Pêcheurs à la ligne à New Brighton, Wallasey.Mars 2016.Météo Royaume-Uni.Compétition de pêche en mer de la Fête des mères.Bateaux et remorques pêchant le Mersey avec Rod & Line.La pêche à New Brighton est très populaire.La prise principale est Whiting et Dabs, un peu de cabillaud show, mais pas dans les nombres trouvés à d'autres marques plus haut le fleuve Mersey.New Brighton est un lieu de pêche idéal, avec son emplacement de choix sur la côte, tout comme la rivière Mersey rencontre la mer d'Irlande.
3600 x 2400 px | 30,5 x 20,3 cm | 12 x 8 inches | 300dpi
Date de la prise de vue:
6 mars 2016
Lieu:
New Brighton, Wallasey. UK
Informations supplémentaires:
Cette image peut avoir des imperfections car il s’agit d’une image historique ou de reportage.
The Mersey Basin Campaign began in 1985 as a 25-year, government-backed movement to clean up the entire Mersey river system. Its sister organisation, the Healthy Waterways Trust, continues following the completion of the Mersey Basin Campaign in 2010. The River Mersey travels nearly 70 miles from its start, at the confluence of the Rivers Tame and Goyt in Stockport, to where it meets the Irish Sea at New Brighton. On its journey west, through south Manchester and Warrington towards Liverpool’s famous Pier Head, it passes through 29 local authority areas. Almost five million people live within its catchment. A successful clean up required the engagement and participation of myriad different organisations, authorities and communities. What was needed was an organisation that could bring everyone together. The Mersey Basin Campaign broke new ground in British administrative practice with its uniquely collaborative programme. It is internationally recognised as having pioneered effective partnership working – in 1999 it became the inaugural winner of the International Thiess Riverprize for best river system clean up. In 1983 The river was described as an affront to the standards a civilised society should demand of its environment. Untreated sewage, pollutants, noxious discharges all contribute to water conditions and environmental standards that are perhaps the single most deplorable feature of this critical part of England.” Then it was polluted and home to a myriad of shopping trolleys. Since then more than a billion pounds has been spent cleaning it up. The river is now cleaner than it has been in over one hundred years.