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Sardines at Scottburgh and How They Got Here by Kevin in Qora

Sardines at Scottburgh and How They Got Here by Kevin in Qora

Sardines at Scottburgh and How They Got Here by Kevin in Qora

Sardines at Scottburgh and How They Got Here by Kevin in Qora: big thank you to Kevin for today’s early report. More to follow this afternoon.

Over to Kevin…

Morning everyone. This is Kevin at Qora Mouth, just north of Mazepa Bay in the southern Transkei. Well it’s morning here and I think, you know, with the amount of people that are chasing the sardines, obviously not the netters, the netters are right on point, they know exactly where they’re going to be based on the progress that they’re making up the coast.

But I think there’s a lot of the general public that would love to just Experience the sardine run and we’re getting a lot of requests asking where they’re going to be and how fast are they moving. So we’re just going to quickly do a quick little summary this morning just to show you guys the movement and we can from our schematic.

You can see that. Generally from the 7th of June the Sardines arrived in the, on the KZN coast and it’s now the 12th of June and we have confirmed a net is coming out at Scottborough today. So yeah, guys no need to drive around aimlessly and get very frustrated and disappointed. You can definitely head down towards the Scottborough area.

Even a little bit south of that, there’s still going to be lingering shoals down there. What happens on the south coast of KZN is that most of your predators are going to be sharks, and those sharks are having a feast. And what they do is the sharks come in from deeper water, and they start attacking the shoal from the seaside.

And so that drives that shoal closer and closer into the shore. So like when we had at Sezela. The sardines actually were right on the beach, right on the shore break. And that’s gonna happen now the whole way up through KZN, cause major predatory activity. So yeah guys go and, go and have a look. Go and see what’s going on.

But no need to drive around aimlessly. Follow our schematic daily and we’ll keep you up to date where they are. Have some fun, but like we’ve said before, please, please, please give the netters space to do what they’re doing. As we’ve seen with the tragic accident that happened this week, what they’re doing is not only vital for their own livelihood and for the fishing and, uh, food industry, which is where these sardines are absorbed into.

It’s also extremely dangerous what they’re doing. Even those nets on the beach, they contain sharks. The net itself is extremely dangerous because it’s still in the shore break and you don’t want to get your leg or part of you trapped by that net. So just stay away, observe from a distance and good luck.

Hope you guys find the sards and get to experience sardine fever. Okay, that’s all I got for now. We’ll chat later on today. Cheers chaps.

Affiliated YouTube Channels

https://youtube.com/@Brucifire – highly entertaining surf reporting

https://youtube.com/@thesardinenews – neva miss a single sardine

https://youtube.com/@mydotackletalk – highly technical sport fishing

https://youtube.com/@surflaunchingsouthernafrica – getting out there safely

https://youtube.com/@waterwoes – complain here

Affiliated websites

https://umzimkulu.co.za – self-catering right on the Umzimkulu River
https://umzimkuluadrenalin.co.za – sardine run coming up
https://thesardine.co.za – never miss a single sardine
https://masterwatermen.co.za – news from deep down
https://brucifire.co.za – surf and conditions reporting
https://fishbazaruto.com – your dreams are out there
https://mydofishinglures.co.za – technical sport fishing

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Everyone is welcome to celebrate clean beaches and ocean conservation at Shark Weekend

Stop Shark Finning at Shark Weekend Scottburgh 8 to 10 June 2019

Everyone is welcome to celebrate clean beaches and ocean conservation at Shark Weekend

Scottburgh 8 to 10 June 2018

The annual Paddle Out for Sharks (POFS) and World Ocean’s Day (WOD) events will culminate in the 2018 Shark Weekend – a full programme of talks, clean ups, surfing competitions and beach activities geared towards marine conservation running at Scottburgh from 8 to 10 June.

Shark Weekend has a number of interactive activities planned suited to the whole family. The full programme starts at Scottburgh Beach at 3pm on Friday, 8 June with a ‘Healthy Ocean’s Talk’ and beach clean-up. The conservation celebration continues on Saturday, 9 June from8am with a Paddle Out for Sharks ceremony at Scottburgh Beach and Backline. There will be a number of beachside activities including a treasure hunt, sand shark art, snorkelling lessons, as well as adaptive surfing demonstrations and surfing competitions.

Throughout the weekend, Scottburgh’s Premier Resort Cutty Sark will play host to a number of Shark Weekend activities including Aliwal Shoal’s Shark Photo Exhibition, the Mares Dive Gear Exhibition as well as Conservation Talks and Videos. In addition to the generous venue donation, Premier Resort Cutty Sark is running a weekend special room rate of R350 per person, per night.“The 7th Paddle Out for Sharks, in conjunction with Word Ocean’s Day on 8 June, gives us a chance to highlight the impact of human actions and how we can positively turn the tide for shark conservation and good health of our oceans,” said Shark Weekend organiser, marine biologist, shark researcher and member of Shark Angels, Jess Escobar.

“For me, the annual Paddle Out for Sharks celebration has become an opportunity for all different ocean-users to stand together and show their support for shark and ocean conservation. It is reaching more and more people every year, converting the misguided fear around sharks into a respect and willingness to protect them. I am so happy and excited to see such a great support for our sharks and ocean conservation in our area.”

Paddle Out for Sharks started in 2012 after several sharks were killed in nets along the KwaZulu-Natal coastline. The diving and marine conservation communities converged to protest against the nets in support of shark conservation. This tradition has continued every year with more voices calling for protection of sharks, an animal which forms a crucial part of the oceanic ecosystem.

Forming an integral part of the Shark Weekend programme will be an address by renowned ocean activist and founder of the NPC, Breathe, Sarah Ferguson, on Saturday, 9 June at 3pm.The former national swimmer took to ocean swimming six years ago and decided to do something more meaningful with her swimming.

“I decided to start a foundation centred on ocean conservation, so I established Breathe,” recalled Ferguson. “I then started training to become the first African woman to swim the Kaiwi channel in Hawaii which I successfully completed in July 2017.”

Her 30-minute talk, entitled ‘Swimming to Fight Plastic Pollution – Live Deeply & Tread Lightly’ outlines her passion of swimming and the global epidemic of plastic pollution.

“We cannot ignore this issue,” said Ferguson. “They recently found a plastic bag at the bottom of the Mariana Trench – the deepest part of the ocean. Education is critical to change behaviour and create awareness about this relevant and growing epidemic. Change starts with the individual and needs to come from the public as well as at government level. Together, we can all change the statistic that by 2050 there will be more plastic in the sea than fish.”

Special thanks are extended to all Shark Weekend sponsors, including Premier Resort Cutty Sark, Scuba Xcursion, Mares, Pollywog, Blue Wilderness and Made for More.

Post by Olivia Jones Communications

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Sardines at Scottburgh: The Video

Sardines netted in Scottburgh

Sardines at Scottburgh: The Video

Fresh in from Scottburgh, down the KZN South Coast of South Africa. More proof of sardines filtering through…great news for our anglers and spearos.

Join our mailing list to stay up to date with The Sardine News weekly, by signing up, at top right.

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Pelagic gear available at Fishing’s Finest…click the logo below to check their online shop out, with 30% discount promotion running right now.

Pelagic

Check out the Mydo range of spoons, that simply hammer the shad and many other gamefish also hunting the sardines…http://thesardine.co.za/mydo/

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Sardines netted at Scottburgh

Sardines netted at Scottburgh - photo by Jay Steenkamp R900 a crate of sardines 2017

Sardine netted at Scottburgh

Yes, it’s official, with featured photos by Jay Steenkamp, of the Natal Sharks Board.

The sards were caught this very morning – and although not massive amounts, is a great sign of things hopefully coming our way!

Sardines at Scottburgh
Sardines at Scottburgh

Thanks to Jay Steenkamp who keeps us right in the loop each and every year. Our other sardine spies are also reporting action, but these are the first solid photographs.

Jay Steenkamp in his office keeping a sharp lookout for sardines for us
Jay Steenkamp in his office keeping a sharp lookout for sardines for us

The sardine report 2017 is sponsored by…

Pelagic
Pelagic

Special offer from Pelagic and Fishing's Finest
Special offer from Pelagic and Fishing’s Finest…click the image to go visit the online store and get your discount!

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Rehabilitation of natural wetlands at Renishaw Hills’ development to attract local flora and fauna

Rehabilitation of natural wetlands at Renishaw Hills’ development to attract local flora and fauna

A well-orchestrated programme of invasive alien plant removal, excavation and re-planting of indigenous vegetation, in an effort to restore the area’s natural wetlands, has begun at Renishaw Hills within the Mpambanyoni Conservation Development on the KwaZulu-Natal South Coast.
The Renishaw Hills development – a new mature lifestyle village near Scottburgh – is centred on the natural beauty of the region with a focus on restoring the indigenous flora and fauna throughout. The wetlands’ rehabilitation forms an integral part of the overall restoration project which is being funded by Renishaw Property Developments – a subsidiary of Crookes Brothers Limited, the JSE stock exchange-listed organisation driving the Renishaw Hills development near Scottburgh.

Led by experienced team members Elsa Pooley (landscaper and botanist), Geoff Nichols (leading KwaZulu-Natal expert in rehabilitation) and Amanda Maphumulo, horticulturist, the wetlands’ restoration programme – which started in May 2016- will convert about 22 hectares of sugar cane farm back to being a partially functional wetland. The work is being performed in conjunction with Mpambanyoni Conservation Development’s estate manager, Gareth Hampson, and every aspect of the project strictly adheres to the guidelines of the Environmental Impact Assessment that was carried out in preparation for the development.

“Wetlands are a vital part of the biosphere,” explained Geoff Nichols. “They provide free goods and services to the planet, slowing flood pulses, keeping water upstream longer, cleaning pollutants and silt while creating a habitat for various fauna and flora.”
He said a good example of the use of wetlands is as roosting sites for Barn Swallows who return every summer to roost in the reedbeds associated with marshes.
The process of restoration will take many years but it is estimated that, should everything go according to plan, the area should have wetlands functioning at about 50 percent in the next three to five years.

 “With the halting of herbicide use, the indigenous plants will take hold over the next few years and the sponge effect will be slowly restored once we physically block the herring bone drains to raise the water table again,” explained Nichols.
The Invasive alien plant control team, which has been working on the whole estate the last three years, is now working to a co-ordinated programme with the rehabilitation and landscaping of the new estate. In an effort to re-establish the natural vegetation, the restoration team is scouring the local remnants of wetlands for plants that have been lost to the system such as Red Hot Pokers, Arum Lilies, Crinum or Vlei Lilies, River Pumpkins as well as about 70 other plant species. A number of plants are also being sourced from the local Izinyoni Indigenous Nursery.

“I have had a passion for these wetland plants for years and have collected many species which we are about to return to one of the wetland ‘nurseries’,” said Nichols. “This is good wetland that will allow us to plant stock plants for the rest of the site.”

He explained that certain other adjustments are being made as the effects of the restoration become evident.

“We are seeing clear water running and the banks are stabilised with plants, preventing excessive runoff into the wetland. Decisions will now need to be made as to whether this will be a woody or non-woody wetland as steps will have to be taken either way.”

In addition, wetland triage has begun which involves pushing back soil plugs about 5metres wide to block the drainage channels. These blockages raise the water table which in turn provide habitat for skulking birds and animals while also creating the deeper channels that create the extra surface area that become the wetland’s ‘small intestine’. This allows water to percolate slowly through the plants and their root systems which filter out all pollutants created by human activities.

“With the establishment of the plants, the animal life will begin to arrive,” explained Nichols. “They will most likely come from the surrounding area which has good wetlands, wild forest and remnant grasslands. Many more wetland birds and animals will increase as the flora and, with it, shelter and food increase in diversity through our efforts as well as by natural means.”

For more information about the development visit www.renishawhills.co.za

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