A busy morning in the office and one or two calls regarding the missing teenager Gaia Pope. The poor family are struggling to come to terms with their loss after Gaia's body was found near Dancing Ledge at about 1500 on Saturday. A terrible tragedy. Then up to London to the Commons. I spent much of the afternoon listening to Aaron Brown, who represents Fishing for Leave, a campaign group determined to get our fishing waters back within our control. I support this 100 per cent. The former Defra Secretary of State Owen Patterson was also there to give weight to the arguments being put to us. In short, Mr Brown wants quotas to be binned and to base fishing on a time-at-sea basis, policed with modern technology and regular checks. There is no doubt that the quota system has seen the scandalous growth of discard. We throw about eight million tons of fish back into the sea each year. Mr Brown told us that the mark-up value of fish to the UK is more than £6 billion. That's a staggering sum. Mr Brown said we had some of best fishing grounds in the world and of course the EU wants to retain access to them. The fear among fishermen is that the Government might barter their rights away in exchange for something in the Brexit negotiations. I sincerely hope that is not the case. I long for the day we take back control of our national waters up to 200 miles out. That's when we can start rebuilding our fishing industry, which the EU has destroyed.