Japan: Something's Down There, and It's Huge...

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  • Опубликовано: 29 май 2019
  • Japan maintains one of the world's largest commercial fishing fleets and invests heavily in technology. To pay for it all, they have to catch an awful lot of fish.
    I found a fishing captain off the coast of Japan’s Shikoku Island who let me join them for their three-day fishing run.
    Commercial fishing is the same the world over - long bouts of tedium (filled with endless card games and a half-working, 30-year-old television) - interspersed by periods of frantic activity.
    The boats work in groups, like packs of wolves - using technology to find schools of fish and then encircling them with nets.
    Fishing really is one of the most dangerous jobs in the world.
    Everybody waits for the moment when they find out if they’ve got a good catch.
    The tension is palpable.
    They relieve it by snacking on a few raw fish they’ve caught at the top of the nets.
    At last - something’s down there. It’s HUGE. When the fish bump against the net they drag the entire boat. It takes hours to haul up them up.
    Once the fish are safely stored they dash for shore. Fresh fish brings a premium in Japan and it’s now a race to get their catch to the biggest seafood market in the world - Tsukiji in Tokyo.
    Check out Japan's Tsukiji Fishmarket - From Sea Slugs to $250,000 Tuna: • Japan's Tsukiji Fishma...
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    Category: Travel

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