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Good news for residents in Brittany as extra trains confirmed
The services will begin running in 2025
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Drivers can now get proof of driving licence online in France
The new service could be useful in certain situations such as if you are stopped by police
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Weather for the week December 9 to 13: Winter arrives in France
A chill is to spread across the country with temperatures 3C below seasonal norms
Mystery of thousands of fish washed up on beaches in Brittany
Authorities say the phenomenon is natural but a marine life NGO suspects fishing ‘sea waste’
Thousands of fish have been found washed up on beaches in Finistère, Brittany, prompting marine activists and NGO Sea Shepherd to lodge a formal complaint on “suspicion of sea waste”.
However, local authorities have so far said that they suspect the phenomenon to be natural, caused by strong wind or waves.
The bay of Douarnenez was particularly affected as were the beaches of Pentrez, Lestrevet, Saint-Nic, and Plomodiern. Several hundred kilos of sardines and mackerel were found washed up on the sand. Jellyfish were also caught in the mix.
🐟 Plusieurs centaines de kilos de sardines et de chinchards ont été découverts le long des plages de Pentrez et de Lestrevet, à Saint-Nic et Plomodiern, ce mardi. 😲 pic.twitter.com/AO8BhOWjYN
— Ouest-France 29 (@OuestFrance29) January 10, 2023
The gendarmerie and customs divisions have opened an inquiry and the Parc natural marin d’Iroise has also been asked to investigate and pass comment.
Another hypothesis is that the fish have come from a boat accident, where a fishing boat (accidentally or not) dropped its cargo into the ocean. Sea Shepherd believes this is most likely the case, prompting its complaint.
However, maritime authorities have said that early inquiries suggest that the issue is due to a “natural phenomenon linked to the strong winds of the past few days”, especially “given the freshness and quality of the fish, which have almost no damage”.
Specialists say that the phenomenon can occur when shoals of fish are chased by predators near the coast and are swept up by strong waves that eventually dump them onto the sand.
People on the beaches are strongly advised not to pick the fish up but simply to wait until the waves eventually wash them back out to sea.
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