Fishing
in sentence
600 examples of Fishing in a sentence
A photo-journalist on vacation arrives at a small town in Mid America to relax and do a little
fishing.
He feels he can escape into a picture at a gallery in which men are
fishing
at a serene lake.
Half an hour in my eyes began to wander towards our bookshelves and books that hitherto had little appeal suddenly looked tempting (fly
fishing
for beginners, advanced motor mechanics and so on).
A law passed to limit
fishing
and protect fish resources in the area makes it impossible for this community to continue living from their traditional salmon and shellfish fisheries anymore if they do not resort to poaching .
So although it is true that the Swinomish violate the law on fishing, this law does not take into account the fact that they have always made a living out of
fishing
and cannot survive without.
In 1849, in the Archipelago of Saint-Pierre et Miquelon, the drunken Ariel Neel Auguste (Emir Kusturica) and his partner Louis Ollivier (Reynald Bouchard) kill for a futile motive (to see if he is fat or just big) the
fishing
boat captain Coupard (Michel Daigle).
To quote Samantha Carter herself, "What's wrong with going out on fishing,".
When I was a teenager I used to watch a lot of Cirio Santiago's war/action flicks like "Equalizer 2000","Nam Angels" or "Last Stand at Lang Mei".His cheaply made but highly energetic movies were popular during VHS revolution in Poland."Demon of Paradise" tells the story of Hawaiian
fishing
community terrorized by a man sized amphibious monster.I consider myself very tolerant when it comes to rating and reviewing Z-grade trash,unfortunately "Demon of Paradise" is simply dull.There is no gore and the bloodless killings are mostly off-screen.Admittedly Hawaiian landscapes are beautiful and the music is fine,but "Demon of Paradise" is a misfire.4
Dogs get butchered, people disappear, a boat blows up - and yet nothing seems to wake up this small (and probably quite jaded)
fishing
community.
The students, seeking revenge, asked the Cambodian voodooist Pawn to cast a black magic against the couch, who mysteriously died after
fishing.
It's up to the local forest ranger Tom Cole (played by editor, producer, writer and director Charles McCrann as Charles Austin) his wife Polly (Beverly Shapiro) and his half brother Jay (Philip Garfinkel) who are on weekend
fishing
trip, to try and save the day and put an end to the hippie zombies reign of bloodthirsty terror!
These guys filmed themselves sinking
fishing
vessels in international waters, armed with the argument that out there no one has authority over them, claiming themselves to be heroes for enforcing local laws.
MBYGALD shows that even bands who've got personalities as colourful and diverse as a bunch of accountants and librarians going on a
fishing
trip can be offered to make a movie in which this absolutely amazing collective charisma is supposed to set the screen on fire.
And what's even worse: Roddy Mcdowall's character gets introduced during the first scenes (apparantly he's a wealthy tourist on a
fishing
holiday), and after that, he never re-appears in the movie!
While he occasionally leaves their floating home to fetch
fishing
tourists she never does.
She goes
fishing
and frolicking as if nothing tragic has happened in her life swimming in the lake she says smiling that she's watching God.
"The Widow of St. Pierre" is a beautful and haunting film that tells the story of a man committed to death on a small French
fishing
island that does not have a guillotine and how he learns to repent his crime and becomes a useful member of the community.
One is a lawyer who falls hopelessly in love with a young girl whose father made his living
fishing
dead bodies out of the Thames River, removing anything of value on them, and turning them in to the police.
Its a happy, peaceful life sustained by
fishing
and trapping.
The US, Russia, Canada, Norway, and Denmark, for example, have agreed to prohibit commercial
fishing
in the international waters of the Arctic Ocean until research can be carried out on how fish stocks are being affected by rapidly melting ice and warming seas.
Unfortunately, however, the industry is plagued by illegal, unreported, and unregulated fishing, which undermines conservation efforts and handicaps honest fishers and businesses that follow the rules.
Rogue
fishing
accounts for up to one-fifth of all ocean fish caught globally.
In late 2011, the EU and the US agreed to collaborate to combat illicit
fishing.
They all agreed to encourage other countries to ratify and implement the Port State Measures Agreement (PSMA), which will make it harder for dishonest
fishing
operations to operate.
Illicit
fishing
operations rely on a range of tactics and loopholes in international law to get their products to market.
Adopted in 2009 by the UN Food and Agriculture Organization, the PSMA requires parties to implement stricter controls on foreign-flagged
fishing
vessels.
Encouragingly, rogue
fishing
is no longer viewed as an orphan policy issue in some countries.
European regulators have already introduced sophisticated monitoring and surveillance programs, blocked market access to countries with a record of illegal fishing, penalized European rogue operators, and helped support “yellow or red carded” countries reform their fisheries laws.
Such efforts – for example, the electronic documentation scheme for the Atlantic bluefin tuna catch– represent one of the most effective tools to eliminate illicit
fishing.
Eliminating rogue
fishing
will help replenish marine life and secure food and livelihoods for billions of people.
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