Thursday, 8 October 2015

DEPUTY MAYOR'S MUSEUM PLEA FOR GRIMSBY

GRIMSBY is missing out on thousands of pounds worth of tourism revenue through lacklustre promotion of  its rich heritage.

That was the claim made by North East Lincolnshire's deputy mayor, Coun Christina McGilligan-Fell, at a meeting of the authority tourism. culture and leisure scrutiny panel

"Why haven't we got a museum and visitor centre?" she demanded. "That's a question I've been  asked time and again.

"We are way behind places such as Lincoln - look at the success it has had with its Magna Carta celebrations. It's brought in thousands of visitors to the city."

One bugbear of many  people has been the demise of the Welholme Galleries  building which NELC has now earmarked for disposal.

Many of its fascinating artefacts have been relocated to a purpose-built storage unit on the South Humberside industrial estate where they are currently being kept under lock and key and never seen by the public.

Sue Wells, the chief executive of Lincs Inspire Ltd, which oversees much culture and leisure provision (but not tourism) within the borough, agreed that Grimsby had an impressive past.
She noted that the public had access to  archives and fishing records - and could even have sight of a rare genuine copy of Henry VIII's "autograph".

However, neither she nor anyone on the panel was able to offer any hope that the deputy mayor' museum aspirations might come to fruition, at least in the near to medium future.

Both the council  and Lincs Inspire face extreme financial pressures, so it perhaps  needs  a deep- pocketed philanthropist  to come forward.

But where is that  individual . . . ?

COUNCIL CHIEF'S HIGH HOPES FOR FUTURE OF NORTH EAST LINCOLNSHIRE


 
  
AN upbeat note on the future of North East Lincolnshire has been sounded by the top man at the council, Rob Walsh.
 
Addressing Grimsby, Cleethorpes & District Civic Society's annual meeting, he enthused: "I am proud and honoured to be chief executive - North East Lincolnshire is a great place to live, to work in and to visit.
 
"I came to the area 24 years when I fell in love with the woman who became my wife.
 
"We have three sons. I am happy to stay here as long as I am still wanted."
 
Mr Walsh started his career with the authority in 1996 - on April 1! - as a child care lawyer. The welfare of vulnerable and disadvantaged children has always remained an issue close to his heart.
 
He steadily  rose through the ranks  to become deputy chief executive, succeeding Tony Hunter in the top job some 20 months ago.
 
Reflecting on almost quarter of a century of local government life, he struck a note of humility, commenting: 
"I've seen a lot,  done a lot, learned a lot - and made a lot of  mistakes."
 
During a question-and-answer session lasting almost  an hour, Mr Walsh's key message was the importance of "aspiration and ambition".
 
He insisted: "We have to set out our stall for the next five, 10, 15 years. There will be distractions along the way, but we have to stick to a plan.
 
"Take  the example of Greater Manchester - it is now being talked up  by the Chancellor, George Osborne, as a potential northern powerhouse, but is a journey that has taken the city  20 years."
 
It is councillors, not officers, who make the   policy decisions, but that did not prevent the chief from being lobbed a series of  tough questions by civic society members on such lightning rod  issues as:
 
  • The rubbish-strewn state of the River  Freshney
  • Derelict heritage buildings in both Grimsby and Cleethorpes
  • The controversial Top Town paving scheme
  • Slow progress on finalising a  Local Plan
  • Empty shops in Victoria Street
  • Consultations  with the public on issues such as the  proposed closure of Scartho Baths
  • Relations with private sector partners such as the  education improvement consultancy, Serco
 
Mr Walsh insisted that NELC was improving and becoming much more "focused" in its approach to tackling challenges.
 
He acknowledged that the authority had, in the past, missed opportunities for external funding from national and European sources, but he claimed  it was now achieving more success.
 
He cited, as an example, the award of  a  £1.9-million grant which is likely to see the back office activities  of North East Lincolnshire Council merging with those of neighbouring North Lincolnshire Council by the end of next year.
 
Asked if this would lead to job cuts, he said "fewer staff" would be required, adding that - with funding pressures set to increase - the council had to ensure it remained  "sustainable".
 
He cautioned: "We can't solve every problem.
 
"For one thing, it's not affordable and, for another, sometimes we get things wrong - as  you will tell us!"
 
Mr Walsh said he spent much of his time out of his office - for instance,  speaking to staff and senior figures at external organisation partners, among them  John Fitzgerald, his counterpart at ABP.
 
Historically, the relations between NELC and the port operator have not always been harmonious, but a new leaf has been turned, with the prospect of closer arrangements in the future.
 
"It's important that we put our skin in the game,"said the chief.
 
On the back of NELC's existing contract with private sector partner Cofely, he hoped  there might come significant investment from the latter's parent company, the French giant, GDF-Suez.
 
"We have to demonstrate to them our potential,"he said. "We have to schmooze them, but in the right way."
 
Inevitably, the question of Grimsby Town FC's proposed relocation to a site off Peaks Parkway also came up during the meeting, held at Grimsby Town Hall, but the chief would not be drawn, preferring to leave this particular hot potato to the councillors.
 
"Rest assured, I''ll evade that question here, there and everywhere!"he quipped.
 
What about The  Mariners'  prospects of securing a return to the Football League?
 
Here the chief was happy to strike a more typically forthright and confident note. "I predict promotion for Town."
 
But he did no say when . . .

TRINIDAD NIGHTMARE FOR LINCOLNSHIRE WILDLIFE TRUST CHAIRMAN










THE chairman of Lincolnshire Wildife Trust has  revealed  how a stomach bug almost cost him his life on an exotic  bird photography holiday overseas.
 
At an RSPB group meeting  in Cleethorpes, Geoff Trinder described how he suddenly collapsed and cracked open the back of his head after the bug struck.
 
He was rushed to a Trinidad hospital where doctors and nurses were horrified not just by the extent of the head wound but also by the downward spiral of his blood pressure.
 
But, now fully recovered, neither Geoff nor his wife, Chris, were put off by the mishap. Back in January, they flew out to India for a similar wildlife photography holiday - one of 45 since he retired from his job as an art teacher.
 
An audience of about 50 in the Corpus Christi hall on Grimsby Road  enjoyed a fascinating illustrated talk on some of the wildlife of this remarkable country.
 
Although Geoff acknowledged that it is generally more rewarding and less expensive to seek out birds on your own initiative, they decided to engage guides for the obvious reasons that local experts would know  what species to look out for and where to find them.
 
Among the scores of birds  the couple saw were: Snake eagle, brown hawk owl, Siberian rubythroat, bluethroat,  copper barbet, white-eared bulbul, rufous treepie,  spot-billed duck and various shrikes and plovers.
 
But the highlight was a 40-minute encounter with a family of magnificent tigers which came within feet of the open-top vehicle in which they were passengers.
 
"It  blew me away,"enthused Geoff. "To see one of the big cats so close-up in the wild was magical - probably one of the most memorable experiences of my life."
 
Geoff is not a fan of towns or cities, but he and Chris made a point of visiting the Taj Mahal which he described as "probably the most beautiful building" he had ever seen.
 
On the downside, the couple were horrified to be told that any unaccompanied woman who went out in Mumbai after dark "would be raped".
 
The urban traffic was so congested, noisy and dangerous as to be described by Geoff as "unnerving and ridiculous".
Particularly disturbing was to see some individuals  resting their heads on the road, as if it were a pillow, as vehicles zoomed past just inches away.
 
Although he did not find India as poverty-stricken as when he visited Madagascar on a previous holiday, there were other disturbing sights - including that of pigs roaming urban streets to forage on garbage and women washing their clothes in filthy river water.
 
Because of hygiene concerns, the couple decided against eating any meats, salads or cold vegetables, sticking with cooked vegetables throughout.
 
They also took with them plentiful supplies of anti-bacterial gel  to disinfect their hands, especially after coming into contact with coins or notes - hard currency being notorious for spreading bugs.
 
Geoff said he regarded it as important not to b e a slave to his camera on the holiday.
 
 "It doesn't make sense to spend all your time looking at that little rectangle at the back of it ,"he observed. "Sometimes you have to put it to one side and enjoy the fuller picture."
 
When he was taking pictures, he sometimes rested the long lens on a beanbag on the roof of the vehicle so as to keep the camera stable if he was not using a tripod.
 
The couple have been to Africa no fewer than 12  times, but would they go to India again?
"Probably not," said Geoff. "Our next visit will be to Romania."
 
* Pictures below courtesy of Wikipedia Commons and the following photographers:
:Siberian rubythroat: JJ Harrison
:Rufous treepie: Munish Jauhar
:Coppersmith barbet:Jay Dalal5
  
Siberian rubythroat
Rufous treepie
Coppersmith barbet

Tuesday, 10 February 2015

BIRDS OF THE SNOWY NORTH

CLEETHORPES played host to the “premiere” of an illustrated talk - on “birds of the snow” - by one of Britain’s top birders.

At a RSPB meeting at Corpus Christi community centre, Graham Catley, a consultant ornithologist and wildlife photographer, recounted his winter travels - some of them spiced with more than a hint of danger - in remote parts of Sweden, Norway, Finland and Canada.

He brought back with him not just special memories but superb photographs of such species as nutcracker, pine grosbeak, Arctic redpoll, Siberian tit and black-capped chickadee and his personal favourite, the snowy owl.

Sometimes temperatures were as low as minus 28 degrees, and on one occasion, after waiting in snow too long for one particular rarity, he was disconcerted to find himself totally numb from the knees down.

“I think I overdid it by at least an hour on that occasion,” he said wryly. “But you don’t get good bird photographs unless you’re prepared to suffer!

“It brought it home to me that British winterwear  is not  adequate in those sorts of conditions - you need specialist gear for Arctic-type weather.”

When he found the nearest café, Graham made ordering food and drink the second priority - the first was to pull off boots and socks and de-freeze in front of a radiator.

On one excursion, he and his two companions decided to take a road trip to a top birding habitat some 600 miles north of Helsinki.

At times, they drove as far as 65 miles without seeing another car - just reindeer!


Graham Catley - superb photographs


 “Even with car heater on, our breath froze on the inside of the windscreen,”he recalled.

But it was all worth for his stunning portfolio of photographs which sometimes had his Cleethorpes audience literally gasping with delight.

Modestly, Graham attributed the shots not to his own skill and patience but to the purity of the northern light.

Unfortunately, he missed out on seeing a hazel hen (though he saw a dead specimen on one road), but at various locations, he caught up with such beauties as northern shrike, Siberian jay, pygmy owl, azure tit and the increasingly rare Steller’s eider whose numbers have mysteriously plummeted by 85 per cent over the past 35 years.

Graham said he was endless impressed by how Nordic log cabins remained warm thanks to their triple-glazing and reindeer-skin covered seats and to being erected on stilts.

“Even with a small electric convector heater, a temperature of 20 deg was maintained,”he said. “In this country, we’ve got a lot to learn about insulation from the Scandinavians.”

During question time, a member suggested that some of Graham’s photographs would make excellent Christmas cards - a comment endorsed by RSPB Grimsby branch branch group leader, Terry Whalin, who insisted: “I am sure there would be a market.”

Graham’s photographs  can be viewed on his blog: http://pewit.blogspot.co.uk/

Thursday, 29 January 2015

PAINFUL MEMORY FOR ARGENTINE WORLD CUP WINNER

DON'T mention John Burridge - the much-travelled goalkeeper of yesteryear when World Cup winner Ossie Ardiles is booked  to be one of the guest speakers at a dinner in McMenemy's Bar at Grimsby Town's Blundell Park ground on March 6.

The pair famously fell out in the last minute of a First Division match on Boxing Day, 1987,   between Ardiles' side, Spurs, and Burridge's Southampton at the Dell.


According to Burridge, who was briefly on The Mariners' books in the 1995-96 season, Ardiles tried to tread on his feet at a Spurs corner - but the goalkeeper managed to get his stamp in first.

In his 2011 autobiography, Budgie, he writes: " I gave him the old two studs combination on the metatarsal and he went down in absolute agony."





Ardiles (and other opponents) were doubtless unaware that Burridge had a habit of filing  down the back studs on his boots so they were sharp as bullets.

He says: "When people came up to me at a corner and tried to bully and intimidate me, I'd seize the moment.

"I'd bring my left or right boot down on the striker's metatarsal - BANG!

"It sounds sounds cruel and dirty but it was kick or be kicked."

Did the officials not  inspect  the players studs before the match?  Apparently, it tended only to be a cursory check in which they ran their fingers over the front studs.

Burridge claims that, following the match, which Saints won 2-1, Ardiles shouted at him:

"You animal!" then tried to push him  down the 10 steps that led to the dressing rooms  - to which he  responded by "smacking" him

Alas for Burridge, the incident came back  to haunt him later when he was first-team choice for  Newcastle United.

Out of the blue, Ossie Ardiles was appointed Toon manager - and Burridge was soon shown the door. The following season, he was plying his trade with Hibernian in the Scottish Premier League.

Budgie - The Autobiography of Goalkeeping Legend John Burridge 
is published at £16.99
by John Blake.


It also available, on loan at North East Lincolnshire  libraries.

Tuesday, 20 January 2015

RARE MARINERS PROGRAMME GOES UNDER THE HAMMER


A RARE  programme featuring a match between Grimsby Town and Manchester United has sold for £120 at auction.

The season in which the match was played began at the tailend of war when the country was still getting back on its feet. For that reason  it was a Football League (North) Championship match rather than a First Division Match.

The sale was conducted online by Graham Budd Auctions which specialises in sports memorabilia.

No details have been released on either the vendor or the purchaser. 

The auction house is staging its next sale on May 18/19.

For more information about valuations or consigning items , it can be contacted at 020 8366 2525 (email:  gb@grahambuddauctions.co.uk)

The firm is also holding valuation   roadshows at Sunderland (March 3), Blackpool (March 4), Lichfield (March 5) and Eastbourne (March 6).

Monday, 19 January 2015

IAN RUSH: BLUNDELL PARK MEMORIES


The legendary striker (photo: AceKindred, Wikipedia Commons)



LEGENDARY Liverpool and Juventus goalscorer Ian Rush has a hatful of memories about his time at the top - but he also recalls playing against The Mariners in his early days as a Chester player.

It was in the 1978-79 season, and, though not a regular first-teamer,  he came on as a substitute for the last 20 minutes in a Division Three match against Grimsby Town.


In his autobiography,  he describes the pitch at Blundell Park as "a  lovely surface to play on".


He continues: "Grimsby were managed by George Kerr and, though mid-table, I sensed they would do well.


"Their players were  snapping at our lads all the time, never giving us time on the ball.


"Every time I received it, one of their men would be breathing down my neck, putting a foot in, stopping me playing.


"When you have an entire team constantly doing that, it tends to prevent the skilful players in the opposition doing their stuff.


 "The more it goes on in a game, the more those skilful players get fed up.


"In an attempt to find some space they wander, and the next thing you know the whole shape and form of your side has gone to pot."


Despite this, it was Chester who had the last laugh - winning 2-0 to complete a double over The Mariners.


Rush - The Autobiography (Ebury Press, £6.99) is available from bookshops, online retaailers  and also, on loan, from Cleethorpes Library





Friday, 16 January 2015

GARY SOBERS, CHRISTIE'S AND THE FAMOUS "SIX SIXES" OVER

Grahame Lloyd - his painstaking and courageous  investigations uncovered the truth and embarrassed a leading international auction house
 INVESTIGATIVE  sports journalist Grahame Lloyd  fascinated an audience at Cleethorpes Cricket Club on Thursday with a talk about his intriguing  book - Howzat? The Six Sixes Ball Mystery.

His starting point  was the match in which Gary Sobers hit six sixes in a single over in a  county match at Swansea between the side he was captaining, Nottinghamshire, and Glamorgan on August 31, 1968.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M-HN9dFZ2yA 

It was the first time the feat had been achieved in first-class cricket, and the ball believed to have been bowled by hapless spinner Malcolm Nash  was famously sold for £26,400 some 38 years later at an auction in London.

But after 18 months' probing, Lloyd (61) conclusively proved that the ball that went under the hammer at Christie's was not the one bowled on that momentous afternoon in South Wales.

The buyer, an enthusiast in India, had effectively bought an artefact that was worthless.

In his talk, Lloyds attributed what happened to  misunderstandings, naivety and inadequate checking of the ball's provenance rather than deliberate deception, but he believes those involved should have acknowledged their mistakes.

In particular, he believes the auction house,  which no longer holds sales of sports memorabila, should own up to "selling a wrong 'un".

During  his exhaustive research, Lloyd, who lives in Lincoln, tracked down and interviewed Sobers himself. The famous cricketer did not himself benefit financially from what happened, but he signed the  certificate of authenticity which persuaded Christie's to accept the ball.

"The investigation has been an obsession,"said the author who has published the 232-page book at his own expense. "It took over 18 months my life, but I was determined to  establish the truth. 

"Doing the research seemed like a cross between Watergate and the TV detective series, Colombo!"

What happened to the actual ball bowled by Nash? No one knows. Perhaps, no one ever will know.

The author was accompanied at Cleethorpes by his friend, John Parkin (70), the former Nottinghamshire batsman who was the other end of the wicket from Sobers during the "six sixes" over.

By contributing amusing anecdotes from his own career, the ex-cricketer, who lives in Kimberley, Notts, helped make for a thoroughly enjoyable first evening of the year for Lincolnshire Cricket Lovers' Society.

For more information about the book(which retails at £14.99), see Amazon or contact  the author direct at grahameatcelluloid@btinternet.com

Sir Garfield Sobers in 2012. (Photo: By the Madras / Wikipedia Commons)

John Parkin - in his heyday, a sparkling stroke-player, especially off the front foot. He accompanied Lloyd at the Cleethorpes talk


Tuesday, 13 January 2015

JOHN FENTY AND THE "SOUTH LONDON MAFIA"

 
John Fenty (right) - seen with Cleethopes MP Martin Vickers (left) and the deputy leader of North East Lincolnshire Council, Mick Burnett

 ALTHOUGH he is a highly successful businessman and a member of North East Lincolnshire, John Fenty's profile is probably highest as shareholder-in-chief/ main board member  of Grimsby Town FC.

It is probably fair to say that his 13 years or so at the helm have been marked by more disappointment than joy, notably when the unthinkable happened and The Mariners tumbled out of the Football League, never to have returned - at least as yet.

But the darkest hour is just before dawn, and ultimately, possibly this season, the good times will return.

Footballing highlights for John - who endeavours to attend all matches, home and away - have included  thrilling cup wins against Liverpool and Spurs and visits both  to Wembley and Cardiff's Millenium Stadium.

At one time, when Town were still in the Football League, he was linked with what, for inexplicable reasons came affectionately to be dubbed by the media as the "South London Mafia "  - its other members being Karren Brady (then Birmingham chairman), Theo Paphitis (then Millwall chairman), Paul Scalley (Gillingham)  and the flamboyant Simon Jordan (then Crystal Palace chairman), the last of whom he decribes as "crackers but a great bloke and a lot of fun".

When the striker Steve Kabba surprisingly came on loan from Palace to Blundell Park in 2002, it was apparently because Jordan wanted to nettle the club's manager, Trevor Francis, with whom he had lost confidence.

Scoring six goals in 14 matches, Kabba was much more of a success in Grimsby than in his native South London, and he could have become part of a player-plus cash transfer arrangement in exchange for Town goalkeeper Danny Coyne, but the latter decided against the move, so the deal fell through.

One of the low points of John's spell in the hot seat was the  much publicised bust-up which resulted in the dismissal of manager Mike Newell following a match with Rochdale.

There was massive embarrassment to both parties with the  publication in the Grimsby Telegraph of  High Court documents which suggested that, following verbal fireworks,  the pair may even have come close to blows in the car park.

Newell sought £53,000, plus costs, for wrongful dismissal, but, in the end, he had to settle for just £5,000 - reflecting a technical breach of Employment law  by the club. His application for costs was rejected.  

Looking back, John reckons the post-Rochdale row came about because both men were simultaneously  so passionate that the club should do well and so disappointed that the results on the pitch remained steadfastly poor.

"I haven't seen Mike since he left,"says John. "We were good friends, and I certainly harbour no grudge.

"I don' think we could be faulted for appointing him - as a  manager, he had achieved success at both his previous clubs Hartlepool and Luton."

Was John himself any great shakes as  footballer? Up until about 10 years ago when he resumed playing at local league level, he had never pulled in a pair of boots since he was 12.

Since being elected to North East Lincolnshire Council as a Conservative representative for the Humberston and New Waltham ward, John has also been actively engaged across a broad spectrum of community life.

He had always been interested in politics and needed little encouragement when Keith Brookes, NELC's then  Conservative Group leader, encouraged him to throw his hat into the ring.

Much of his council work he has founded rewarding, though he admits to frequent frustrations at how slowly the wheels of local government  turn - for instance, when  it comes to economic renewal and regeneration.

He believes there needs to be much more drive, determination, imagination and tenacity - and much less procrastination - if  Grimsby is again to enjoy the prosperity of its fishing heyday.

Assuming he retains his appetite for politics, does he aspire to higher things - perhaps even a seat in parliament?

"It's not something I've thought of,"comes back the father-of-six’s coy response. "Since his election, Martin Vickers has been doing a good job for Cleethorpes."

But what if vacancy came up for a candidate in another seat? "Never say never," he replies.


THE FENTY FACTFILE 



Favourite food: Indian.

Favourite book: I have only read two in my life - one on tropical fish, the other on DIY. The bulk of my reading matter today consists of council agendas.


Favourite film: Spartacus.


Favourite pop singer: Debbie Harry, vocalist with the pop group, Blondie.

Family pets: Dogs, chinchillas, ornamental ducks, tortoises, koi carp and a blue-and-gold macaw called Molly. 

Person you would most like to meet over dinner: Margaret Thatcher in her prime.

NOTE: This feature is an adaptation of one that  originally appeared in the Cleethorpes Chronicle in Agust 2010



Monday, 5 January 2015

JOHN FENTY: WHERE THERE’S A WILL, THERE’S ALWAYS A WAY


Cllr Fenty
John Fenty - strength of purpose


FEW individuals in Grimsby hold as high a profile as John Fenty. Not only is he a successful, self-made businessman but he is also a forthright member of North East Lincolnshire Council - one who is never afraid of courting controversy on subjects about which he feels strongly. Most notably, the 52-year-old is also the major shareholder of Grimsby Town FC and at the forefront of initiatives to build a new stadium for the club in readiness for the day, hopefully not too far off, when The Mariners return to the Football League. The feature below is the first part of an updated version of one that originally appeared  in the Cleethorpes Chronicle in August 2010.
 
WHEN he was a schoolboy first at St Peter's Primary, then at Matthew Humberstone, the future  prospects did not look particularly bright for John Fenty.

He was affected by dyslexia which affected his academic performance and undermined his confidence.

"My biggest dread was having to stand in front of class to read out a poem or piece of prose,"he recalls. "It was a nightmare.

"Nowadays, teachers are alert for signs of dyslexia and it is usually soon detected, but no so when I was at school. 

"My response to classroom difficulties was to play truant, but at least I can say put my time to positive use. I liked cars and spent as much time as I could   spraying old bangers or tinkering under their bonnets.”

John was the middle one of five brothers -  the others being Mark, Paul, Steve and Pete, the last of whom was an Army officer who, very sadly, died some years ago.

During much of his boyhood, John saw relatively little of his father, also called John, whose job as a fisherman kept him at sea, but plenty of his mother, Marjorie, whom he describes as a "phenomenal inspiration" and “a perpetual ray of sunshine”.

"She was a real whirlwind,"he says. "As well as bringing up family, she was always helping and encouraging other people - even to the extent of wallpapering their homes.

"She accepted that I was not academically gifted but saw that I had an aptitude at mechanics and building things. She gave me loads of encouragement.

"It paid off because I developed all sorts of building skills and was able to carry out house and garage extensions to our own home."

As well as leaving school with no qualifications, John had other disadvantages - for instance, he is colour-blind and has a liver disorder which, though under control, can cause tiredness. It is thought the latter may have been caused by a bacterial infection during a time spent in Africa.

However, after he left school, his enthusiasm for all things mechanical earned him an apprenticeship at Hartfords Motors which was followed by eight months stint at John T Howard Transport.

"I enjoyed both jobs, but especially the latter because I was repairing components instead of just fitting them," he recalls

John was also an admirer of his boss, Mr Howard, but he decided to hand in his notice when an opportunity arose to become self-employed.

He bought a refrigerated van with which he transported pallets of frozen products, mostly fish, to outlets all over the UK on behalf of Grimsby merchants such as Blue Crest and others.

Business flourished to the extent that he was able to acquire premises on the fish docks from where he set up a small fleet of vehicles, some of which he made available for hire to his increasing roster of food firm clients.

When one of these, Horizon Foods, went belly-up, John saw a new opportunity and, with his accumulated know-how of the business, moved into fish processing and trading on his own account.

Still only in his  20s, this was the first move on a roller coaster ride which lead to the emergence and prodigious success of a company called Five Star Fish which, at its peak, not only provided employment for the best part of 300 staff but also earned a national reputation for excellence.

As it continued to prosper, John received more and more overtures from larger competitors, finally accepting one from a Stock Exchange-listed company, the Really Good Food Group.

"It was my baby, and it was a wrench to let it go," he recalls "But the offer was too good to refuse."

As part of the deal, he agreed to stay on as chairman for two years but left when the business was sold on to another enterprise, British Seafood.

When in 2008, the new owners went into administration, it was bought out by Ranjit Boparan, owner of the 36-strong Harry Ramsdens fish and chip shop restaurant chain and the Scunthorpe-based Buxted chicken-processing plant.

However, before the deal went through, John seriously considered making a bid himself.

If successful, it would have put him back at the heart of an incredibly vibrant and dynamic industry - one pretty well unique to this corner of the UK and one where he retains a huge number of friends.

"It was hard work including long days but they were great times,"he enthuses. "It was a big adventure – one which constantly demonstrated to me the  resilient, ingenious, energetic and logical nature of the Grimsby-area workforce.”

John pays tribute to the cast of colourful and often larger than life characters - competitors as well as associates - with whom he came into contact.

He reserves particular plaudits for the acumen - and sometimes madcap humour - of colleague Roy Matthews for his instrumental role in multiplying Five Star’s turnover many times over into a £10- million-a-year business.

Looking back, John says that, at the start of the “adventure”, he had no clear personal blueprint about what he might be seeking to achieve. Nor, he suspects do many other entrepreneurs.

He lists the building block for his own success as a readiness to grasp opportunities, a capacity to adapt to changing circumstances and a commitment to technological innovation.

To these, he adds the strength of mind to resist the temptations of living a life of indulgence in favour of ploughing profits back into the business.

He and Roy did not always agree - for instance, on the decision to relocate from the fish docks to purpose-built new premises – but, by this stage, John had come to trust his own judgement.

“Lets get on the train,” was one of his favourite sayings.

Now, a couple of decades later could it all be done again by some like minded individual willing to roll up his or her sleeves, take a risk and have a go?

“Where’s there’s a will, there’s always a way,” he replies. “But it would take longer. Business today faces far more red tape - employment law, health and safety and the like.”

* Part Two to follow later this month.