Chapter 148 Discovery of Tuna Cages



All that is known is that he lived to be over eighty years old and never pitied those who came to his door begging for food, regardless of whether they were men, women, young or old, or how pitiful they appeared.

The family never got the details of what terrible things happened to Grandpa during his escape, not even when he died.

Ordinary Chinese people like Grandpa Chen Hong, who were robbed, were probably not even a drop in the ocean among the hundreds of millions of Chinese who suffered during the Japanese invasion of China!

However, during the war of aggression against China, the Japanese devils looted too much gold, silver and antique treasures from our country.

This turned China from the richest country in the world into the poorest.

But after the defeat, those bastards didn't give China a single penny in reparations, let alone the gold and silver they looted.

Based on this calculation, it's possible that over 90% of the parts on these two Japanese fishing boats were purchased with money stolen from China.

Chen Hong looked at the two advanced Japanese fishing boats with eager eyes. "How wonderful it would be if every Chinese fisherman had a fishing boat like this!"

Back then, everyone could go fishing in the open sea. With such advanced fishing boats, fishing efficiency improved, and fishermen's income also increased.

At this moment, she felt immense resentment at being born at the wrong time, in the era of the Japanese invasion of China, which she could not relive.

Having a spatial ability is definitely a powerful tool for murder and robbery. It would surely allow me to kill dozens or even hundreds of Japanese devils and use the spatial ability to leave behind a batch of stolen wealth.

This could reduce the number of powerful companies in Japan, even if it only changes the situation in a single prefecture!

As a passionate Chinese person, I would have no regrets even if I died!

Chen Hong had heard that Japanese fishing boats were very arrogant. They were mostly controlled by fishing companies and would openly carry weapons on board, daring to fight and rob fishing boats from any country.

These Japanese fishermen are particularly thuggish; their nature of bullying the weak and fearing the strong is ingrained in their very being.

If they see a Chinese fishing boat smaller than themselves, they will bully and attack it; but if they see a fishing boat larger than themselves, they will quickly pretend to be cowardly.

Perhaps due to the inherent animosity between China and Japan, Chen Hong disliked the two Japanese fishing boats.

Conversely, the two Japanese fishing boats also found Chen Hong's small fishing boat an eyesore.

A Japanese fishing boat deliberately drove away Chen Hong's fishing boat, so Chen Hong had no choice but to angrily steer the boat further away.

I couldn't fight these rogue Japanese fishing boats alone, so I had to make my escape first.

Chen Hong steered the boat a little further away, stopped it, and took out her binoculars to observe carefully. Since they were natural enemies, she felt it was important to learn more about the specific situation of the Japanese.

After all, the old saying "Know yourself and know your enemy, and you will never be defeated" still holds true.

These Japanese fishing boats really don't discriminate between fish or animals; they even catch sharks following the school of fish, using trawl nets to catch all the fish, big and small, in one fell swoop.

Using advanced trawlers, the fish were hauled directly onto the fishing boat, a sight that filled Chen Hong with indignation. She felt heartbroken that the Japanese had caught several tons of fish in that single haul.

Chen Hong saw through her binoculars that most of what was being unloaded from the deck was herring, and there wasn't much expensive seafood, which made her secretly relieved.

If they were to catch a net full of bluefin tuna, she might be so angry she'd vomit blood. So, watching the Japanese fishing boats' bountiful catch, Chen Hong's stomach swelled with anger.

It seemed there weren't many expensive fish around. Chen Hong started her fishing boat and continued eastward. This time, she wouldn't care about the fuel cost; she was determined to stay until she reached the vicinity of the Hokkaido fishing grounds before making her move.

Chen Hong relaxed her mindset and adopted a touristy attitude, sailing along the boundary between the high seas and Japan's neighboring seas, secretly observing the distribution of Japan's fishery resources.

Along the way, Chen Hong made a significant discovery.

It must be admitted that the Japanese are a nation with strategic vision; despite possessing such a large area of ​​territorial waters, they have not become complacent and closed off.

Near the edge of the territorial waters close to the high seas, there are many large-scale Japanese aquaculture bases. Chen Hong even discovered more than a dozen large aquaculture cages for bluefin tuna.

Chen Hong watched from afar as the Japanese were feeding grass carp into the net cages, which were about 30 meters in diameter.

The tuna in each net cage were a dense, dark mass, numbering at least several hundred, constantly swimming around the inside of the large, circular net, vying for food.

The Japanese are at the forefront of tuna farming research worldwide, a testament to their geographical advantage.

The convergence of the warm Pacific Current and the cold Kuril Current causes tuna fry to migrate to the coastal areas on both sides of the Japanese archipelago every year.

This gives them a unique advantage in catching tuna fry of different sizes.

For our country to farm and breed tuna, the first major problem is catching seedlings.

Tuna are fish that can never stop swimming; they can reach speeds of up to 160 kilometers per hour.

Even while sleeping, they can swim at speeds of up to 60 kilometers per hour. Bringing tuna fry back to China alive from the Pacific coast is a huge challenge.

With today's advanced technology, this problem is still difficult to solve.

Chen Hong recalls that it wasn't until 2022 that China successfully achieved tuna farming in the South China Sea.

In Japan, universities began researching the breeding and cultivation of tuna as early as 1970.

It wasn't until 2002 that large-scale circular net cage farming of tuna began to take shape.

That means the batch of tuna that appeared in front of Chen Hong must have been farmed for five years and was ready to be sold.

This chapter is not finished, please click the next page to continue reading!

Continue read on readnovelmtl.com


Recommendation



Learn more about our ad policy or report bad ads.

About Our Ads

Comments


Please login to comment

Chapter List