Bristol Channel Herring
The Rich Tradition of Minehead Herring Fishing
Minehead fishermen Michael Martin and Paul Date have once again been reliving an ancient tradition that used to see the Somerset harbour town exporting more than 4000 barrels of herring a year to the Mediterranean.
The pair were not exactly improving the nation’s balance of payments by earning foreign Euros - in fact they were finding it difficult to sell their ludicrously cheap haul - but they had just landed a large quantity of the delicious fish which for a long time almost disappeared in the Bristol Channel.
“This is a really good year,” said Mr Date, speaking about his small fishing boat after returning to harbour with what looked like an entire shoal of the silver darlings, as the fish used to be known.
“The herring are normally finished by now,” he added. “You can get them right up up until Christmas time - but that’s no good to us because everyone is too interested in eating turkeys.”
This weekend Mr Date and Mr Martin were selling the fish for less than a pound each - an out-and-out bargain because they were full of delicious roe.
The Historical Significance of the Bristol Channel Herring
A century ago local families would buy 100 herrings for six old pence (2.5 pence) to salt down for the winter. But catches gradually declined and during the 1970s the herring all but disappeared, with the blame laid on over-fishing in the Atlantic and North Sea.
But the port was once famous for its herring - a diarist called Collinson, writing in 1791, noted that a few decades before he visited town some 4000 barrels of herring were shipped annually to the Mediterranean.
“But all this is now nearly at an end,” lamented Collinson. “The trade is lost - the herrings have left the coast - and there are at present only five or six vessels belonging to the port.”
Now the herring are back and a few people are travelling to Minehead specially for the delicacy.