Jaime Baquero":15jhhrix said:
So why didn't Ferdinand provide good nets to the fisherfolks in Bali long ago? Why it took until last week when they happened to find the "good stuff" in Hawaii during MO. Ferdinand and Steve have accused MAC of doing trainings "without nets" looks like Ferdinand has spent several years in Bali working with fishers 'without nets"
Ok, second try after losing my reply...
Jaime,
Ferdinand brought a duffle full of hand netting I provided last year to Ruwi.
(He even asked my permission, worried that I wanted it only for the Philippines...) :lol:
Barrier netting is a different issue. Finding the 'mediocre stuff' locally isn't hard. Basically, it is 'good enough' for a while, but breaks down rather quickly. I met a number of fisherman's wives who tie their barrier netting by hand because of this- Monofilament is cheap, even if tying the knots by hand seems a colossal waste of time, IMO. They don't see it that way- They make netting that is superior to the 'mediocre stuff', so a couple of months of free time produces a net that lasts a couple of years.
The source of the 'good stuff' has been known for some time, Jaime.
The problem is buying it retail in US dollars from a shop in Hawaii makes it prohibitively expensive. It is much cheaper to get it direct from the source, but IIRC, the minimum run was USD14,000 from Taiwan. That dramatically lowers the per foot cost, but that hump was too difficult to get over.
Steve pointed out in an earlier post that the price in Hawaii had halved since the last time he had checked- This made the $850 go a lot further, even when buying retail in Hawaii.
Personally, I am torn between two sides- I'd rather the cash have gone to buy a wholesale run because it would have provided a lot more netting, however, I am also very happy that netting is now in the hands of the fishermen who need it. AMDA made the right decision, I think.
It would have taken a very long time to reach $14,000.
Regards.
Mike Kirda