Mercury in yellowfin tuna

Mercury in yellowfin tuna The environmentally friendly crew at The Watchers – follow the link below to get acquainted with them – are doing a great job of keeping tabs on what is going on all over our ailing planet. http://thewatchers.adorraeli.com/2015/02/05/mercury-concentrations-in-hawaiian-yellowfin-tuna-increasing/ This story however is of particular relevance to us…we catch and eat heaps of south … Read more

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Beware the bluebottle!

Beware the bluebottle!

The Story

We were releasing a sailfish off the Umzimkulu one afternoon. The North Easter had been blowing for days and was finally stopped by a buster South Westerley – ideal conditions for a billfish on the dirty water line, especially in February.

Stepped over and into the engine well which is always full of water. Had a deep cut between two of my toes from an earlier incident that day – and a devillish bluebottle floated in and got its tentacles right into that cut. Right in. The initial searing sensation – which we alI have experienced hundreds of times, was nothing like anything I felt in the past. The poison had a marked advantage as the blue bottle injected its lethal payload of poision right into my raw flesh.

My lymph glands in my thigh started to swell with excruciating pain, and stupidly with my fingers I put pressure on the golf ball size gland – it seemed to burst and the poison entered the rest of me – searing pangs of pain right through my consciousness. Which I nearly lost a number of times.

6 Hours later and the pain finally subsided. There was just nothing to be done . Just crawled into the cabin and lay in asemi- paralysed state – unable to move or anything, until we got back in. Normally the pain only lasts 20 minutes, before it becomes barely an itch. Not this time!

Beware the (blue) bottle! They love this time of the year.

Bluebottle
Bluebottle. Even when lying on the beach like this one…they are a danger.

 

Bluebottles vs Portuguese man-o-war

The Portuguese man-o-war is a monster – with up to 30 cm long float sometimes, with numerous long stinging tentacles and one fully loaded main stinger.  Lucky for us, we don’t get them in our waters. These guys really leave you with problems. The stings open into wounds like welts and all sorts of complications can, and do arise.

Our Bluebottle is much smaller and more friendly, normally an inch or two, but up to 15 cms sometimes. Their single stinging tentacle is proportionately longer – the bigger the bluebottle. And fortunately, the sting is a lot less severe.
They both shoot tiny hooks into your skin which unfold and squirt the poison into you, with no chance of stopping it, once it has found its mark.

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KZN South Coast Dorado bite on!

KZN South Coast Dorado bite on! The “dollies” are officially in the hood…although very little is known about these widespread pelagics, they do seem to prevail season to season just fine. Being open ocean spawners, the dorado (and the sailfish) are purported to be the most hardy of all our pelagic fish species and that … Read more

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Kayaking Barra with Lalaland

Kayaking Barra with Lalaland

Staying at Lalaland kind of gives you everything. Peace and quiet. Beach and sun. And yet you are so close to all the offerings Inhambane has to offer…
Lalaland hosts Chad and Heidi make a point of facilitating anything you need around the Tofo area. Horseriding. Inhambane town tours. Ocean Safaris. Scuba diving. Fishing. Surfing. Kayaking…

Barra is just over the peninsula from Lalaland – and is home to acres upon acres of mangrove forests. They grow happily in the saltwater – at high tide some are completely submerged! They grow randomly, but create intriguing channels through the wetlands. And it’s these channels that you can negotiate on kayaks – putting you face to face with the bird and marine life so prolific in the huge Inhambane estuary.

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Laland is set in PARADISE! You can kayak the Inhambane estuary, surf the Tofinho point, dive Giants and spend time touring Inhambane town. Contact afontelda@gmail.com

The estuary is 40 times bigger than the Knysna lagoon – and is much more populated. Mangrove and blue crabs, flamingos, squid and fishies are among the main attractions – but just paddling about in clear warm water is enough to make you stoked!

Lalaland still has a few rooms open for December 2014. For more info please mail afontelda@gmail.com

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