It’s become a ritual for me, before I head off on any seaside trip, to check in with the Graphic Designer at work to see if he needs any particular photos for upcoming publications he has to design. This time the response was simple, “Boats, I need boats”. Right, a mission to find boats it was. Shouldn’t be too difficult seeing as I was in a county famous for it’s pretty fishing villages. On our way to Mousehole we’d passed through Newlyn and driven alongside it’s quayside. Jackpot. Fishing boats galore, all shapes, all sizes. That would do nicely. So after we’d been romanced by the charms of Mousehole back to Newlyn we went.
Although I could see the boats from where we’d parked I wanted to get in closer. I spotted a metal bridge with a coded gate that led down to where the boats were held but I wasn't sure whether I could go down there. Luckily at that moment a chap was on his way up the bridge and said that of course I could go down there, giving me a very cockled look as if I'd just asked him something completely ludicrous.
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As I wandered down the bridge and onto the jetty I had this strange sensation of feeling like I was trespassing in some hidden sanctum that I had no business being in. It was a strange feeling. And here’s the thing… there wasn’t a soul to be seen. Hundreds of boats and not a fisherman in sight. It was just me and a curious little sandpiper and I felt pretty uneasy there for a while as I gingerly tiptoed around, taking photos, expecting any minute for a big burly fisherman to pop out of a boat and chase me off.
But it was hard to feel uneasy for long because, oh what an afternoon. The light was absolutely beautiful, it was so impossibly clear and bright and the colours everywhere were super saturated. It was an absolute feast for the eyes. I meandered along the jetty, in the glorious sunshine, snapping as I went. Cornwall + sunshine + camera = Happy Tash!
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It was only when I bent down to take a close up of one of the boats that I had a moment that broke through my blissful meandering. Inside the boast I saw a bucket of knives inside and it hit me that these boats were actually used to capture and kill fish. It was such a strange and sudden realisation, I’m not sure why it hadn’t dawned on me before. I’d just seen pretty little fishing boats bobbing away in the water and hadn’t given any further thought to their actual purpose.
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I was pulled out of my moment of melancholy by a commotion up by the bridge. There were men running, shouts, alarms, gear thrown on and then a lifeboat in the water and out to sea quicker than I had a chance to get to my feet. I hurried back up to where mum had been patiently waiting for me (god bless my mum’s endless reserves of patience when it comes to being abandoned in the name of getting the perfect shot!) She explained that they were off to help a family who were stranded near Penzance. I was in awe at just how quickly those men had got in the water and said a little prayer for them and the family. I hoped they’d reach them in time.
With the excitement over, the quayside returned to it’s sleepy Saturday afternoon state of stillness. I wandered along a little longer, merrily filling up my memory card with as many photos as I thought would help my colleague and then the call of dinner beckoned so back to the caravan we went.