotted around the city ends up bound for Chinese restaurants in Japan, of which there are many. The rest is sold to hotels to include on their menus for newly weds and for corporate banquets. In olden times, shark fin was sometimes used as a substitute for gold when Japanese merchants traded with China. Understandably, and for this same reason, the exact location for fin drying in Japan remains a closely guarded secret. And a significant amount is shipped to China for sun-drying, although the exact drying location in China is an even bigger secret. These days, the port of Kesen-numa feels like a town down on it’s luck. Once thriving, today there is a sense of decay in the air. Overgrown and rusty. Similarly, attitudes have yet to move with the times. As public sentiment slowly turns against shark fin soup in Hong Kong, what was once an ancient tradition in this forgotten corner of Japan, is, according to conservationists, wreaking havoc on shark populations worldwide. Small fishing boats used catch sharks as part of the city’s ancient tradition. But this tradition, coupled with modern fishing methods like the advent of strong and long fishing lines, and boats that can go further and stay out of port for longer, is a recipe for disaster for the sharks. According to the Japan Fisheries Agency, the nation’s national shark fin catch nearly halved since the late 1960′s. In 1969, the total number of sharks caught and landed in Japan was around 65,000 tons. Last year’s total was around 35,000 tons, and Kesen-numa accounts for around 90% of all sharks caught nationally. Whether the global marine ecosystems can suffer such an onslaught is debatable. The arguments against shark-finning are, by now, well known in Hong Kong. It is said that sharks take decades to reach adulthood, and by ripping them out of the oceans at such an unprecedented rate, we are depriving them of them of the chance to reproduce, and thus repopulate their decimated numbers. As sharks are apex predators at the top of the food chain, they are naturally predisposed to exist in smaller numbers than their prey and this, combined with their low reproductive rates, makes them naturally vulnerable to over-fishing. Cruelty may be the issue at stake for those who see the wasteful practice of slicing the fins off the shark at sea and tossing them back over the side of the boat, but in Kesen-numa the whole shark is landed. It is said that every part of every shark landed at Kesen-numa is processed there and then consumed. Even it’s heart. For the people of Kesen-numa are seen as a little strange by ordinary Japanese. Locals can ill afford the shark fin soup available at many of the town’s small side street restaurants, but the locals have developed a peculiar, if bloodthirsty, fondness for raw salmon shark heart sashimi. An exotic ‘delicacy’, which, according to local people, is consumed nowhere else in Japan. It is left up to the tourists who visit Kesen-numa to order the city’s famous speciality, shark fin soup. And tourists do come. Some are attracted to the splendid hiking along Miyagi Prefecture’s rugged coastline, whilst others are seafood aficionados, looking for their next hit of sublime ultra-fresh exotic seafood. Early risers among them will inevitably make their way to the dock, where they are confronted with one of the most bloody spectacles they are likely ever to witness in their lives – Kesen-numa’s very own industrial shark-finning show. A quick walk around the town, reveals a parallel universe, where even the most basic concepts of marine conservation do not exist. Just a stone’s throw from the dock, is the ‘Kesen-numa Rias Shark Museum’, which visitors enter through a giant set of shark jaws. Once inside, tourists are first confronted by real copies of faded front pages of tabloid newspapers from around the world that sensationalize shark attacks on swimmers. Make no mistake, sharks are bad, evil, a threat to humanity and they should be erdaicated from the face of the earth, the headlines, and so it seems the museum’s message screams at us. This despite the fact that humans are statistically far more likely to die from crossing the road, than from an attack by a shark. After passing exhibits relating to the natural history of sharks at the half way mark, visitors leaving the museum pass a glass display box filled with all kinds of products one can make from shark; shark fin soup in a can, shark cartillage pills which are supposedly good for joint pain, and hand-crafted handbags made from shark leather. But not a word about conservation and the critical situation facing global shark stocks due to over-fishing. Could a new battle between marine conservationists battling to save the sharks and the Japanese fishing lobby be on the horizon? First there was the annual showdown in the Southern Ocean between the Japanese whaling fleet and the environmental groups Greenpeace and Sea Shepherd to save the whale. Then there was the runaway success of the Oscar-winning documentary ‘The Cove’ which exposed the brutal Japanese trade in captive dolphins. One would think the tide is slowly turning. Isn’t it time Kesen-numa City, Japan’s dirty little shark secret, was shut down too? ALEX HOFFORD : HONG KONG CHINA KESENNUMA JAPAN SHARK FIN PHOTOGRAPHER

jdk May 23, 2011 at 4:59 pm

Mirror to the second link about Kesennuma: KESEN-NUMA CITY, JAPAN – It’s 5am on the the north eastern tip of Japan’s main island of Honshu, and 75 tons of dead shark is being meticulously arranged into a neat grid of tidy piles, of twenty sharks per pile. If you thought shark finning was exclusively a Chinese problem, think again. Welcome to Kesen-numa City, Japan’s shark fin capital. Here, six days a week, small teams of Japanese workers go about the hushed business of industrial shark-finning. By 6.30am, with piles arranged, the sharks are disemboweled first. Hearts are ripped efficiently from their bodies by men wearing brightly coloured rubber boots and aprons. At 7am, the shark corpses are cleaned of their blood by workers wielding water hoses. And by 8am, small teams are silently moving up and down aisles and rows like robots in a Japanese car factory, quickly slicing off every dorsal, pectoral and tail fin from the lifeless, grey lumps. Big hungry black crows squawk in the shadows, looking for bloody morsels. And shark fins plop with regularity into small yellow plastic baskets. The baskets fill up fast, are then weighed, and finally carried to a nearby truck, where a man with a notepad strikes a deal. At 9.30am, it’s all over for another day. Fork lift trucks scoop up tons of limbless carcasses, then dump them into a high-sided truck. The process is a brutal sight to behold, and not for the faint-hearted. The fishing port of Kesen-numa City is located in Miyagi Prefecture in North East Japan, and is the country’s only port dedicated to catching sharks. Over two days in early July 2010, I saw 119 tons of blue shark (Prionace glaucaof), ten tons of salmon shark (Lamna ditropis), and three tons of short fin mako shark (Isurus oxyrinchus) landed on the dock at Kesen-numa. Not to mention several tons of endangered bluefin tuna, (Thunnus thynnus), but that’s a whole other story. Taking government transparency to another level, landed shark tonnage numbers are provided daily by the port of Kesen-numa’s Japanese only website, which is publicly, (and apparently unashamedly), available. According to the most recent data available, a Kesen-numa Municipal Fisheries report, the gross tonnage of blue sharks landed in the small fishing port dropped from 9,722 tons in 2007 to 8,200 tons in 2008, a decline of 18.6%. Only a small portion of shark fin prepared in Kesen-numa is destined for export, mostly to Hong Kong and Shanghai, where Japanese shark fin is seen as a premium brand by the new wealthy elite of China. For wealthy Chinese, shark fin from Kesen-numa is seen as a premium, or luxury, brand. Mr Hatakeyama, 45, a shark fin processor from Kesen-numa, said, “Quite a bit of shark fin is sent to Shanghai from here as there are many rich people there. Our shark fin here can command higher prices than Chinese shark fin sourced from elsewhere in Asia, the Middle East or Africa. Even though the Chinese have their own shark fin, they prefer Japanese brands”. Given the delicacy’s roots, this is hardly surprising, but what is more unexpected is that the majority of shark fin processed in Kesen-numa is for domestic consumption as shark fin soup at Chinese restaurants and expensive hotels in Japan. Like in China, shark fin soup is common place at weddings, company banquets and all sorts of other special occasions where the paying host wants to show off their wealth. And much of the shark fin produced at small food factories dotted around the city ends up bound for Chinese restaurants in Japan, of which there are many. The rest is sold to hotels to include on their menus for newly weds and for corporate banquets. In olden times, shark fin was sometimes used as a substitute for gold when Japanese merchants traded with China. Understandably, and for this same reason, the exact location for fin drying in Japan remains a closely guarded secret. And a significant amount is shipped to China for sun-drying, although the exact drying location in China is an even bigger secret. These days, the port of Kesen-numa feels like a town down on it’s luck. Once thriving, today there is a sense of decay in the air. Overgrown and rusty. Similarly, attitudes have yet to move with the times. As public sentiment slowly turns against shark fin soup in Hong Kong, what was once an ancient tradition in this forgotten corner of Japan, is, according to conservationists, wreaking havoc on shark populations worldwide. Small fishing boats used catch sharks as part of the city’s ancient tradition. But this tradition, coupled with modern fishing methods like the advent of strong and long fishing lines, and boats that can go further and stay out of port for longer, is a recipe for disaster for the sharks. According to the Japan Fisheries Agency, the nation’s national shark fin catch nearly halved since the late 1960′s. In 1969, the total number of sharks caught and landed in Japan was around 65,000 tons. Last year’s total was around 35,000 tons, and Kesen-numa accounts for around 90% of all sharks caught nationally. Whether the global marine ecosystems can suffer such an onslaught is debatable. The arguments against shark-finning are, by now, well known in Hong Kong. It is said that sharks take decades to reach adulthood, and by ripping them out of the oceans at such an unprecedented rate, we are depriving them of them of the chance to reproduce, and thus repopulate their decimated numbers. As sharks are apex predators at the top of the food chain, they are naturally predisposed to exist in smaller numbers than their prey and this, combined with their low reproductive rates, makes them naturally vulnerable to over-fishing. Cruelty may be the issue at stake for those who see the wasteful practice of slicing the fins off the shark at sea and tossing them back over the side of the boat, but in Kesen-numa the whole shark is landed. It is said that every part of every shark landed at Kesen-numa is processed there and then consumed. Even it’s heart. For the people of Kesen-numa are seen as a little strange by ordinary Japanese. Locals can ill afford the shark fin soup available at many of the town’s small side street restaurants, but the locals have developed a peculiar, if bloodthirsty, fondness for raw salmon shark heart sashimi. An exotic ‘delicacy’, which, according to local people, is consumed nowhere else in Japan. It is left up to the tourists who visit Kesen-numa to order the city’s famous speciality, shark fin soup. And tourists do come. Some are attracted to the splendid hiking along Miyagi Prefecture’s rugged coastline, whilst others are seafood aficionados, looking for their next hit of sublime ultra-fresh exotic seafood. Early risers among them will inevitably make their way to the dock, where they are confronted with one of the most bloody spectacles they are likely ever to witness in their lives – Kesen-numa’s very own industrial shark-finning show. A quick walk around the town, reveals a parallel universe, where even the most basic concepts of marine conservation do not exist. Just a stone’s throw from the dock, is the ‘Kesen-numa Rias Shark Museum’, which visitors enter through a giant set of shark jaws. Once inside, tourists are first confronted by real copies of faded front pages of tabloid newspapers from around the world that sensationalize shark attacks on swimmers. Make no mistake, sharks are bad, evil, a threat to humanity and they should be erdaicated from the face of the earth, the headlines, and so it seems the museum’s message screams at us. This despite the fact that humans are statistically far more likely to die from crossing the road, than from an attack by a shark. After passing exhibits relating to the natural history of sharks at the half way mark, visitors leaving the museum pass a glass display box filled with all kinds of products one can make from shark; shark fin soup in a can, shark cartillage pills which are supposedly good for joint pain, and hand-crafted handbags made from shark leather. But not a word about conservation and the critical situation facing global shark stocks due to over-fishing. Could a new battle between marine conservationists battling to save the sharks and the Japanese fishing lobby be on the horizon? First there was the annual showdown in the Southern Ocean between the Japanese whaling fleet and the environmental groups Greenpeace and Sea Shepherd to save the whale. Then there was the runaway success of the Oscar-winning documentary ‘The Cove’ which exposed the brutal Japanese trade in captive dolphins. One would think the tide is slowly turning. Isn’t it time Kesen-numa City, Japan’s dirty little shark secret, was shut down too? ALEX HOFFORD : HONG KONG CHINA KESENNUMA JAPAN SHARK FIN PHOTOGRAPHER

jgonzalf June 29, 2011 at 1:11 pm

I don’t doubt it, small fishing boats don’t wander TOO far i’d imagine.

Adam August 11, 2011 at 1:35 am

*paris hilton voice* "That's Hot!"

(seriously…perfect way to escape crowds, brats, and jerks…and just fish)

I'm gunna try it out after work instead of hittin' the river for carp…lol

taxed till i die, August 18, 2011 at 7:46 am

very funny star from me

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