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by the Rambler
Ulster Star
23/11/2001
THE book on basket-making launched at Lisburn Museum
a decade ago, contains an interesting account of the experiences of
a veteran Lough Neagh fisherman, circa 1917.
John McAlinden of Toland's Point, since deceased, rehearsed an
appalling story of the vicissitudes of his era.
He concluded by revealing that although the Tyrone men claimed they
got £1 for a stone of eels, the men on this side of the Lough never
got that much.
He went on to say that a local man, who joined the army, came home
to report that when the army went to Billingsgate market each day
for their requirements they were charged 170 shillings (£8.50) a
stone!
I have no information about current prices but the eagerness with
which regular eel fishermen look forward to the opening of the
season on June 1 is an indicator that no-one is selling at £1 a
stone nowadays.
The Toomebridge Cooperative is, of course, now in control and
everything is regulated: seasons, hours, gear, quotas, etc, etc.
The days of setting fire to the whins on the shore to warn poachers
to scarper or have their lines seized by the bailiffs have long
since gone.
I have suggested to some of the veterans that eel fishing is a nice
cushy number now, but I have got blistering responses.
Come to think of it, handling one eel, or a full net of them, must
be a messy, slippery business.
How would you like to tackle the task of one skinning one, eg, if
you wanted to cook a meal?
They are gourmet fare but the sight of still writhing on the
hot-plate would put many people off. I have already mentioned the
number of `takes' that the television camera men had to have when
they pictured a Bartin's Bay man cooking an eel alfresco earlier
this year. I think his name is McNally.
Reports were in circulation last summer that global warming had
affected the Gulf Stream, which eels follow on their way to the
shores of the British Isles and that shoals have been reduced.
Report
Local fishermen do report a fall off in catches but
one of the most experienced of them dismissed the global warning
theory when I consulted him. "It is the pollution of the water that
is the cause," he said. Certainly, the state of Lough Neagh waters
viewed from the shore of Bartin's Bay is appalling.
Maybe the cat fish which inhabit the waters of South America,
existing in areas where the water is too stagnant for other fish
would be more at home around Derryclone Point?
I have been reading about one of these, a giant electric eel which
often exceeds eight feet in length and can produce up to 600 volts
in a single discharge.
It is an ugly brown brute with a broad blunt snout and a thick set
body, which lives for 15 to 22 years - the male 15 and the female
22.
The tail contains the electric organs - muscles
lying on either side of the vertebal column, some 5000/6000 electric
plates which are arranged like cells in a battery.
One section is used as a navigational signal, the others to create
the stunning discharge.
The eel has no teeth but uses the electric shock to stun its prey.
In one instance, an electric eel reputedly knocked down a horse
which was crossing a stream! One shock will not kill a human but
several can prove fatal.
The electrical eels' diet is fish, clams, frogs, shrimps, insects,
worms, plants and items of refuse.
Electric eels have been used in the treatment of rheumatism and a
study in France is exploring the possibility of using them to
monitor water quality.
The only threat to its survival is industrial waste, ie pollution. .
It is not of much interest to anglers although there are reports
that it is sometimes eaten. Shocking!.
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