Second Shetland Truck System Report Part 180
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7190. How many tons of kelp do you sell?-I only took a note of it for last year, when there were twelve tons.
7191. At what rate was it sold?-I did not get the account sales, but I understood the price paid in Shetland, free on board, was 5, 10s. per ton.
7192. That is 5s. 6d. per cwt. Will it take 1s. per cwt. to put it on board s.h.i.+p?-No.
7193. Where is it s.h.i.+pped?-The kelp I take is s.h.i.+pped in one of Hay & Co.'s vessels, carried to Simbister, landed there, and re-s.h.i.+pped again.
7194. By free on board, do you mean free on board at Simbister?-Yes.
7195. You think that s.h.i.+pment and re-s.h.i.+pment would not cost 1s.
per cwt.?-I don't think it would.
7196. Therefore there would be some margin of profit upon the kelp bought at 4s. 6d. and sold at 5s. 6d.?-If you buy the kelp at 4s. 6d. and pay 1s. of royalty, then it is actually costing you 5s. 6d., and there is no margin left for the expense of receiving and s.h.i.+pping and trans.h.i.+pping again.
7197. But I understood you to say that there was no royalty actually paid by Hay & Co.?-Neither there is; but they have the same right to receive that royalty, or to calculate upon that royalty as if it were paid, they being in the position of proprietors of the property.
7198. You have said that the amount of cash paid to the fishermen at settlement was about 553, and that the average amount due by each man for goods to his family would be 3, 8s. 6d.: would there be no cash advances to them during the season?-Yes.
7199. These would be included in that sum?-Yes.
7200. Would the amount of these advances be material?-I am not prepared to say how much they would be. It would depend upon the necessities of the man. I think in one case they amounted to 12, 9s. 6d.
7201. Was that sum paid in cash before settlement?-Yes.
7202. That would be nearly the amount of his total earnings?-It would be nearly the amount of the average earnings; but that man had very high earnings.
7203. I believe you have made some calculation as to the total amount of summer fish bought: what is it?-During the ten years I have been manager at North Roe, there have been summer fish bought to the value of about 7000; and during the same time the cash paid at settlement has been about 4420. That includes the rents of tenants who have fished; but it does not include the cash advanced to them through the year, which in some years has been pretty considerable. The following is a statement for the last four years, of the value of the fis.h.i.+ngs, and the amount paid in cash at settlement: Cash Paid at Value of Fis.h.i.+ngs. Settlement.
1868About 400290 1869 704 335 18701003 540 18711220 723
[Page 173]
7204. Is there any winter fis.h.i.+ng at North Roe?-There is what we call home fis.h.i.+ng for nine months of the year in small boats.
7205. But the proper home fis.h.i.+ng terminates about August or September?-The haaf fis.h.i.+ng terminates about 12th August.
After that the men immediately resume fis.h.i.+ng in their small boats, and continue it until the middle of May next year.
7206. Are these the small boats you mentioned before as belonging to the men themselves?-Yes.
7207. I think you said that of these there were only two at North Roe?-That was in the summer time; but almost every man on the property has a share of a small boat for the winter fis.h.i.+ng.
7208. Are these boats generally purchased from Hay & Co.?-I think since I came there they have generally been purchased from them, but not altogether.
7209. Are they paid for by instalments?-Our bargain for them is, that they are to be paid in three years, and during these three years they stand in separate account in my books.
7210. Is there a separate boat book?-They are entered in the general ledger, but kept in a separate account; and at the expiry of the three years, if it is not paid off, it ought properly to be put to the man's private account, and to become part of his shop account.
That is the rule, although, in some cases, I have not carried it out to the extent of carrying it to the man's private account at the close of three years.
7211. Do you generally find that that boat account is paid off within the three years?-No; it is frequently continued longer.
7212. In what way are the fish disposed of that are taken in that small-boat fis.h.i.+ng in winter?-They are sold when the men come ash.o.r.e. I tell the men what price will be paid; and if they agree to take that price, receive the fish and pay for them every time they are delivered.
7213. Is that paid to them in cash?-They are at liberty to take cash, or to buy goods, or do anything they like; but we never leave these transactions unsettled.
7214. In point of fact, is it generally cash that pa.s.ses, or do the men take what goods they want at the shop?-In many cases, I think in most cases, if the fis.h.i.+ng is small, perhaps they want as much, or pretty near the value, when they come ash.o.r.e, out of the shop in goods for their houses; but if they have been having a few days' successful fis.h.i.+ng, then they take the cash when they don't require the goods. They are not asked to take the goods; and they are not required to do it in any way.
7215. Are they bound to sell these fish to you in the same way as their summer fish?-I think that is understood; but there have been many exceptions that I have known.
7216. Are there more exceptions in the case of this small-boat fis.h.i.+ng than of the summer fis.h.i.+ng?-I think so.
7217. Have you any note or book here, showing the amount of the transactions with regard to this small-boat fis.h.i.+ng?-No. I have offered the men, when they came ash.o.r.e, to pay them for their haul, and then they could go where they liked with the money; but they said, 'What is the use of doing that?-We want so-and-so from the shop, and we would just have to give the money back again.'
7218. How is it ascertained at the shop what amount the men have to get in goods for their fish? Do you take a note of it at the time?-Yes; and I enter it in the fish book.
7219. And from that note you know how much the man has to receive in goods?-Yes; or how much he has to receive in cash.
7220. But he takes the goods if he chooses to go to the shop at the time?-Yes.
7221. What amount of transactions of that kind may there be in the course of a year?-Last year I think it was only about 56.
7222. Was that the whole value of the fish so purchased?-Yes; but I think in some years since I came there it has been over 100.
7223. It is only the North Roe men you are speaking of now?- Yes.
7224. The Yell men don't deliver their fish to you in that way?- No; not generally.
7225. Then that sum would be paid to about 33 men?-I think there are more than that who engage in the winter fis.h.i.+ng. Some of the men who go to the Faroe fis.h.i.+ng, and some also who go south, employ their time in winter in that way.
7226. That would make it a very small sum that is paid to the men for their winter fis.h.i.+ng?-Yes; it is very small.
7227. So that it rather seems the winter fis.h.i.+ng is hardly worth taking into account in your general transactions?-It is not.
7228. Do Messrs. Hay & Co. purchase cattle to any extent for the purpose of selling them?-They have an island, the island of Uyea, where they graze for their own purposes.
7229. Is that in Unst?-No; it is in this parish. I buy the cattle for that island yearly.
7230. Is it simply for grazing purposes there that you buy the cattle?-For no other purpose.
7231. Are they bought at public sales?-Generally they are.
7232. Do these cattle enter the accounts of the fishermen?-Yes, mostly. They pa.s.s through their accounts; but I could show cases where they received the cash again immediately.
7233. Are they not settled for at the annual settlement?-Yes; or they get cash for them at any time they want.
7234. Are these cattle often taken from men who are in arrear with their accounts?-No; they are never taken from the people who are in arrears. If a man was in arrears, he might be asked to bring his cow to the public sale if he was to dispose of her; and then we might buy her or not.
7235. There is said to be a system in Shetland of marking the horns of cattle when the merchant or landlord has a debt against a fisherman tenant: can you explain what the practice is with regard to that?-I believe such a practice does exist; but in my own experience I have never set any value upon it at all, and never practised it at North Roe.
7236. What do you understand the practice to be?-I understand that if any one has a claim against a tenant, either proprietor or merchant or any other party, they consider that if their mark or initials or brand is put upon the horns of the animal, it then becomes their property, even in cases where the animal has not been removed from the possession of the original owner. That is how I understand it has been done in my neighbourhood.
Second Shetland Truck System Report Part 180
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