Fishermen
must follow weather forecast for bumper harvest -
Meteorology
Kormantse, Feb. 6, GNA – The Mtantseman Municipal
Officer of the Meteorological Agency, Mr. Patrick Awuku
Owusu, has advised fishermen to follow the weather forecast to
anticipate where and when they would reap bumper
harvests.
He explained that the fish is a cold blooded creature,
which did not need too much warmth to survive and,
therefore, moved to the high seas when the coastal
waters turned too warm.
It, however, moves to the coast when the high seas
become icy and they cannot contain the cold.
The Meteorological Officer was addressing a disaster
awareness workshop, organized by the World Vision Ghana
WVG at Kormantse near Saltpond, on Wednesday.
“When fishermen are abreast of the movement of fish it
will help them in their fishing expedition and reduce
the cost of fuel spent on hunting,” he said, and urged
them to take weather forecasts seriously when planning
their activities.
The workshop, attended by unit committees and assembly
members, chiefs, heads of departments, officials of the
NADMO and security officers, was to assist assemblies in
hazard mapping and preparing disaster response plan.
Mr. Ebenezer Okoampa, associate director of the
Humanitarian and Emergency Affairs Unit of the World
Vision Ghana, expressed regret that people often forget
about the existence of natural disasters.
He quoted Dr. Torahiko Terada, a Japanese Scientist, who
said, “Natural and man-made disasters will hit us at the
time people have forgotten about it”, to buttress his
point.
He said people would not build on waterways, fell trees
indiscriminately or burn bushes if they remembered that
their actions could cause disasters.
Mr. Joseph Tsetse-Arthur, a fisherman, expressed regret
that people who had knowledge about the fishing industry
and the weather were not educating fishermen to improve
their lots.
Mr. Tsetse-Arthur said if cost a great deal to go on
fishing these days and added that they needed those
vital information to save them from wasting money on
fuel for expedition.
GNA