G at Australian Seachange Newsletter
Transcription
G at Australian Seachange Newsletter
Seachange Newsletter Edition 7 July 2009 G at Australian Contents: Editorial International Results Benefits 10% discounts Qld & Australian records Competitions What makes a Champion? State news Media Releases Safety AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World Editorial Welcome to edition 7 of Seachange.- the newsletter for members of the Australian Underwater Federation Spearfishing Commission. This issue is packed with information, issues and results and photos from the recent Interpacific Championships in Australia and the South African National Championships invitation- the Australian teams won both events- Congratulations. Also great to see a large number of new Spearfishing national records- many from Juniors and ladies. Change always occurs in sport and life. We have had a great few years with growth of sustainable Spearfishing, membership, increased profile of the AUF and associated businesses. We are now at a crossroads – questions are being asked - should spearfishers continue their affiliation with the AUF or go it alone? – one of our state bodies the USFA (AUF NSW) has strong opinions and has proposed a split from the AUF. See their press release. I will continue to talk to individuals, clubs, state Chairs and USFA about issues, options and outcomes for the best interests of all Australian spearfishers. The global recession makes for tough times for all of us- divers think twice before purchasing new gear or going on dive trips- some have or will sell their boats and some will even question the small AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World amount of money for membership of the AUF Spearfishing. Small businesses are in tough times and this will and has impacted on sponsorship. In tough times we should be able to help each other and have loyalty and trust. So I ask you to support the businesses that support the AUF and remember they offer 10% discounts (see adds below) and keep up your membership so we can support you There is another huge threat to our sport- The Coral Sea has now been declared a Conservation area and the Green groups have huge funding (over $1 million from Pew) and lobbying power to declare no fishing zones. I have been very fortunate to dive the Coral Sea and it has clear water and amazing fish and shark life and Australian spearfishers would be devastated if we are denied access to this “Everest” of spearfishing. The AUF Spearfishing has very limited funds but will work with other If (WHEN) some of the Coral Sea is made fishing groups (particularly Recfish Australia) into a sanctury then the capture of prized and Government to determine our most pelagic species such as this magnificiant important areas, the issues and try and Dogtooth Tuna will not be possible for maximise access for current and future Australian spearfishers recreational spearfishers. If you wish to help you can send a letter to your Minister or donate funds. What can you do to help current and future spearfishers have access to these fish in the Coral Sea? The AUF National body has been working on national insurance and an online membership systems. For more information see the AUF media release or check the system at www.auf.com.au. Also see th th the media release for the 60 anniversary of AUF\USFA on 19 September. How are we doing as an organisation representing spearfishers? I am keen to receive feedback and work with all to continue to improve our sport. If you are happy or dissatisfied with the volunteer management of the AUF Spearfishing at national, state or local level let us know what you can do to help. There are a few people who put in enormous effort to make a difference- I would particularly like to acknowledge Alastair MacNeil and his team for their outstanding commitment as Convenor and Manager Interpacific team for the recent competition in WA – well done. Dr Adam Smith, National Chair (Spearfishing) AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World BENEFITS FOR AUF MEMBERS SPEARING THE MENU- 15 % discount Spearing the Menu, Australia’s first spearfishing television program, is now available on DVD with a 15 per cent discount being offered to AUF members. The two-disc DVD set contains all seven episodes from the first series. AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World Interpacific- Dunsborough WA April 2009 Report by Ali MacNeill – Australian team manager The end of April and beginning of May saw four extremely talented teams of divers arrive in Dunsborough, Western Australia, at various times from the countries of New Zealand, Hawaii, Tahiti and host country Australia. New Zealand being very keen and with a large entourage, arrived first. They headed down to the South West of WA and settled into the Dunsborough Lakes Caravan Park, where we would all eventually stay. New Zealand had a strong line up with Duane Herbert (Runner up at the Australian Nationals, Colin Smith, Ian Warnock (very seasoned competition divers) and a young enthusiastic and competent, Julian Hansford and Herb as Manager. Whilst New Zealand began their scouting of areas, thankfully our young and extremely experienced Drew Fenney (Australian Team) arrived early also and was able to scout and keep an eye on our Kiwi rivals! Next to arrive to our shores was the laid-back and very talented Hawaiians, their team consisted of Mark Healey Marnie Zukevich, Kapono Zukevich, GR Tarr and Manager Bill Ernst. Their priority was to travel north for five hours by car and then travel by boat for a further 3 hours to the famous Abrolhos Islands. Dave Bay, a local spearfisherman was kind enough to look after the Hawaiian team throughout their stay. The team enjoyed diving at the islands and were able to shoot some magnificent Spanish Mackerel and some great bottom fish. After two days, they returned to Perth to get the low-down about the competition areas, and after providing them with information, fish ID AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World books and charts of the area (which they were to share with New Zealand!), they departed to Dunsborough. I was to receive a phone call a couple of days later asking, “What was the record for WA Dhufish?” Kapono had been scouting at Hamelin Bay with his team mates, when during the day, he had seen a fish; large, just like a grouper back home. At the end of the day, after not shooting any fish they decided that the rules would be to shoot a fish for meals. Kapono was confident he had the correct landmarks for this “grouper”, so he returned to the exact cave where he then shot an amazing 21kg West Australian Dhufish, one of the biggest shot in nearly 8 years, and certainly a fish that very few divers have ever shot! Saturday evening of the 25th April saw the ever-talented and humble Tahitians arrive at Perth International Airport. I greeted the team of Lai lau Amatahiapo , Joel Drollet, Tepou Nehemia, Teva Monta and their captain, Romuald Montagon. The language barrier was going to be a problem, so I was fortunate in locating an interpreter Tony Pelleau through the Dunsborough Outdoor Sportz Centre (Damo Lane was very crucial in many aspects for making this event a great success). It took the very tired team a mammoth 22 hours to travel from Tahiti to Perth and after collecting luggage and equipment it was on to the IBIS hotel in Perth! It took a lot of explaining (mainly sign language!) to explain to the Tahitians why there were so many people in the city centre that day dressed in military uniforms, with smiling faces and in party mode . Later in the week, through or interpreter, we were able to explain to them that it was ANZAC Day celebrations (Australian and New Zealand Army Corp – who served during World War 1). On behalf of all countries competing, we acknowledge the ANZACS and thank them for the sacrifices they made so that we can live in a great free country. AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World Sunday saw the Tahitians heading to AQWA to look at the magnificent aquarium and familiarise themselves with our fish species. After many extra hours driving, the Tahitian along with Jorma Merilainen another local spearfisherman who also came for the week to look after them, the team arrived in Dunsborough in the late hours of Sunday night. Monday morning 8.00am saw the Australian contingent meet together and head off to do our own respective reconnaissance of the competition sites. The Aussie Team had a powerful line up, consisting of 3 times Australian Champion, Arnie Piccoli (also the oldest member of our team!), Drew Fenney from Victoria, and experienced local divers with national and international experience, Dave Sutcliffe and Derek Dufall. The team could not have achieved its success without the support of a young and keen local diver Cameron Neilsson - his commitment to the team spirit was greatly appreciated. Thanks also to a young Jordan MacNeill who ably assisted throughout the tournament, the organisers and all countries. The next two days saw teams scouting areas, divulging little but wanting to know everything! We had a great opening ceremony at Damo’s shop and we were thankful to the Fisheries Department of WA who came to assist with fish ID and explain fishing rules to our visiting countries. Unfortunately the weather forecast for the second day of competition predicted swell, peaking at 4.7metres during the day. A decision had to be made. The managers and captains decided to bring the competition forward by one day and although it was unfortunate, it was a mutual consensus. All teams had at least one scouting day at each of the sites. Hamelin Bay was Day One’s location and Day Two (big swell day) was to be Canal Rocks. If the competition had to be cancelled on the day, we could then consider Friday as an alternative or head to the backup location of Eagle Bay. Wednesday morning saw us all head down to the picturesque Hamelin Bay where conditions were good with a small swell, but rising throughout the day with a light South Westerly blowing. As teams prepared themselves, safety boat drivers deliberated about launching and retrieving boats later in the day. 8.00am saw the start of the 24th Inter Pacific Spearfishing Championships and oddly enough, at this point in time, only a couple of divers and not one onlooker had questioned the fact that we were swimming in the Indian Ocean! Four countries and two pairs per country headed off at great pace to start the day. Seven pairs headed off to the south-west and one Hawaiian pair headed to the northwest. After an hour the safety boats located their divers. Divers were in very close proximity to each other and had swum 2.5kms out to sea to secure what was meant to be the great spot. Fish seen on previous days were not there on competition day, as is the nature of fishing. However, some good fish were landed and the divers continued for a further five hours, swimming and hunting for species. The day ended well, once we were able to On behalf of the Western Australian Spearfishing Commission and the Australian Underwater Federation I would like to give you some great comments I received today from Foodbank (An Australian Without Hunger). "Dear Alastair, please accept this correspondence as one of sincere appreciation for your members of your association from the donation of fish from the two recent competitions. Since the inception of Foodbank South West (21st September, 2004) this is the first time we have had fresh fish to put on the menu for those in need. The charitiable Organizations, being recipients (Welfare Agencies) have expressed their gratitude to us." Thank you to all competitors and helpers from the National Spearfishing Championships and the 24th InterPacific AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World Spearfishing Championship, for helping people in need. A special mention to Simon retrieve all the boats. We then returned to the Dunsborough Lakes Caravan Park for the weigh in, but were somehow missing the Tahitian Team as they decided to stop and have a beer at the Karridale Tavern! Eventually, the weigh in took place. Some great fish were presented, including Dhufish to 13kg, Samson Fish, Harlequin Fish, Queen Snapper, Black Drummer and Breaksea Cod. The day’s result was Australia leading, followed by a close and competitive New Zealand , Tahiti and Hawaii. On Day 2, managers and captains headed off early to check out conditions at Canal Rocks. We knew that the swell was going to rise from 1.5 metres to 4.7 metres during the day. Conditions looked good with no wind, so we decided that we should continue. Managers phoned the contingent at the caravan park to awake and prepare divers. Upon returning, the divers prepared themselves for the second day of competition. The swell was definitely rising and there was a big suck up and down the beach. After the divers left, in smoky conditions (a result of CALM doing some back burning), the task of launching boats took place. Eventually, after a bit of grief, all boats on the hour headed to locate their divers. Australia, New Zealand and Hawaii sent divers to the west, while Tahiti went north-west and the remaining four pairs raced to the Indicators. As the day progressed, the swell rose considerably, but all teams fished productively. Again great fish were found including, Samson Fish, Dhufish, Salmon, Flathead and Queen Snapper. Our boys dived very well, with Arnie and Drew working out deep in 20 to 30 metres and Dave and Derek worked in the surgy shallows and white water. Today was going to be a very successful day for the Aussie Team. The wind didn’t pick up during the day, but some divers found the smoky conditions a little AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World awkward for breathing. After six hours of teams working extremely hard in conditions that were deteriorating throughout the day all divers returned and the task of retrieving boats began once again. Earlier in the competition, one of the observer’s boats returned early as they had a disastrous time tyring to get their boat up. After the propellor at high speed, it hit the concrete ramp when the water sucked away and the boat was bakento heavy, the final repair bill came in at $7000! The remaining four boats came in unscathed thanks to the assistance of all divers. Everyone was now talking and sharing stories and experiences that had unfolded during the day. At the final weigh in, some great fish were once again presented. The spirit and atmosphere around the caravan park was of laughter, awe for some of the public and in particular the great appreciation from Foodbank, the agency who gladly accepted all the fish we had wanted to donate to people and families in need. We later received a letter from Foodbank thanking us for the fish and acknowledging the great work the Australian Underwater Federation had done in running such a great event. Since Foodbank’s inception, no other fishing organisation had ever donated fresh fish to them, so we want to extend thanks to all teams for their efforts. The final weigh-in saw Australia present a magnificent catch to dominate Day 2 and convincingly win the competition. Tahiti and New Zealand were neck-a-neck on the last day with Hawaii only just behind. Many photos were taken that afternoon as we all relaxed with a beer to reflect on a great week. The spirit, rivalry and friendly nature in which the competition proceeded was a credit to all countries and the many volunteers who assisted, making the event a huge success. The following two days saw some divers head out to try and catch a Dhufish before they headed home to their native country, while others explored the great location and wineries of the Augusta/Margaret River region. The final presentation night was held at Rivendell Winery, where a magnificent three course meal was served, stories were exchanged, traditional bantering between AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World Australia and New Zealand continued, Hawaiians appeared as relaxed as ever and the Tahitians’ sang and played their musical instruments to the pleasure of everyone. Final Placings Place Country % Score 1st Australia 200% 2nd New Zealand 173% 3rd Tahiti 154.2% 4th Hawaii 125.8% South African National Titles and 1 Day International Between South Africa, the SAUFF Team and Australia. As a preamble to a story about a great week of diving I would like to set the scene. During World Titles in Venezuela In October 2008, the South Africans invited Australia to attend their National Championships and a 1 day International, early in May 2009. The competition area, Southern KwaZulu/Natal, from Hibberdene to Port Edward, had also been proposed as the venue for the 28th CMAS World Titles in 2012. This would be an opportunity for Australia to scout and acquire valuable information in the lead period to the 2012 World Titles. We were already committed as hosts to the Inter Pacific in WA late in April 2009. Due to the tight schedule we selected two teams, one for each competition. AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World Hi Adam, Just a short message to say that we've had a wonderful time in South Africa. We had great conditions, great fishing, and at the end of the day we managed to put our act together and win the One Day International. Kind Regards, Tony, Graham, Ric & Rob Tony Heugh, Rick de Vries, Graham Carlisle and Rob Wills arrived in Durban, South Africa, early on 2 May. After a brief stopover at the Dive Factory, where we borrowed weights and plastic bins for our gear, we travelled south in a double cab, kindly on loan to us from top South African diver, Gyula Plaganyi. On the 3rd we travelled north to Rocky Bay, where we were loaned the use of a large semi-rigid rubber duck from Mark Addison of Blue Wilderness. Mark, renowned internationally for shark tours and conservation, showed us some great spots and we were able to acquaint ourselves with many of the varied fish species. We are all much indebted to Mark and hid wife, Gail, for making their excellent facilities available to us during these championships. Later on the 3rd, we attended the sign on function and captains meeting at the Shelly Beach Skiboat Club, a fantastic venue virtually on the beach with launching facilities. On the 4th we headed down the coast to the southernmost competition area and launched off the beach at Port Edward. We had been kindly sponsored a very nice new 15 foot Cat by Ryan Hanson of Ski-Vee boats. This great little boat was ideally suited to our needs and came decked out with Australian team signage. AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World This was to be the first of two days of SA individuals and each diver was to weigh in his/her own fish, to determine the SA individual champion. The score sheet was interesting, 1 point per kilogram up to a maximum of 5 points per species, fish weighed to the nearest lower 100 grams after being gutted and gilled, bonus points for each species on a scale of 1 to 5, a maximum of 10 fish allowed for each diver. We had managed to source weigh points from local divers and Graham who had only recently immigrated to Australia and knew the area. We headed to the northern part of the area where we were greeted with murky water - Graham told us not to be disheartened as often the less dense freshwater from the rivers formed a layer over clean water. It turned out to be clear water under a layer of 2 meters of mud and we found some good sized Bronze Bream in relatively shallow water and Graham also boated a nice Catface Rockcod in this area. Next we headed wide and deep where we dived in 20 to 25 meters for the rest of the day. Graham speared some good fish which included Baardman, Rubberlip, Spade Fish and Englishman. Rick and Rob speared Bumphead, Knifejaw and Scotsman and I finished off the day with a nice Yellow Belly Rockcod. The weigh in took place at the Port Edward Ski-boat Club and the day was Gyula's with an impressive bag of great fish. Graham had done well with 9 weighers and was in the running with a top 4 or 5 placing for the day. Next day we were to travel north for a competition off Scottborough. We launched at Rocky Bay. After some years away from SA surf launching conditions we were happy to have great conditions for the early days of the competition - unlike Australia where we are fortunate to have great launching facilities, the guys in SA have to launch off the beaches with 4 wheel drives, tractors and winches. Timing is essential and one has to be patient in waiting for a lull or break in the sets of waves before making a break for the open water behind the surf zone. The SA guys knew their stuff and we all made it out for the start of another great day at sea. AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World The Aussies had an average day and were humbled by a great catch of fish by Southern Natal A diver, Broderick Whittaker. Gyula of Natal A was to placed second overall behind Boland A diver, James Lawson-Smith. 50 Divers weighed in and the Aussie contingent was holding their own with credible placings for Graham 11th, Tony 19th, Rob 22nd and Rick 26th. A strong frontal weather system had developed and we did not dive on the 6th. After hard deep diving of nothing under 20 meters on the previous day, we were glad for an opportunity to thaw out and rest. During the day a strong wind arrived with a thunderstorm at the head of a front, followed by torrential rain and the rivers soon filed and spilled silt laden water into the southern competition areas. We were treated to a braai/barbacue at the Shelly Beach Ski-boat Club in the evening. We had a great array of local cosine with putu pap, boerewors, salads and the local beer brews were taking to our liking. Next was to be the team’s event on the 7th. Due to torrential rains in the south, the venue was again moved to the northern zone. For this event individual scores were not an issue and the teams focused on landing 30 high point scoring weighers from 3 divers. We were not allowed to rotate divers so reserves spent their time manning the boats and sorting the fish into categories according to points. We were allowed a maximum of 3 fish per species. Soon after the competition start, we dived in deep water wide of Scottborough and boated a couple off good fish. I had just allowed a large Cape Knifejaw to tangle me up in a cave and had had a stressful time sorting my spearline out when Graham surfaced behind me and shouted for everyone to jump onto the boat. It turned out he had dived to see fish scatter and upon reaching the bottom a large Great White had approached him from behind and followed him to the surface in a somewhat erratic behaviour. AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World After a quick team talk we decided 'discretion to be the better part of valour' and retreated to resume or efforts elsewhere. Before our departure we notified a couple of the other teams in the area. Notably Natal A stuck it out for a while, didn't see the shark and to their credit, won the day. I speared a Spanish Mackerel early in the day but had placed a dodgy high shot, so asked the Rob to round up the others who helped to land the fish. We were lucky to save the fish from a persistent Bull shark - thumbs up for a team effort - we were starting to show signs of good things to come! The weigh in was at Mark's Blue Wilderness facilities - in this day and age where prejudice against spearfishing is rife, it was a pleasant surprise to find ourselves welcomed by an essentially scuba diving outfit. Mark and Brent are of the belief that spearos are not villains of the sea, but rather extreme sportsman willing to brave big surf and test the elements in quest of a fair contest for a feed of fish. No more than 10 fish per diver at one fish per species was the rule for each day of the competition. Most of the teams did not manage to fill their quota for the day and the Australians managed to weigh in 25 fish between 3 divers for a credible 6th place out of 18 teams. Due to strong winds the 2nd team event day was cancelled and we all took some well earned rest on the 8th. During the evening I attended the annual AGM for the SAUFF at the Shelly Beach Ski-boat Club. The meeting was well attended and I noted a reminder in the brochure for the Champs, 'that all members should attend'. I took time to reflect upon the poor attendance at Australia's AGM's and the hope that we can take a keener interest in our sport in the future. Brent mentioned that the SAUFF was struggling to get membership interest outside of competition divers - likewise the AUF is struggling with a core membership of keen competition divers and needs numbers to be truly representative as AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World the peak body for spearfishermen from all walks in Australia - it might be a way for us to combine efforts to improve membership interest in our respective organisations into the future. The 9th dawned, the day scheduled for the 1 day International between the host, South Africa, The SAUFF team and Australia. So far we had been diving 6 hour competitions. Strong winds had been forecast for the day - after an early briefing, during which the teams decided on a 4 hour competition, we launched at Rocky Bay and headed for a central meeting point off Scottborough. We'd had plans to dive some distant locations, but due to a shorter format and rough conditions, decided to dive a similar location to the one where Graham had sighted the Great White 2 days earlier. This proved to be a good decision as the South African A team wasted time getting to a distant location and did not give themselves enough time to spear enough fish to win in the shorter duration competition. The SAUFF team were not fairing much better. They had elected to dive the deep Scottborough area closer inshore, where we had been in the Interprovincial competition 2 days earlier. We dived 4 spots without moving too far and spent a lot of time in the water, bringing in quality high point scoring fish at a steady rate most of the day, but did not land much during the last hour of the competition. Rick left a reelgun in a cave after his spear was stuck and his reel jammed - he cold not let out line and did not have the puff to cut the spearline. In hindsight we should have visited a 5th spot an hour before the end - instead we stayed on the fish we had at our 4th spot. We had about 23 fish in the bag for the day and were not at all confident of our fortunes when we beached. however it soon became apparent that the other teams had not done particularly well either. I walked into the weigh in area confronted by a large Black Muscle Cracker speared by SA captain, James Lawson-Smith - the most prized fish and envy of all the spearos who had attended the 4 days of competition diving! A great fish worthy of recognition and for a moment I had a feeling of being done yet again. Upon collecting my thoughts I noticed 3 crates of fish and recognised ours as the middle one - also the fish looked heavier and more numerous in that crate. A moment later I looked up and the story in the expressions was told - we had won the day by an incredible stroke of fortune and some lucky decisions which went our way. James's fish stole the show on the final day, but we were happy to take the honours for our combined efforts, which included quality fish, amongst which were a Red Flush Cod, 2 large Rubberlip, Santer, Englishman and Green Jobfish. We can't say enough to thank our hosts, the Hibiscus Underwater Club, their Chairman who also chairs the SAUFF, Brent Addison, his son Mark and the use of his facilities at Blue Wilderness in Rocky Bay, the Shelly Beach Ski-boat Club for the use of their facilities, Gyula Plaganyi for the use of his double cab ute, Ryan Hanson for the use of his boat, and so many others. On behalf of the AUF and my fellow team members, Graham, Rick and Rob, I would like to extend our sincere thanks for a great time in South Africa. We hope that in the not too distant future, we can host a South African team on our shores. We are also grateful to the AUF and its members for sponsoring us with $1000 towards our expenses. AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World Tony Heugh. More photos at http://www.flickr.com/photos/robwills/sets/72157618134744636/ AUF diver focus – Tim Neilson This is a new section so you can get to know the people who are making a difference. Tim Neilsen has been Spearfishing for over 20 years , has achieved great results in Spearfishing competitions all around Australia including winning the 1997 Australian Spearfishing Titles. Tim has represented Australia at the inter-pacific championships and the world titles in Croatia and is keen to offer his services as manager for the Australian Team in the upcoming titles in 2010. Tim is off to Croatia this month to start preparations for next year. He is excited about the position and is keen to do whatever it takes to give the Australian team its’ best possible chance. Tim is also the owner of Australias largest Spearfishing store- ADRENO Spearfishing Supplies & Dive Centre in, Brisbane. AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World Records Officer Report Greg and Anthea Pickering There have been 29 records processed this year with 3 more pending. Although not all are on the website as yet, updates will be done shortly. The majority of records have been from Queensland with the female records doing rather well. The largest fish being the Yellowfin Tuna caught by Keith See Kee out from Shark Bay. A 26.800kg Wahoo caught by Thomas Bateman (Junior Record) is a fabulous catch. Wahoo 26.800kg Thomas Bateman Big-eye Trevally 3.067kg Jayme-Lee Neilsen High-fin Cod 2.430kg Jayme-Lee Neilsen Black Unicorn 1.639kg Jayme-Lee Neilsen Stripey Sea Perch .770kg Jayme-Lee Neilsen Small-spotted Spinefoot 1.097kg Jayme-Lee Neilsen Golden-spotted Spinefoot 1.070kg Jayme-Lee Neilsen Purple Rock Cod 2.150kg Jayme-Lee Neilsen Moses Perch 2.560kg Bryson Sheehy Yellowfin Tuna 60.800kg Keith See Kee Red-bellied Fusilier 1.000kg John Van Blanken Small-eyed Paddle-tail Sea Bream 4.240kg Bryson Sheehy Tomato Coral Cod 2.952kg Timothy McDonald Red Emperor 12.840kg Timothy McDonald Marbled Rock Cod 5.830kg Craig Whalley Yellow-stripped Leatherjacket .625kg David Scholefield Pickhandle Barracuda 6.850kg Kate Saunders Barcheek Coral Trout 4.410kg Thomas Barnett Rainbow Runner 1.500kg Jayme-Lee Neilsen Saddle-Tailed Sea Perch 6.780kg Andrew Sprenger Long Spot Coral Trout 9.170kg Andrew Sprenger AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World One Spot Razorfish .750kg Michael Saunders White Trevally .680kg Jayme-Lee Neilsen Stripey Sea Perch 1.660kg Brett Gamlin Tarwhine 1.980kg Warren Carter One Spot Sea Perch 2.420kg Adam Hansen Sweetlip Emperor 4.750kg Andrew Sprenger Sawtail Surgeon Fish 2.075kg Jayme-Lee Neilsen Long Spot Coral Trout 8.800kg Barry Paxman Some house keeping. Please fill in all of your application. Some applications arrive incomplete and this then takes time to follow up. Please be considerate by adding all you details. Also if you can write a short story re how you caught your record I can then add it to the AUF Spearfishing website. Greg and Anthea Pickering QLD and Australian records updated Copy from Mick McDade 07 3269 4683 AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World Diver tells of freak wave capsize Posted Wed May 6, 2009 1:46pm AEST Updated Wed May 6, 2009 5:04pm AEST The rescue boat returns to port with two men who were rescued off Ceduna on Tuesday night. (West Coast Sentinel) An abalone fisherman has spoken about his rescue off the coast of Ceduna in South Australia after his boat capsized. Greg Pickering was working with a deckhand about 20 kilometres offshore when a freak wave struck late on Tuesday. Mr Pickering says he was diving to about 12 metres when it happened. "I'd been there for four hours and all of a sudden I just got pulled off the bottom and it just kept pulling and pulling, 'cause I was on a dive hose that was connected to the boat," he said. "Then the air went off and I came up and the boat was upside down and the deckhand was sitting on a capsized boat and he was okay." The two men were found by rescue crews in a life raft about three hours later. GREG’S ACCOUNT Recently my Abalone boat was tipped over by a large wave while I was Abalone diving 25km’s off Ceduna on the far West coast of South Australia. It could have been a very serious situation for my deckhand and me but we were rescued very quickly due to safety procedures we had in place. As the boat was up turned I had to make a number of dives to retrieve the safety gear including a PAINS WESSEX 406 MHz EPIRB, flares and life raft. The EPIRB worked extremely well and a spotter plane found us after 2 1/2 hours (it was dark by then). We were safely tucked away in the life raft and as we heard the plane approaching we AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World operated the distress flares. The life raft carried virtually everything that we would need, food, water, medications, torches etc. The sun went down and we avoided some exposure to the extreme cold by being in the life raft. However it was the EPIRB that was the real star of the show. All my contact details, had previously been registered on line in Canberra. The signal was picked up almost immediately and my wife Anthea was contacted to confirm that I was at sea on that particular day. The State Emergency Service in Ceduna was contacted and within a short time a fixed wing aircraft was getting ready to leave Ceduna airport, at the same time they put to sea in a 31’ Catamaran. Once the position was pinpointed by the second satellite going overhead the plane left Ceduna to locate us. The boat drove directly out to where the coordinates from the EPIRB indicated. The plane spotted us and the boat arrived a short time later. Phil from the Canberra search and rescue office was able to convey to my family at this time, that we were both well although the boat had rolled over. We were picked up after 3 hours, an amazing short time considering our position off the coast. The S.E.S. is partly funded from boat registration fees (recently increased in S.A.) and it is money well spent. I cannot emphasize how good these 406 MHz EPIRBs are. They are a vast improvement over previously available ones (which only got the search area down to 5 square kms). I think every spear fishing boat should have one of these 406 MHz EPIRB s considering some of the remote areas being dived these days. I would like to thank the S.E.S. for their professional service at all times. They are all volunteers and they deserve a heap of praise for their efforts. We recovered the vessel, conducted a complete refit and are fishing again. AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World Marine parks may not be the answer WEDNESDAY, 15 APRIL 2009 Professor Colin Buxton is a leading marine expert and Director of the Tasmanian Aquaculture & Fisheries Institute, University of Tasmania. He offers the following opinion piece on the topic of marine parks: The South Australian Government is planning to turn almost half of the state’s waters into marine parks which in time will incorporate “no take” sanctuary zones where commercial and recreational fishers will be banned from entering. On the surface, the concept of marine park protection appears to have merit in preserving fish stocks and protecting the local marine environment. However, research funded by the Australian Government’s Fisheries Research and Development Corporation indicates that there can actually be side effects from the establishment of marine parks which can be potentially devastating to the very fish stocks they aim to nurture. For example, studies on some marine protected areas established in Tasmania indicate that waters adjacent to “no take” sanctuary zones face considerable pressure because of increased use from displaced fishers. As a result, these adjacent areas are prone to serious damage through overuse, potentially leading to a collapse in fish stocks. And while the SA Marine Parks Act provides for displaced commercial fishing to be bought out, this is not the case for recreational fishers, who will face extra fishing pressure and competition for spots from their fellow recreationals who are displaced because of the marine parks. If we are genuinely concerned for the environment we must be concerned about the effect of marine protected areas on the remainder of coastal waters. The SA Government, commercial and recreational fishers have one thing in common — they have the best interests of the state’s marine environment at heart. Commonsense would dictate that the best way of tackling this concern is to first identify any problem. However, to date the Government has not detailed the existing threats to SA marine ecosystems. If there are concerns with over-fishing, would it not be better to focus our energies and scientific research on tackling these problems head-on and across the whole state rather than to rely on a network of marine parks to do the job? If we are genuinely concerned about our marine environment how can we argue that only 46% should be protected? To me this makes no sense and in fact implies that South Australia’s fisheries management is not doing its job — despite being independently accredited as best practice. Commercial and recreational fishers have been vocal in their opposition to the excessive size of the marine park outer boundaries planned by the Government. Quite rightly, they argue that the marine parks are not based on addressing the real threats to marine ecosystems and habitats, and are demonstrably not the best way to manage fisheries. AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World The question also has to be asked as to why the Government would deliberately exclude Adelaide’s metropolitan coastal area — which is so obviously in need of protection — from its contentious marine parks proposal? Is there an election coming up? I believe that well-designed and managed marine parks can be a valuable tool in the protection of specific marine habitat and can contribute to the mitigation of properly identified threats. They are also especially valuable as a baseline reference point for scientific study. But if the South Australian Government is serious about protecting the marine environment it should outline the specific threats to the marine species and ecosystems before it confines 46% of the state’s coastal waters as marine parks. It should also articulate how marine parks are going to manage those threats. After all, if we all know the threats we can all work together to solve the problems, which may or may not necessitate marine parks, and importantly, may not need to exclude fisheries Test your knowledge- How good are you with fish ID? (a) (b) (c) (d) (e) Small headed reef flathead Fringe eyed flathead Black flathead Dusky flathead Bar-tailed flathead AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World Year 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987 1986 1985 1984 1983 1982 1981 1980 1979 1978 1977 1976 1975 1974 1973 1972 1971 1970 1969 1968 1967 1966 1965 1964 1963 1962 1961 1960 1959 1958 1957 1956 1955 1954 1953 Venue Open Dunsborough, WA Arnold Piccoli Wollongong, NSW Paul Roso Townsville, QLD Adam Smith Kangaroo Island, SA Ian Puckeridge Phillip Island, VIC Robert Torelli In our sport we respect our Australian Champions Perth, WA Arnold Piccoli and those who represent our country. The list on Ulladulla, NSW Ian Puckeridge the left contains some well known multiple Magnetic Island, QLD Ken Picard sporting champions Rye, VIC Andy Ruddock Perth, WA Ian Puckeridge Nelson Bay, NSW Ian Puckeridge Hobart, TAS Tim Nielson Batemans Bay, NSW Ian Puckeridge Kangaroo Island, SA Robert Torelli Townsville, QLD Ian Puckeridge Eden, NSW Mark Colys Perth, WA Andy Ruddock Wollongong, NSW Robert Torelli Hobart, TAS Robert Torelli Kangaroo Island, SA Greg Pickering Cairns, QLD Andy Ruddock Phillip Island, VIC Robert Torelli Perth, WA Arnold Piccoli Sydney, NSW Paul Riorden Swansea, Tas Robert Torelli Fleurieu , SA Robert Muir Tannum Sands, QLD cancelled Warnanbool,Vic Len Joyce Perth, WA Robert Muir Eden, NSW Heiki Nevala Triabunna, Tas Les Siemek Minlaton, SA Ralph Whalley Cairns, QLD Kevin Ranger Port Fairy, VIC Bob Hart Margaret River, WA David Hopkins Bridport, TAS Ralph Whalley Nowra, NSW Brian McKenna Narooma, NSW Les Siemek Edithburgh, SA Geoff Skinner What makes a Champion? Mackay, QLD Allan Badger Ocean Grove, Vic Steve Duffy Busselton, WA Brian Bailey "When considering the stature of an athlete or for Shoal Bay, NSW John Black that matter any person, I set great store in certain Maroochydore, QLD Peter Kemp qualities which I believe to be essential in addition to San Remo, VIC Ron Taylor skill. They are that the person conducts his or her life Kangaroo Is, SA Ron Taylor Denmark, WA Ron Taylor with dignity, with integrity, courage, and perhaps Currarong, NSW Ron Taylor most of all, with modesty. These virtues are totally Phillip Island, VIC Ben Cropp compatible with pride, ambition, and Bicheno, TAS John Black competitiveness." Quote from Don Bradman Tullebudgera, QLD Bob Webb Moonta Bay, SA Roy Howell Bremer Bay, W.A. Bernie Harbour Next event- 14 -21 Feb 2010- Victoria Bermagui, N.S.W. Barry May Point Lonsdale, VIC Barry May Rapid Bay, SA Frank Kirkham Tweed Heads Ron Cox Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Australian Spearfishing Champions Open USFA / AUF 60TH ANNIVERSARY REUNION DINNER INFORMATION SHEET To celebrate its 60th anniversary the USFA has hired the Whitlam Theatre at the Revesby Workers Club for a reunion dinner to be held on Saturday 19th September 2009 commencing at 6.00 pm. Past and present members and their guests are invited. Tickets are now available at a cost of $65.00 per person (3 course dinner included). Tickets must be pre-purchased and are not available on the night. This is the same venue where the highly successful 50th Anniversary reunion was held. This event had almost 400 past and present members travelling from all states and territories to attend. It is advisable to book early to avoid disappointment as seating is limited. There will be displays of diving memorabilia and historic equipment and a slide show presentation featuring our early members and our association’s history. Don’t forget to bring along your old photo albums and diving memorabilia or other items of interest. There will be prizes for the best decorated tables and time for dancing and talking about the good old times. A strong line-up of guest speakers will feature Ron Taylor, John Harding, Barry Andrewartha, Terry Hagley (USFA Foundation Member) and Keynote Speaker Toni de Fina (Life member and past President AUF). The Revesby Workers Club has, on several occasions, been awarded with the prestigious Club of the Year Award and is located adjacent to Revesby Railway Station. Access to car parking is via Blamey Street (off River road) or Tarro Avenue (off Weston Street) and there is ample free parking for over 400 vehicles situated at the front and rear of the premises. There is easy access from Sydney Airport by taking the South Western Motorway (M5) and using the River Road exit. Come along and have a great night with great company, great food and a lot of great memories. PS. Don’t forget your table decorations. Tickets may be obtained from: Mel Brown Ph. 02 4283 2757 9 Narelle Crescent Mob. 0412 494 186 WOONONA NSW 2517 Email melvenbrown@optusnet.com.au AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World Great Australian Shark Count (Watch) Key contacts if you want to get involved are: National Michael Rupnik- shark@auf.com.au - 0400367424 National Adam Smith- adamksmith@bigpond.com.au- 0418726584 Or log your sightings online at www.auf.com.au Please spread the word that we are doing our bit to understand the marine environment and sharks We have put in letters to federal and state Ministers asking for additional funding to support the GASC. You may wish to contact Peter Garrett (Environment Minister) Peter.Garrett.mp@aph.gov.au or Tony Burke (Fisheries Minister) Tony.Burke.mp@aph.gov.au and let them know you support the future of recreational fishers and divers and stewardship and community monitoring of sharks. AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World QLD REPORT Retirement of a great bloke from Qld Chair- Thanks Dave Dear Qld exec, clubs and members As indicated at the recent AGM I wish to stand down as the Qld chair, but agreed to stay on in the interim since there were no nominations and felt I may be able to help the new committee “settle in”. Due to work and personal commitments I will be standing down from the Chairperson position immediately. I will still make myself available to the SC committee of Shane, Craig, Anthony, and Chad if needed but only in an advisory type role. When I stepped in to the position over 5 years ago there really wasn’t a lot of guidance as to what the role was, apart from a very broad duties statement. That statement has since become more detailed (attached) as I have taken on tasks I felt were appropriate to those duties, and tasks I felt were needed. In that time we were fortunate to have risk management training so as to develop a risk assessment (attached) for spearfishing in Queensland. This risk assessment served to ensure me that the tasks I was carrying out were the right ones, and also identified areas where the spearfishing commission should be paying attention to. Many of these include: better communication with members, education of non-spearfishers (and spearfishers), changing public perception, and engaging with decision-makers better. This helped me in developing a strategic plan (attached) for spearfishing in Qld, which I sought input from club contacts. A strategic plan is simply a plan of what we want to achieve within certain time frames to help ensure the tasks and actions that are needed are clearly identified, and that they are actually carried out. These tasks were what guided me in setting up a committee based on types of tasks (eg communication), however the roles of each of the committee members will probably evolve a little. In the past 5 years I have written numerous articles, given many public talks and displays, spoken to all types of media, met and worked with other stakeholder groups and representatives, met and worked with environmental and fisheries managers from Qld and NSW, attended and chaired many meetings – AUF and others, organized an annual Qld competition schedule, met and worked with many other spearos from around Australia, collated and maintained state and club contact lists, have been an integral member of the Great Australian Shark Watch project, promoted our activities at every opportunity, assisted Qld members in representative duties where possible (eg. grants, team shirts), created AUFQ links with research, as well as the many administrative developments mentioned. I have had deputies during most of this period in Shane Morrison (Assistant – Nth) and Kevin Chard (Assistant – Sth), who have been great to work with. However, many of these tasks are now spread among the committee to make the load easier, to spread the knowledge of the commission among several, and hopefully make being a part of the Spearfishing Commission more enjoyable. I have also worked with the national AUF spearfishing executive over the years and with the current professional leadership through Adam Smith, my job has benefited through learning and adopting national approaches and initiatives. I therefore would like to encourage somebody to nominate for the Spearfishing Chair position. If you love spearfishing and working with others, have some basic computing skills and access to email, have some political awareness, have a professional attitude, and feel you can devote 2-3 hours a week to the role then you are ideal. I can honestly say that I have personally gained a lot from being in the role: new friends, training, many new skills, travel, a sense of achievement and in helping make a difference. Please contact me if you wish to discuss or Judy Breeze (judyaufq@bigpond.net.au) if you wish to nominate. Emerging future needs: AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World Review of AUFQ spearfishing rules and bylaws (need to be consistent with AUFQ constitution and the national spearfishing rules where appropriate) Review of the risk assessment Develop policy on competition organisation (a guide using template docs and spreadsheets, include sponsorship guidelines) Explore NEATFish competition accreditation. Policy on commission spending (in conjunction with AUFQ) Also attached for your records are: the current AUFQ constitution, the current AUFQ Spearfishing Bylaws, and a notice of competition eligibility in Qld as a result of the changes made to the AUFQ constitution recently. Cheers David Welch Ph: 0414 897 490 NQ Titles 16/5/09 COMPETITOR Total Species Total Weight Points Percentage 6. Adam Smith/TSC 12 37.0 1570 100.0 13. Marc Richards/CUA 10 20.0 1200 76.4 16. Jake Boyd/TSC 8 30.0 1100 69.8 9. Kevin Ranger/CUA 7 19.6 896 57.1 11. Keith SeeKee/CUA 7 18.5 885 56.4 7. Dave Welch/TSC 7 18.0 880 56.1 21. Jason Coe/CUA 20. Matthew Ludbrooke/TSC 7 17.2 872 55.5 6 15.7 757 48.2 19. Sid Caswell/CUA 5 13.0 630 40.1 12. David Williams/TSC 5 9.0 590 37.6 10. Shane Holley/CUA 3 21.5 515 32.8 3. Warren Faithful/CUA 4 11.0 510 32.5 17. Chris Ray/CUA 3 13.0 430 27.4 4. Andrea Severati/TSC 3 10.5 405 25.8 5. John Picard/TSC 3 10.0 400 25.5 2. Alan Banister/TSC 2 8.5 285 18.2 2 8.5 285 18.2 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 8. Stephen Menzies/TSC 1. Bob Malcolm/TSC 14. Michael PannachTSC 15. Will Evans/TSC 18. Joe Elams/CUA Total fish = 94 Av 3kg Total weight = 281 kg Did not weigh Did not weigh Did not weigh Did not weigh 94 281.0 AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World Fish/diver hour = 0.23 fish Nemrod results Marc Richards Kevin Ranger Keith SeeKee Jason Coe CUA Adam Smith -1570 Jake Boyd - 1100 Dave Welch - 880 Matt Ludbrooke - 757 TSC 4307 1200 896 885 872 3853 QLD Calendar 2009 Jan Feb Nationals WA 14th-22nd Mar Apr Bluewater Classic Easter 10th-13th 28th and 29th May Jun Sat 16th May Qld Titles NQ Titles Townsville 6th-7th AUFQ AGM 28th Interpacific WA Sun 17th Vic state titles 27th apr-2nd may Backup day Eden Champs 7th-9th Jul Aug 6th-7th Sep Oct Nov Cloughy Challenge Cairns Nemrod Cairns Nemrod 12th and 13th Sat 31st Back up Date 7th 27th Club dive Contacts Craig Barnett 04 1774 1774 AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World Dec Queensland titles Report by Peter Muller Queensland 2009 State Spearfishing Titles June 6 & 7 - Cape Gloucester The 2009 Queensland spearfishing State titles, organised by the Mackay Down Under Skindiving Club, were held over the Queens birthday long weekend on the 6 and 7th of June. Twenty-three competitors from the Tweed Gold Coast, newly formed Curtis Coast (Gladstone), Mackay and Townsville clubs nominated, with competitors staying at the Gloucester Eco Resort which is situated on the tip of Cape Gloucester, to the north of Airlie Beach. The competition began at first light on Saturday morning with a briefing at 6:30 am on the beach in front of the resort. The dives were held at the Charity and Faith reefs, which are some 80 to 85 km to the north of Cape Gloucester. Four boats from the Mackay club were used to transport divers to the reef, with the trip taking around an hour and a half. The conditions at Charity reef on Saturday were ideal, with calm seas and sunny blue skies and a day time of temperature of 26 to 27°C. Winter had not yet set in and the water was still a mild 24°C, with visibility of 10 to 15 m throughout the day. Boats arrived at Charity at 8:00 am with the 5 hour competition beginning at 8:35. Charity is a small “C” shaped circular reef about 2 km in width with a central lagoon. Charity reef lived up to its name and turned on some good action providing divers with the full range of fish. Trout were abundant with several divers weighing 3 trout species of a blue spot, leopard and footballer and plenty of big blueys coming in as well, the best being a 10 kg monster captured by local Bowen diver Clint Stoneham. Mackerel were about also with many sharky and several spanish being taken. There was also a good range of parrot fish available with some divers spearing up to 5 species. However day 1 went to Jake Boyd, also of Bowen, who set the pace by weighing an impressive nineteen species. The ever perennial Adam Smith was close behind with seventeen species, but with 10 kg more weight than Jake, was to make up some of his lead. The nearest rivals of Craig Barnett and Tony Heugh came in with 12 species each, which gave Jake and Adam a break of 35 percentage points. AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World Sunday, day 2, had a similar start, however the competition was shortened to four hours and GTs were also taken off the list. The boats headed out to Faith reef soon after 6:30 am for the quick trip to the reef. A slight swell was running from a light north-westerly wind which soon flattened out on the approach to the reef. Sunday was similar but with more cloud and milder conditions, but still ideal for spearfishing. The day’s dive started at 8:45 am with a 12:45 finish. With the shortened time divers got away quickly and were soon dispersed across the reef. Faith was a little disappointing, even though being only 5 km north of Charity, fish were not as plentiful with divers having to work hard for their fish. As a result, only 4 divers weighed 10 or more species with Tony Heugh and Adam Smith both weighing 12 species. Again it came down to weight and Tony won the day with 7.5 kg more fish. Mick Saunders and Ken Hunter of Mackay both had good days bringing in 11 and 10 species respectively which helped improve on their Saturday scores. Several of the divers in the top 5 dropped down the ranking by not doing as well as the previous day. By being consistent and coming second on each day, Adam Smith won the competition with 190 percentage points. Tony Heugh was runner-up on 161 points, closely followed by Jake Boyd on 158. The Veterans performed impressively by making up 4 of the top 6 places, which shows that experience counts – see below for full results. Place Name and Club Day 1 points Day 1 % points Day 2 points Day 2 % points 1st Adam Smith (TSC) 2220.6 95.4 1420 95.0 190.4 2nd Tony Heugh (TGCFC) 1421.5 61.0 1494.5 100 161.0 3rd Jake Boyd 2328.7 100 876 58.6 158.6 4th Michael Saunders (MDUSC) 1190 51.1 1412 94.5 145.6 5th Simon Baldwin (TGCFC) 1278 54.9 1269 84.9 139.8 6th Ken Hunter 841 36.1 1296 86.7 122.8 7th Lee Jamnicky 1000.9 43.0 1132.5 75.8 118.8 8th Clint Stoneham 1035 44.4 1083 72.5 116.9 9th Dave Welch 1358.2 58.3 815 54.5 112.8 10th Bryson Sheeny 1103.7 47.4 969 64.8 112.2 11th Craig Barnett (MDUSC) 1461.7 62.8 619 41.4 104.2 12th Shayne Martin (MDUSC) 1198 51.4 720 48.2 99.6 13th Andrew Lucas (MDUSC) 1220 52.4 611 40.9 93.3 14th David Jensen 901.5 38.7 777 52.0 90.7 (TSC) (MDUSC) (TGCFC) (TSC) (TSC) (TGCFC) (CCSC) Total % points AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World 15th Daniel Tarasiuk (TSC) 1118.5 48.0 621 41.6 89.6 16th Matt Ludbrook (TSC) 642 27.6 846 56.6 84.2 17th Paul Urane (CCSC) 562.6 24.2 831 55.6 79.8 18th Shane Morrison 1052 45.2 466.5 31.2 76.4 19th John Vandenburg 580 24.9 500 33.5 58.4 20th Natt Kane 985.5 42.3 0 0 42.3 21st Jackson Hong (MDUSC) 540 23.2 236 15.8 39.0 22nd Mark Brooks (CCSC) 254.4 10.9 249.5 16.7 27.6 23rd Tim Davidson (CCSC) 356.3 15.3 0 (MDUSC) (MDUSC) (CCSC) 15.3 The Mackay Nemrod was also held on Saturday with the Nemrod final being decided on the Sunday. Townsville easily won the Mackay Nemrod round with an impressive 7026 points, followed by Mackay (5070 pts) and Tweed Gold Coast (4804 pts). However for the Nemrod final, Tweed Gold Coast came up trumps with a winning score of 4865 pts, while Mackay was second on 4047 pts and Townville third on 3957 pts. The Pairs and Team competitions were also determined on Sundays dive and the Pairs were won by Tony Heugh and Simon Baldwin of the Tweed Gold Coast Freedivers club with 2764 points. Adam Smith and Jake Boyd of Townsville came second on 2296 pts, closely followed by Michael Saunders and Shayne Martin of Mackay on 2132 pts. The placings remained the same for the Teams competition, with Tweed Gold Coast (Tony Heugh, Simon Baldwin, Bryson Sheeny & Lee Jamnicky) winning with 4865 pts, Townville (Adam Smith, Jake Boyd, Dave Welch & Clint Stoneham) second on 4194 pts and Mackay (Michael Saunders, Shayne Martin, Craig Barnett & Andrew Lucas) third on 3362 pts. Four age categories for the men’s section (no Masters competed) were contested at the 2009 State Titles. The Queensland age categories had also been brought into line with the rest of Australia after the AUFQ AGM this year, so that the age categories now are Masters, Veterans, Seniors, Intermediates and Juniors. The place getters for each age group are as follows: The 2009 State Titles were a huge success with fantastic weather and full credit must go to Craig Barnett, Andrew Lucas, Shane Morrison, Dan Wisely, Shane Martin, Ben Shepherd, Bob Eaves and the rest of the team at Mackay Down Under Skindiving club who organised the event. Also special thanks to the boat drivers -Shane Morrison, Bob Eves, Ben Shepherd and Craig Barnett for providing their boats and time over the weekend. AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World Several great prizes were also donated, with all competitors able to win these prizes from a draw held after the presentation. Tony Heugh donated a carbon Edge spear gun while a Omer Cayman HF 1300 spear gun was put up by Andrew Lucas, Craig Barnett and Shane Morrison Marine who also chipped in with a selection of diving accessories. MDUSC donated a Ray Whitton painting valued at $500. A huge thanks to all those who sponsored and supported the 2009 QLD State Titles. The lucky winners were Tim Davidson, who won the Omer carbon rail gun and was so happy at winning he did not let go of the gun for the rest of the night. Tim had unfortunately come down with food poisoning on the Saturday and spent a lot of the time out at the reef being sick. Mick Saunders number came up again for the Edge spear gun, this being his second prize draw win in a row. Clint Stoneham from Bowen won the Ray Whitton painting, congratulations to all. Runner-up Tony Heugh and winner Adam Smith Pairs winners – Tony Heugh and Simon Baldwin IN THE NEWS- QLD (and responses) Spearfishing ban slammed DANIEL BATEMAN June 19th, 2009 A NEW study that has proposed a ban on spear guns and gill nets to save the Great Barrier Reef from overfishing has been rubbished by fisheries scientists. An international team of scientists led by Dr Josh Cinner from the ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies has proposed a ban on fishing gear such as spear AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World guns, fish traps, beach seine nets, and gill nets to aid coral reefs that have been hit with bleaching. The team's research, carried out in Kenya and Papua New Guinea, showed certain types of gear was more damaging to corals and to certain species of fish needed to help reefs recover from bleaching or storm damage. Dr Cinner, who is based at James Cook University, said the fishing gear was creating a double jeopardy for both the corals and certain types of reef fish. "They are already on the edge because of the overfishing and the additional impact caused by a bleaching even can push them over," he said. The team found spear guns were the most damaging of all fishing gear, especially to corals themselves and fish such as parrot and trigger fish, which keep seaweeds and urchins in check while coral regrows. "Spear guns target a high proportion of species that help maintain the resilience of coral reefs, but also can result in a surprising amount of damage to the corals themselves," Dr Cinner said. "When a fish is shot with a spear gun, it often hides in the reef, so some fishermen break the corals in their attempts to get it." Dr Cinner said temporary bans or imposing permanent restrictions on the use of various types of gear could apply to virtually any coral reef management whether in the developing world or in developed countries such as on Australia's Great Barrier Reef. Fellow JCU fisheries scientist Dr Andrew Tobin said the proposed fishing gear bans should not be applicable to the Great Barrier Reef. "Some of those findings are probably very reasonable for those areas they've studied, but to make any link to Great Barrier Reef waters is probably drawing a very long sword," Dr Tobin said. "The fishing gears he's looking at, most of them aren't used in the GBR World Heritage Area anyway." Dr Tobin said there was very little spearfishing on the reef. "There's already some pretty harsh regulations in place for that, he said. "It's a reasonably low fishing method, as well." Townsville marine biologist Dr Walter Starck, who provides advice to Sunfish North Queensland, said there was no issue with overfishing of herbivorous fish on the Great Barrier Reef. "Here in Australia, it is completely irrelevant," he said. Sunfish North Queensland spokesman Brian Pickup labelled the study's scientists as 'doom and gloom merchants'. "All right, we might have a problem with netting, but we don't have a problem with sustainability of our fisheries on the Great Barrier Reef," Mr Pickup said. SHOULD SPEARFISHING BE BANNNED? HAVE YOUR SAY BELOW AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World Latest Comments on the website (these comments were organised and written largely by AUF Spearfishing members): Just typical of the research that goes into fishery decisions. It all comes from overseas and is based on a totally different scenario to the social values of the GBR.As a charter operator i have been asked countless times over the years to participate in research studies, the latest being a survey by dpi&f to study how many barra charter fishers kill and the sizes of those fish. But they were not interested in how many we release and that is why i tell them all to get nicked these days as they will only turn this info against us in the form of a rediculous fishery decision. The charter and commercial sectors have been crippled in the last 5 years as a result of several fishery regulations being introduced by political promises to the green movement and its going to get worse as leaks have suggested the marine park to increase to over 50% green zones after the 2011 review of the GBR. Must be the 52.6% they promised WWF back in 2003. By the way can anyone tell me why spearos would try to shoot a trigger fish in the first place, i know i never have. Glad i sold my reef boat when you could sell one.Posted by: Ryan Moody of hinchinbrook 10:36am Monday This is disappointing. As an environmental resource management scientist and a spearfisher, this article appears very poorly researched and reported to me. it appears the aim is for sensationalist headline grabbing rather than accurate reporting. Safe, Sustainable and SELECTIVE most accurately describes spearfishing as it is practiced in Australia (and on the GBR). To consider spearfishing on a par with netting is unrealistic and misguided. Fishing pressure in general on the GBR is very low compared to the rest of the world, and spearfishing has about the lowest impact of all the methods used. I have yet to meet a spearfisher who does not care for the environment and for the sustainability of the fish stocks. Many are actively invovled in the collection of both scientific data and anecdotal evidence that may be used by regulators to best manage both the ecosystem and the fish stocks. please consider contacting the Australian Underwater Federation Spearfishing, or other State or Local spearfishing groups to gain a better understanding of how the activities are practiced here, you will find it is not comparable to subsistence collection and netting in other parts of the world. Posted by: Matt Anscomb of Townsville 10:18am Monday I can understand the outrage by spearfishermen in these comments, but the Bulletin article chooses just a small section of the results of this study. The original article http://www.underwatertimes.com/news.php?article_id=23651107408 talks about commercial and poor subsistence fishermen in the tropics and the need for compensation if any bans are put in place. It was investigating measures for heavily bleached reefs to allow them to bounce back, not wholesale closures in general (especially areas with quotas, size limits and marine reserves). “Selective gear restrictions offer reef managers and fishers alike some middle ground, reducing pressure on the reef and its fish while it is in the recovery phase, while also providing fishers with some options for their livelihood” Dr Cinner. The Bulletin draws the link to the Barrier Reef. The authors quote was originally "In principle, it can be used anywhere." Obviously it wouldn't be used where it wasn't needed. I also spearfish, but I understand that science is a search for truth, not influence. Posted by: Robert Hughes of Swansea 6:51pm Sunday This is yet another unfortunate case of science misinforming the public, and from a common source. Many such studies have merit and are relevant to those regions where carried out. What is failed to be acknowledged here, and time and again, is that fortunately the GBR context is very different. Spearfishing on the GBR is at very low levels, the target species are generally NOT the "susceptible fish species", and where they are taken, spearfishing very rarely takes the particular species identified by the same research centre as the most important for reef resilience. Furthermore these particular fish groups on the GBR are some of the most abundant. The authors clearly do not understand spearfishing practices on the GBR and also they undermine the considerable proactive efforts by Australian and GBR spearfishers in following best practice environmental standards. Make the local relevance clear to the public if you are going to publish this type of report locally, otherwise you are just misleading the public using false credentials!Posted by: Scott Whitby of Brisbane 10:25am Sunday AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World I totally disagree with this study. Spearfishing is a ver ecologically sustainable sport as it is very species and size selective. The diver can choose the more prized, edible species, and their is also no bi-catch. The areas mentioned in the study are areas where overfishing had historically occurred and a large proportion of the targeted catch are herbivorous fishes. This scenario and issues does not occur on the Great Barrier Reef. Townsville Bulletin should do more thorough research into what they are printing before they publish it!!Posted by: Brendan Meale of Townsville 6:48pm Friday Sensation seeking "scientists" should be banned not spearfishermen. Tvle Skindiving Club members are very aware that their sport is based on safe, sustainable, selective fishing.Triggefish are never taken & many members do not regard parrot fish very highly and would rarely take the bag limits permitted by govt regulation.This proposal is not based on local science & is little more than a greenies wet dream. Posted by: John Picard of Townsville 3:31pm Friday Already mentioned is that Triggerfish are not targeted by Australian spearfishermen. Parrotfish hole up at night time when spearfishermen do not operate. They are not targeted whilst hiding inside reef structures! By daylight Parrotfish swim over reef structures and cross sandy bottom between corral structures. Most often when speared these fish are away from the coral structrures and spearfishermen target them in open water where they are not in front of corals which could be damaged. Speaerfishermen do not put spears into coral reef structures if they can help it. Spears are expensive and would stand to get damaged or lost if they did. If the scientists have studied spearfishermen in action on the Great Barrier Reef - let them publish their science. Until this happens I see no need for spearefishermen to answer ghosts. Posted by: Tony Heugh of Glass House Mountains 2:29pm Friday Spearfishing is selective (and possibly the most environmentally sustainable way to catch a fish) as it has no bycatch, does not use bait, does not damage habitat. It is a recreational only activity in Australia and has numerous environmental restrictions (clarity, depth, weather) and Govt regulations as to where it can occur, what species can and cannot be taken and size restrictions. I am proud to be a sustainable recreational spearfisher and a member of the Townsville Skindiving Club and Australian Underwater Federation whose mission is "Bringing sport, conservation and awareness to the underwater world" (www.auf.com.au). Yes we legitimately catch a small number of quality fish to eat, we also take photos, love the exercise of freediving and we lead community monitoring projects such as Great Australian Shark Watch.I would welcome Dr Cinner and other scientists to talk to spearfisher or participate in spearfishing on the GBR to observe the sustainable activity of Australian spearfishers before they make any further outlandish statements. Posted by: Adam Smith of Townsville 1:25pm Friday Spearfishing is one of the most ecologically sustainable methods of fishing. Spearfishing allows the hunter to size up the prey before the kill and there is also no by-catch. A restricted dive depth of up to approximately 18m makes the impact of spearfishing insignificant on natural populations and ecosystems. I believe there are more important issues to address when considering threats to the reef. Agricultural runoff, pollution and commercial fishing pressures have a far greater impact on marine ecosystems. In a country such as Australia, that is supposed to be in the midst of an obesity epidemic, spearfishing should be encouraged as a great healthy lifestyle of gaining exercise while eating fresh healthy seafood that is caught sustainably. Activities such as spearfishing exposes people to the beautiful marine environment we have on our doorstep and therefore helps people gain a greater appreciation and respect for the marine environment and its sustainable use. Encouraging inclusive input from people such as spearfishers, who have a great understanding of the oceans' processes, many solutions may be found to help keep the GBR healthy and sustainable for many years to come. Posted by: Grant Russell of Sydney 12:52pm Friday This is yet another unfortunate case of science misinforming the public, and from a common source. Many such studies have merit and are relevant to those regions where carried out. What is failed to be acknowledged here, and time and again, is that fortunately the GBR context is very AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World different. Spearfishing on the GBR is at very low levels, the target species are generally NOT the "susceptible fish species", and where they are taken, spearfishing very rarely takes the particular species identified by the same research centre as the most important for reef resilience. Furthermore these particular fish groups on the GBR are some of the most abundant. The authors clearly do not understand spearfishing practices on the GBR and also they undermine the considerable proactive efforts by Australian and GBR spearfishers in following best practice environmental standards. Make the local relevance clear to the public if you are going to publish this type of report locally, otherwise you are just misleading the public using false credentials! Posted by: David Welch of Townsville 12:08pm Friday it's a shame that jcu science is out of touch of the real world. would be avaiable to comment on anything marine , boating ect anytime with an informed blanced opinion. call me on 0428988229 andrew Posted by: andrew mead of townsville 10:50am Friday It never ceases to amaze me how these antifishing ratbags want to ban everything, one activity at a time until there is nothing left. Banning spearfishing as if that activity is reponsible for overfishing and coral damage is absurd. Spearfishing is a very hard activity. There is no by catch and certain species and sizes can be targeted. Unlike line fishing and netting where you can catch anything. There is not any overfishing on the Great Barrier Reef Posted by: Mike Forfar of townsville 10:27am Friday Spearfishing should not be banned. It is the most selective form of fishing there is and highly regulated in Qld and Australia in general. Trigger fish are not target species and parrot fish are subject to strict size and bag limits in Qld. K. Chard Spearfishing Representative- GBRMPA FRAC Posted by: Kevin Chard 9:35am Friday what next I suppose this is a lead up (excuse)to impliment a fee or levi if you like to our recreational spear fishes. Carn't imagine what damage a hand full of spear fishes could do compared to what get pulled up the commercial nets and left to die. Sometimes I think these people have to much time on their hands and make these ridiculous statements to be seen to be doing something to justify their positions. Sounds awfully fishy to me. Posted by: Evol Fayers of Cape Cleveland 7:30am Friday I hope that common sense will protect those beautiful fishing grounds around Australia.No need to end up like the Philippines are now a big coral trout here is rarely bigger than 10 inches. Posted by: Paul Linder of Davao 7:26am Friday AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World The Sandgroper Shield -A new, revitalised competition for WA skindivers It is no secret that in recent years there has been a huge drop-off in competitive spearfishing in Western Australia. However, this year there has been National and International competitions in our backyard, exposing us relatively new divers to the rigours and opportunities of Species/Swim competitions. As a reserve for the Inter-Pacific team, I spent a week with experienced competition divers, savouring the opportunity to learn by observation and inquisition. I also learnt more about the competition scene that used to exist in WA, which helped to develop the divers that still stand out amongst their peers today. A group of us had whet our appetites at the Nationals, and were eager to continue the steep learning curve of competition. With no one likely to stick up their hand and do it for us, it was up to us to organise our own. This was the birth of the Sandgroper Shield - a series of 9 events to be held over the financial year, all either shore dive or swimming from an anchored boat. The spirit of these competitions is intended to be about gaining experience and improving as spearfishermen, but no doubt a competitive drive will develop to take the Shield with the best score over 7 of the 9 events. Competitions in WA have a recent history of poor turnout, due mainly to a focus on pelagics and big fish. If that is the case with the Sandgroper Shield it will still run. If there are 5 regulars and a handful or part-timers, competition will still be provided for the keen. The vision is to help develop a group of competition spearfishermen that would be able to hold there own in a National Titles across the Nullabor, and to dominate the next National Titles held in WA. The first event will be a shoredive held in the Cape-to-Cape region, on the weekend of the 15-16th of August. This time of year may be difficult for weather, but by choosing the best venue Cape-to-Cape and selecting the best day of the weekend some great fish will no doubt be landed. Anyone wishing to take part, please email me at camo.snow@gmail.com to be added to the contacts list. AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World South Coast Championships Jervis Bay, NSW The comp held over two days..Forty spearos signed on .Overall winner Jack Lavender runner up Garth Byron Conditions in the bay were calm outside one an half to two metres swell from the south, vis was good . Divers went as far south as wreck bay and up north to the wide bomby of currawong. Good species of fish were weighed in. All divers went to the presentation, and all went home with a prize. Everyone had a good time. Everyone that fished the comp .Thankyou for making it a great weekend Eddie skerry eddieskerry@wix.com.au AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World EDEN – Queens Birthday long weekend Winner Gunther Pfrengle Winner Junior- Ryan O Donnall 2nd Jack Lavender John Higgins and Boarfish AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World News from Victoria Bluewater hunting in Victoria The run of southern bluefin tuna off Portland and Port MacDonnell was strong again this year with fish being caught from February to June. Fish over 100kg were caught on line, but most were between 20-35 kg. A few keen spearos had a crack at the Australian Record of 28 kg. A few fish were speared including this 16 kg tuna by Murray Peterson. This fishery is getting better and better each year and it won’t be long before a seriously big fish is taken! VRFISH mag VRFish are Victoria’s recreational fishing peak body who aim to represent and advocate the interests of the Victorian recreational fishing community. While VRFish members are primarily anglers, SCUBA divers and spearfishers are also represented. A feature article was recently included in VRFish’s magazine “Fishing Line” in which we were able to promote the sport, dive flag awareness, the Southern Freedivers and the AUF. This magazine can be downloaded here http://www.vrfish.com.au/newsletter/FishingLines-April09.LR.pdf. AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World Victorian Spearfishing Challenge Murray Peterson won the Victorian Spearfishing Challenge, narrowly defeating Jordan Hill. Some great fish were weighed in including kingfish to 15kg, plenty of sweep over 1 kg and some monster crayfish. SPECIES in gms Flathead Sweep Snapper Whiting Snook Crayfish Kingfish Trevally Squid Salmon 10920 900 1480 800 75 1460 1850 975 70 Total NAMES 900 1140 700 640 1980 4140 Jordan Hill 1305 750 845 635 2195 2950 Rob Torelli 705 1130 620 1080 5050 15080 1050 2040 Ryan Harris 500 1040 770 590 700 3430 1800 380 590 830 53 780 560 13110 1100 1720 1110 52 Murray Peterson Leigh Elliott Aaron Crocombe 1350 1090 1090 Chris Monaghan 450 Drew Fenney Matt Koopman 1190 1990 480 2140 4010 430 1560 1880 710 1840 39.5 460 26.5 1255 635 1550 885 760 530 17 11 2125 3180 535 Paul Dorfstatter 24 18 1620 Adam Greenhow Jack Monkiewicz 680 825 Christian Hughes Josef Bednarek Louie Papadopoulos 59.5 10 10 2860 1130 AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World 9 8.5 Club Championship Results of the club championship are shown in the table below. Drew Fenney beat Murray Peterson in A-grade. Leigh Elliot and Greg Sperring took out B-grade and C-grade respectively. Trent Crane improved throughout the season to take out the Junior titles and Ashleigh Illingworth won the Ladies section. Ryan Harris won the photo comp with this great pic of a cuttlefish. He won this comp last year as well. 1st 2nd 3rd 1st 2nd 3rd 1st 2nd 3rd 1st 2nd A B C Jnr. 3rd 1 Ladies Drew Fenney Murray Peterson Ric DeVries Leigh Elliott Christian Hughes Jason Horne Greg Sperring Andrew Vibert Luke Donnison Trent Crane Jordan Whitmore Ashleigh Illingworth Ashleigh Illingworth AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World Records (click to view) Latest Record Random Record Divers Name: C. WHALLEY Divers Name: R. BARNES Weight: 5.830 kg Weight: 1.650 kg Common Marbled Rock Cod Names: Common Maori Sweetlips Names: Scientific Epinephelus Name: polyphekadion Scientific Plectorhinchus Names: multivittatus Date 20-02-2009 Captured: Date Captured: 08-11-1984 NO IMAGE ON FILE AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World BLAST FROM THE PAST Some photos from last century AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World For immediate publication 26 March 2009 Community shark monitoring project enters a new era The highly successful Great Australian Shark Count project is to undergo a name change to better reflect the scientific benefits the project offers. This community-based project, previously coined the name GASC, will now be known as Great Australian Shark Watch. The project has so far won national awards and generated enormous community support. This project has also attracted enormous community and media interest due to a number of shark attacks on swimmers, surfers and divers this summer. “The new name better reflects the information generated by the project.” says Dr Adam Smith, national chair for the Australian Underwater Federation spearfishers and the project co-ordinator. “Although the project actually involves the community counting sharks, it will not be informative about trends in shark population numbers. The data collected will however be very useful in showing scientists and managers where and when particular shark species are found. This type of information is lacking and will become even more useful with several years of data collected.” With the help of the community, particularly divers and spearfishers, the project has recorded several thousand shark sightings, including the unusual record of a leopard shark off Sydney, a species generally found in tropical waters. With the success of the project so far, organizers are very keen to see Great Australian Shark Watch continue into the future, however this is currently in jeopardy says Dr Adam Smith. “The project funding runs out this month and despite several attempts we have not been able to raise further funds to ensure the project continues. This would be a real shame given the importance of sharks and the benefits the project provides.” said Dr Smith. “The education side of the project which has raised awareness of shark conservation has also been outstanding.” The project has organized four dedicated community shark monitoring weekends in four different states in the past year. The project will hold another one of these across the weekend of March 27 – 29 and are hoping for hundreds of keen skin and SCUBA divers to be involved. Organisers will lead a monitoring team in the Solitary Islands Marine Park in NSW, but urge divers from across Australia to monitor sharks on this weekend. To report shark sightings divers can go to the project website at www.auf.com.au and be in the running for random draw prizes such as wetsuits, t-shirts, posters and stickers. The Great Australian Shark Watch project has been supported by a range of Government, scientific, community and industry groups including DAFF, FRDC, Reef Check and The Ecology Lab. The organisers are disappointed that the project appears to be in is final stages due to lack of financial and government support and have recently written to federal and state environmental and fisheries Ministers and asked for ongoing funding but have received no response. “We have some dedicated volunteers who will help maintain the project database in the short term, however the long term future of the project will depend on future funding” says Dr Smith. “The project has proven that the diving community is interested in participating in monitoring sharks; however we need funding support to ensure we can harness this interest and put it to some use.” AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World If you can assist in ensuring the future of the Great Australian Shark Watch project, require more information or wish to be involved in monitoring sharks please contact Michael Rupnik, Executive Officer on shark@auf.com.au or on 0400 367 424. -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------The Australian Underwater Federation (AUF) is the national governing body for underwater sports such as underwater hockey, SCUBA, snorkel coaching and training, fin swimming, and spearfishing (a small but selective type of recreational fishing). The AUF is a member of Recfish Australia and is committed to working strategically together with all recreational fishers. The mission of the AUF isBring sport, conservation and awareness to the underwater world Media enquires to David Welch on 0414897490 and Michael Rupnik 0400367424 www.auf.com.au MEDIA RELEASE So long and thanks for all the fish - a crisis for recreational fishers Australia is in crisis with bushfires, floods, cyclones, oil spills and stock market crashes. These haveaffected everyone and cost billions of dollars. Amidst all this chaos, recreational fishing is the most recent casualty due to a lack of support by the Australian Government. It may seem a small crisis but recreational fishing representation at a national level is almost gone thanks to lack of government funding. The peak national body, Recfish Australia has been told that the government will not provide any funding in 2008/9. Formed in 1983, this peak body has existed on a government grant of $100,000 peryear to represent a $2 billion plus industry with diverse interests and major challenges. This is the same federal government that has just handed out billions of dollars to jump start the economy and spent over $100 million on elite sport. This begs the question of why several hundred elite sportspeople are supported by the government but over 3.5 million recreational fishers have no national support or national voice. Recfish Australia has a proud 25 year history and many achievements. It continues to represent Australia's 3.5 million recreational fishers at a national level on issues as diverse as loss of access;shark recovery plans; management of Commonwealth fisheries and the development of best practice guidelines for recreational fishing. Recfish Australia has also been at the forefront in battles over Marine Parks, protected and threatened species and sustainable management of fisheries resourcesand many more issues that impact on the future of recreational fishers. One of the major national issues is climate change and its impacts on recreational fishers. The lack of funding means that recreational fishers will have no coordinated body to represent them and no peak body to meet with government on climate change implications and the impacts arising from natural resource management, competing user groups and many other issues. “Without a strong, coordinated peak body, it’s inevitable that recreational fishers will be railroaded when it comes to natural resource management” said Len Olyott, CEO of Recfish Australia. Recfish Australia has managed the role of peak body through a combination of government grants, membership fees, project management fees and sponsorship funding and a huge volunteer commitment for 25 years. A small government investment of $100,000 a year from 2004-2007 supported professional staff and allowed Recfish Australia to deliver a high level of service to grass roots recreational fishers, its member organisations and the Australian Government and achieved positive outcomes for the community.In a media release from October 2008, the Federal AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World Minister for Fisheries, the Hon. Tony Burke MP stated “The Rudd Government supports the recreational fishing industry, which generates jobs and tourism in rural and regional areas,” The Government also committed to a three-year, $2 million Recreational Fishing Industry Development Strategy. So, one of the questions that Recfish Australiahas continued to ask the Minister and the Rudd Government is how the $2 million will be spent andwhy is the peak national body not supported with any Government funding. Recfish Australia has recently developed a sponsorship and donations policy and is asking organisations and individuals to help where they can. Assistance from $100 to $100,000 or more willbe gratefully received and there is a range of benefits and rewards for becoming involved with thework of Recfish Australia. A Supporters Club has also been formed to allow individual fishers todirectly contribute and ensure that their voice is heard. The short-term goal for Recfish Australia is an annual core funding of $400,000 per year to allow theorganisation to effectively represent the recreational fishing sector. “Fishers are quite happy to spendhundreds of dollars on fishing tackle so surely $20 to support a national organisation that will ensuretheir rights are recognised is not a big ask.” said Olyott. Details of the policy and how to becomeinvolved can be found on the Recfish Australia website www.recfish.com.au or by contacting Len on 0427073356. ENDS Media Contact Len Olyott 0427073356 or Adam Smith 0418726584 Media Release Please forward to your networks For Immediate distribution 22 June 2009 Recfish Australia committed to sustainable recreational fishing Recfish Australia today reaffirmed their commitment to ensure that sustainable recreational fisheries continue in Commonwealth Waters. This follows two expert panel workshops to consider the conservation values for the East Marine Bioregion. The workshops, recently held in Cairns and Sydney involved a wide range of experts from a variety of community sectors including: commercial, recreational and charter fishing, marine tourism, shipping, state government, conservation NGOs and marine scientists. The meetings were the first step to discuss conservation values presented in the draft East Marine Bioregional Profile and to assess possible threats and existing threat mitigation measures. Public consultation will occur later in the process but all recreational fishers are encouraged to write to DEWHA with their comments about the draft profile. Recfish does however, have significant concerns with the process, not least of which is the short time line for delivery with a draft plan for marine protected areas expected by mid 2010. “We are talking about an area of Commonwealth Waters (between 3 nautical miles and 200 nautical miles from the coast) that runs from near the tip of Cape York in far north Queensland to past Bateman’s Bay on the south coast of New South Wales. There is not a lot of information about the ecology of the region and there is not a lot of AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World time to collect information about the extent of recreational fishing in Commonwealth Waters.” Said Len Olyott, CEO of Recfish Australia. Participants at the Cairns workshop voiced grave concerns about the fisheries data presented in the draft profile which was considered outdated and in some cases, inaccurate. Regarding recreational data, Olyott had this to say “The Australian Government is relying on recreational fishing data from a national survey conducted nearly 10 years ago, a lot has changed since then and more people are accessing Commonwealth waters in private boats or through expert charter operations. Any closures that ban fishing will have huge negative impacts on regional economies and will result in large scale job losses. We believe that recreational fishing in these areas is sustainably managed. The problem is that we need time to collect the data to prove our case.” The biggest threat to recreational fishing remains the calls from extreme conservation groups such as the American- based Pew Environment Group that continues to lobby government to close extensive areas in the Coral Sea and off Southwest Australia. Recfish Australia encourages all recreational fishers to apply political pressure through their local federal MPs and senators to guarantee that all sectors have a chance to present their case and to guard against any secret deals. To find out more about how you can become involved, visit the Recfish Australia website: www.recfish.com.au ENDS – Media Contact Len Olyott 0427073356 or Bruce Schumacher 0418499322 Mentoring- could it help Spearfishing? A contemporary view of mentoring defines it as a voluntary relationship based on mutual respect, trust with a two-way communication process. It provides an opportunity for sharing skills and experiences so individuals can develop towardstheir personal and work related goals. The mentor has knowledge and experience to offer the less experienced person. The mentee needs to have the drive to acquire this wisdom or insight. Ultimately, the mentor cannot force the mentee to learn or control how these insights will be implemented by the mentee. The value of a mentoring system is in the availability of an individual that understands the processes or issues confronting a colleague and who can offer the benefit of being able to ‘see around the corner’. Mentoring has become an increasingly popular method of developing skills and knowledge. Its effectiveness is attributed to several key factors: 1. Timeliness- The mentee receives the information/skill they need when they need it 2. Relevance- Real world issues can be discussed and progressed 3. Customisation- This relationship exists to meet the needs of the two parties involved and can therefore be customised to suit those changing needs. Mentoring Skills Core Mentoring Skills (needed by both mentors and mentees): Listening, Actively, Building Trust, Encouraging, and Identifying Goals and Current Reality. AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World Australian Underwater Federation Inc Susan Dockar A.U.F. Memberships P.O. Box 195 Menai Central N.S.W. 2234 Ph/Fax: (02) 9543-4907 Email: SoozieD@bigpond.com Representing all Freedivers, Spearfishers and underwater sports enthusiasts Full Name: (print)…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….. (Surname) Given Names AUF Membership No………………………………………..……… New……. Renewal Spearfishing and/or Freediving Club………………………………………………………………………….. Address: (No. & Street)………………………………………………………………………………………………… Suburb:……………………………………………………………..State:……………...Post Code:…………. Phone: (…..)………………………………………..Mobile:………………………………………………………. Fax:: (…..)…………………………………………email:………………………………………………………… Occupation: …………………………………………………….Date of Birth:………./…………/…………… Male: Female: NOTE: A.U.F. m/ship + National and State Spearfishing Commission memberships due 1st July and expires 30th June . NEW ONLINE FORM at www.auf.com.au each year Or contact Sue Dockar AUF Memberships – P.O. Box 195, Menai Central, N.S.W. 2234 (02) 9543-4907 AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World Do you want to learn more about Spearfishing? Perhaps you or your club should contact one of these AUF accredited and trained Spearfishing coaches. Darren Craig - Central Coast Sealions (NSW) Accred Sept 2005 - 2009 - AUF Exp 30/6/06 (no contact info) John Van Blanken - Tweed/Gold Coast Freedivers (QLD) exp 30/6/08 (07-5593-9034) Cameron Miller (QLD) - Acccred. Feb 2011 Accred to Jan 2010 - AUF exp 30/6/07 - AUF (0438-801-990) Les Tryk (Newcastel Neptunes) NSW - Accred. exp Jan 2014 - AUF 30/6/09 233) (0402-459- Mary Anne (South Australia) – 0419804685 mary-anne.stacey@bigpond.com AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World Australian Underwater Federation Inc. SPEARFISHING SAFETY RULES These Safety Rules are intended to minimise the risk of injury or mishap to divers engaged in Spearfishing. Divers are encouraged to adopt these rules without exception and to promote them amongst divers who may not be familiar with them. It is the responsibility of all A.U.F. members to make our sport as safe as possible. While engaged in Spearfishing you should: * Tow a safety coloured float (yellow, orange or red) with an International Code “A” flag (signifying diver below) displayed in a vertical position above the float. * Attach game to the towed float so that the game is carried away from your body. * Carry a knife that is attached to your body and which is readily accessible. * Carry a plastic safety whistle and a reflective signal mirror. * Wear a weight belt fitted with a single hand operated, quick release buckle. * Never load or carry a loaded speargun out of the water. * Ensure that speartips are suitably sheathed while not in use. * Ensure that you are not under the influence of any drugs or medication that may impair your senses, judgement or physical ability. * Cease diving if for any reason you are not feeling well. * Take liquids to ensure that you do not suffer the effects of dehydration. * Avoid hyperventilating by taking no more than 2 or 3 deep breaths before holding your breath. * Always dive with a friend or tell someone where you will be diving and your estimated time of return. * Obtain a current weather report for the time that you will be diving. * Be on the alert for boat traffic and ensure that you are visible to passing vessels. AUF Mission: Bring Sport, Conservation and Awareness to the Underwater World