List Arrivals, Sailings and Events
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News EventWednesday, June 25, 2025 @ 1435 |
Un-named small blue hull private motor cruiser passing Greenock on 25 June 2025 |
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An un-named small blue hull motor cruiser passing Greenock Esplanade (Firth of Clyde, Scotland, UK) |
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It always seemed strange that owners who are justly proud in maintaining and presenting their vessel do not have the name on the bow. Can anyone put a name to this cruiser ? |
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News EventMonday, June 30, 2025 @ 1736 |
IRISH COAST ( 1952-1968 Passenger and cargo vessel 340 feet long of Coast Lines, Liverpool) |
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Either IRISH COAST or SCOTTISH COAST collided with Shell Oil Tanker at Ardrossan Harbour |
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--------------------------------------------------------------------------------- E-Mail at 1736 on 30 June 2025 Does anybody remember in 1950s / 1960s when either IRISH COAST or SCOTTISH COAST was leaving Ardrossan Harbour for Belfast and her stern contacted a Shell Tanker in the Tanker Berth ? Blackie ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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News EventMonday, June 30, 2025 @ 1900The date is correct but time is unknown and the time shown here is only our best estimate |
DISNEY DREAM (2011 > Dream-Class Cruise Liner 4,000 passengers 1,458 crew IMO 9434254 : 1,114.7 feet 339.8m overall of the Walt Disney Company / Disney Cruise Line) |
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Two persons rescued after being overboard from DISNEY DREAM near Florida (USA) |
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After his daughter fell from the fourth deck of a 14-deck Disney Cruise ship on Sunday afternoon, a father jumped into the ocean to try to save her, according to witnesses. Videos on social media showed passengers cheering as the two were safely recovered by a rescue boat. They were picked up after treading water for 10 minutes, according to witnesses. The girl appeared to fall when her father took her picture against a railing, witnesses said. A man overboard alert was broadcast on the ship, and crew rushed to recover them. "The ship was moving quickly, so quickly, it's crazy how quickly the people became tiny dots in the sea, and then you lost sight of them," passenger Laura Amador said. "The captain slowed the ship and turned it around, and then they deployed a tender ship with people on it to go get them, and we saw them rescue the dad and daughter," she told CBS News, the BBC's US partner. The 4,000-person capacity Disney Dream, was returning to Fort Lauderdale, Florida, after sailing for four days around the Bahamas. Disney confirmed in a statement that two passengers were rescued, but offered few details about what occurred. "The Crew aboard the Disney Dream swiftly rescued two guests from the water," a Disney Cruise Line spokesperson said. "We commend our Crew Members for their exceptional skills and prompt actions, which ensured the safe return of both guests to the ship within minutes.
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"We watched it, you could see two little things...it was crazy, it was horrific," passenger Gar Frantz told NBC News, describing how he witnessed the two enter the ocean and nearly disappear into the horizon. The incident took place on the last day of the cruise, and the ship returned to port in Florida as normal. While it is rare for passengers to fall from cruise ships, rescues are not often successful when they do. According to a Cruise Lines International Association report from 2019, 25 people fell overboard that year from cruise ships and only nine were saved from the water.
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News EventTuesday, July 1, 2025 @ 1515 |
ESPRIT (2011 > General cargo ship IMO / MMSI 9479943 / 246794000 : 89.95 mtrs overall of Vertom Bereederungs Gmbh - Moormerland, Germany / Rivermaas Bv - Rhoon, Netherlands) |
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ESPRIT at River Berth, Ayr, discharging bulk cargo from Rouen (France) |
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Contributed by Veronika |
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News EventTuesday, July 1, 2025 @ 1700 |
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Caledonian MacBrayne ship shortage causes summer Scottish west coast ferry disruption |
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From BBC Scotland online news 1 July 2025Ship shortage causes summer west coast ferry disruptionChristopher Brindle
MV Lord of the Isles will be one of three vessels out of actions for a period in July Some west coast ferry services face disruption at the height of the summer holidays as CalMac struggles with a shortage of ships. The publicly-owned operator said one of its largest vessels MV Caledonian Isles - which has been out of action for 18 months - is still not ready to return to service. Another major vessel, MV Lord of the Isles, needs work on its engines, while the chartered catamaran MV Alfred is due for annual maintenance. CalMac is redeploying several ferries across the network in a bid to maintain services, but has warned that sailings to Arran, Islay, Mull, South Uist and Colonsay will be disrupted. The reshuffle will, however, allow sailings from Ardrossan to Arran to resume next week when the 41-year-old ship MV Isle of Arran returns to the route. The North Ayrshire town has been without a ferry service for six months, since the arrival of MV Glen Sannox which is too large to fit the Ardrossan facilities, and sails instead from Troon. A CalMac spokesperson said having three major vessels out of service in July meant some disruption was unavoidable but it was taking steps to give communities as much capacity as possible. The spokesperson said : "Both MV Alfred and MV Lord of the Isles require the works they'll be off service for, and we are doing the best we can to maintain service levels and meet capacity requirements on all islands with the vessels available to us during this period. "We are grateful to local communities for their support as we've worked through a complex set of circumstances and apologise to those who will see services affected between 7 and 21 July." What sailings are affected?
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News EventTuesday, July 1, 2025 @ 1700 |
SPIRIT OF TASMANIA 1V (in 2024 Passenger Ferry 212m 695 feet of TT-Line, Australia) |
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Australian ferry SPIRIT OF TASMANIA 1V leaves Port of Leith (near Edinburgh, Scotland) for Tasmania |
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From BBC Scotland online news 1 July 2025Australian 'fiasco' ferry leaves Edinburgh for TasmaniaAlamy
Spirit of Tasmania IV completed sea trials in the North Sea in June An Australian ferry forced to dock for six months in Edinburgh because it is too big to fit in a Tasmanian port has finally left Scotland. Spirit of Tasmania IV, built in Finland, arrived at the Port of Leith in December due to issues with existing infrastructure in the city of Devonport. Delays, cost overruns and other mistakes have caused a huge political row in Australia, leading to Tasmania's infrastructure minister and operator TT-Line's chairman resigning in August last year. The vessel departed the city for Hobart on Monday, where it will undergo a final "fit-out" before its future crew undergo training, the company said. It is expected to complete the 14,857 nautical mile (27,515km) journey in about six weeks. The Tasmanian government ordered the 212m-long (695 ft) vessel to leave Edinburgh, to be delivered to the island in March. But a technical issue with the liquid natural gas (LNG) fuel system in May meant its departure was further delayed. It underwent sea trials in the North Sea in June. TT-Line chief executive Chris Carbone said: "We expect the vessel will be alongside in Hobart in late-August for the final fit out of items including Tasmanian-made mattresses and table tops, cabin stores and artwork, and to undertake vessel crew training. "The training for our crew involves emergency response exercises, passenger muster simulation, firefighting drills, deployment of lifeboats and the mass evacuation systems." Australia's ferries 'stuff up'The saga, which has a number of parallels with Scotland's own difficulties procuring new ferries, has been dubbed a "fiasco" and "stuff up" by opposition politicians. Spirit of Tasmania IV is one of two vessels set to replace two 30-year-old ferries on the Bass Strait between Tasmania and the Australian mainland state of Victoria. But the LNG ships are years late and the cost of building them has soared by A$94m (£47.5m) from A$850m (£430m) when the contract was signed in 2021. It also emerged that the ships are too big to fit the harbour facilities in Devonport and the required upgrades will not be ready until 2026 or 2027. The cost of the harbour redevelopment, meanwhile, has more than quadrupled from an original estimate of A$90m (£45.5m).
The Spirit of Tasmania IV was docked in Leith for about six months The ship was initially moved to Leith from a shipyard in Finland last year due to concerns it would be damaged by pack ice over the winter months. TT-Line was paying A$47,534 (£24,031) per week to berth the ship at Forth Ports, according to figures published by the Tasmanian government. Both the ferry company TT-Line and ports firm TasPorts are state-owned, and in August 2024 the infrastructure minister, Michael Ferguson, and TT-line chairman, Mike Grainger, both resigned. Dean Winter, leader of the opposition Labor party, described it as the "biggest infrastructure stuff up" in the state's history. Getty Images The Spirit IV will be one of the replacement vessels for the original Spirit of Tasmania when a berth upgrade in Devonport is completed It was initially reported the ship could spend up to three years in Leith before attempts were made to lease it to a European operator, but that did not work out. Mr Carbone, from TT-Line said the work to develop the new terminal at Devonport was now well under way. The vessel will travel to Hobart via Gibraltar, the Cape Verde Islands, Cape Town in South Africa and Port Louis in Mauritius. It will dock in Fremantle in Western Australia for about four days while customs paperwork is processed before making the final trip to Hobart in late-August. A spokesperson for Forth Ports said: "The Spirit of Tasmania departed Leith on Monday en-route for Australia. "We wish her well on her journey." |
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News EventTuesday, July 1, 2025 @ 1701 |
CONFORMITY (2020 > General cargo ship 89m overall of Faversham Ships Ltd. / Windle Shipping Co. Ltd. / Manager : Herman Lohmann Bereederungen GmbH & Co. KG) |
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Faversham Ships CONFORMITY leaves Port of Ayr (Scotland) light-ship for Belfast (Northern Ireland) |
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Contributed by Veronika
CONFORMITY was port-side-to the berth and required to shift astern from the berth to the middle of Griffin Dock and then spin 180-degrees to starboard to point her head to the Dock entrance. It takes immense skill and total calmness for the Pilot to complete this manoeuvre in a small Dock. Backing from the berth to the centre of Griffin Dock Now in position and preparing to turn / cant the vessel through 180-degrees to starboard Still turning Still turning to starboard to complete a 180-degree turn Passing through the entrance to Griffin Dock Leaving Griffin Dock and entering the River Ayr. The public pedestrian pathway on the Lighthouse Pier is always busy with sightseers and anglers. Today, with the fine weather, was no exception and the crowds gathered and were greatly impressed at watching the Pilot effortlessy pirouetting the 89meter cargo ship in the confines of Griffin Dock and bringing her past them to the River. Now turning to starboard to head for the Harbour entrance CONFORMITY is now passing the Port entrance Ayr Pilot Boat SCOTIA follows CONFORMITY from the Harbour and will collect the Pilot when the vessel reaches the fairway |
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News EventTuesday, July 1, 2025 @ 1825 |
WESTEWIND (2008 > General cargo ship IMO 9201970 : 88.95 mtrs overall of Royal Wagenborg Shipping Bv - Delfzijl, Netherlands / Amadeus Schiffahrt, Germany) |
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WESTEWIND arriving at Port of Ayr (Firth of Clyde, Scotland) with bulk cargo from Wismar (Germany) |
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News EventTuesday, July 1, 2025 @ 1835 |
RENEGADE in 2025 Rowing Boat of Ayr Coastal Rowing Club, South Harbour Street Slipway, Ayr, Scotland) |
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RENEGADE of Ayr Coastal Rowing Club being rowed on River Ayr at Ayr Harbour |
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News EventThursday, July 3, 2025 @ 0007 |
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Why the world's Super-yachts are getting bigger and bigger |
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From BBC Online News 3 July 2025Why the world's superyachts are getting bigger and biggerAmer
Superyachts are getting ever larger as buyers want more space Business is booming in the luxury world of superyachts, with the super-rich wanting ever bigger floating palaces. Paola Trifirò knows a thing or two about superyachts – she and her husband have owned more than a dozen over the years. The Italian couple, who have made their fortune in law, and continue to run a global legal firm, like to sail around the world in the height of luxury. Ms Trifirò describes their boats, which can be more than 50m (164ft) long, as being like floating five-star hotels. And she likes to get involved in the design process. One criterion she insists upon is that the crew have ample kitchen space, so they can cook gourmet meals for up to 15 people. Ms Trifirò explains her reasoning: "If you are used to eating well, not everywhere [in the world] are there restaurants good enough." She also says that the large size of the vessels is reassuring. "Whether it's sailing alongside humpback whales, or receiving greetings by fishermen on the Fiji islands, my boats allow me to sail… with strength and safety." Paulo Trifirò Superyacht owner Paola Trifirò likes to pilot the boats herself But what exactly is a superyacht? While there is no official global classification, industry website and magazine Boat International describes one as "a luxury, privately-owned yacht that measures 24 metres or more in length, and is professionally crewed". The magazine says that global sales boomed after Covid. With the super rich suddenly unable to go to luxury hotels, as they were all closed during the pandemic, many switched to superyachts instead. As a result, 1,024 new superyachts were built or on order around the world in 2022, a 25% jump from 2021, and a then all-time high, according to Boat International's figures. This then increased to 1,203 in 2023, another new record. "After the pandemic people considered their super yachts as safe islands both for themselves and their relatives," says Barbara Armerio who co-owns Italian family-run superyacht builder Amer. She adds that billionaires cherished their personal space and independence even more. "They asked for bigger windows, more space outside, and to be able to touch the seawater more easily". While the overall number of superyachts being built or ordered is expected to fall slightly this year to 1,138, they are getting bigger on average, Boat International's data also shows. So far this year, 61 boats of 76m or more in length are being made, up from 55 in 2024. And in the 46m to 60m grouping, numbers have increased to 175 from 159. Meanwhile, sales of the smallest superyachts, between 24m and 27m are down to 286 from 321. "It's clear that some of those new clients the industry found in the Covid-19 years are trading up," says Ms Armerio. Boat International's editor in chief Stewart Campbell says that whatever size superyacht people buy "designers and naval architects are getting very clever at packing ever more volume into hulls, giving owners lots more space on board". As a result, today's superyacht's increasingly have everything from helipads to cinemas, gyms, beauty salons, and saunas. Getty Images Koru, the retro-styled superyacht owned by Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, is reported to have cost more than $500m to build As you'd imagine, prices are extremely high. You can pay €36m ($41m; £30m) for a new smaller boat, up to €295m for a 105m-long vessel with all the optional extras. Half of all superyachts continue to be built in Italy, with its yards currently working on a combined length of 22,195m, or approximately 22km (13 miles), of boats. Turkey is in second place, followed by the Netherlands, the UK, Taiwan, Germany, the US and China. Back in 2023, Italian shipbuilders earned €8.3bn from making superyachts, a record high. Ms Armerio says her shipyard "produces only a few high-grade" superyachts per year, "masterpieces with unique details". She adds that Italian yacht-makers like hers are supported by a solid network of local artisans. "In Italy we find everything we need." Ms Armerio points to being able to drive to Tuscany's stone quarries from her company's base on the coast of Liguria if she needs to order marble. Barbara Armerio Italian shipbuilder Barbara Armerio says buyers want ever more luxury Regarding the billionaires and multimillionaires who buy superyachts, Boat International says that most are from the US. Yet it points to more coming from Turkey, Indonesia and Mexico as those countries' economies grow. Meanwhile, sales to Russian buyers have fallen to due to the sanctions against the country and its elites as a result of Russia's invasion of Ukraine. If the appeal of a superyacht wasn't immediately obvious, Ms Trifirò says they enable her to see the world and fulfil her wanderlust. And she likes to be at the controls of the boat. "My curiosity to explore new places pushes me to cruise the oceans while in the driver's seat," she says. Ms Trifirò adds that her crew is paid double what they'd likely earn on land "as it is very important to keep them happy. Our captain has worked for us for 22 years. |
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News EventFriday, July 4, 2025 @ 0600 |
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Ferguson Marine Shipyard at Port Glasgow needs urgent investment to survive |
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From BBC Scotland online news 4 July 2025Shipyard needs urgent investment to survive, MSPs warnThe Ferguson Marine shipyard in Port Glasgow was taken into public ownership in 2019 The publicly-owned Ferguson Marine shipyard needs "urgent investment" to become more competitive and survive, according to a committee of MSPs. The yard has no pipeline of work lined up beyond the ferry MV Glen Rosa, which is expected to be delivered by the middle of next year, raising concern for its future. Holyrood's public audit committee said leadership and governance failings along with the delays and cost overruns building two CalMac ferries had caused "reputational damage", despite the yard's long and proud history. The MSPs said there was no shortage of potential work, and recovery was possible but it would require investment and better oversight. The Port Glasgow shipyard recently missed out on a government-funded order for seven small CalMac ferries, seen as well-suited to its capabilities. During a visit to Ferguson's last month, committee members were told its bid was rated best on quality, but labour costs meant it lost out to a rival shipyard in Poland. The committee said the yard's inability to compete effectively in the open market was, in part, "the result of decades of under investment".
Committee convener Richard Leonard told BBC Scotland News: "When we visited the yard it was obvious that it needed more capital expenditure, but there was no shortage of work out there. "If they were able to compete for the work that's coming on stream, whether it's more smaller vessels for CalMac, or to support the North Sea renewable wind developments, or to support the Border Patrol service, there is lots of work in the pipeline, it's just not going to Ferguson's at the minute." A year ago Scottish ministers promised £14.2m of investment over two years to improve productivity, although it remains unclear how much has yet been delivered. The Labour MSP said he believed about £25m was required to modernise the shipyard effectively. "This is a yard with a distinguished past which could have a distinguished future as well," he said. He added: "There is no doubt that the yard has suffered significant reputational damage and that the workers at Ferguson Marine deserve better, the communities waiting for a new ferry deserve better and the people of Scotland deserve better." PA Media The Glen Sannox entered service in January after a near seven year delay The report raised concerns about a number of recent issues, some of them previously highlighted by the Auditor General. They included:
In May, Ferguson Marine said the delivery date for Glen Rosa had been pushed back by another nine months and the cost of the ship had increased by up to £35m. The committee expressed "serious concern" at this and urged ministers to give "urgent clarification" about where the additional funds were coming from.
MV Glen Rosa was launched from the Ferguson slipway in April 2024 but it still requires fitting out work at the quayside The Ferguson shipyard in Port Glasgow was nationalised in 2019 after contracts for the two dual-fuel ships, Glen Sannox and Glen Rosa, ran into difficulties, and ferries procurement body CMAL rejected claims for extra costs. The last commercial yard on the River Clyde, which employs about 300 workers and apprentices, is now run by a government-owned company Ferguson Marine Port Glasgow (FMPG). Delays and design challenges continued under public ownership with the cost of the two ships now about £460m if written-off government loans and money paid out prior to nationalisation are included. The original contract price was £97m. Glen Sannox was finally delivered to CMAL last November, nearly seven years late, and the second ship is due by the end of June 2026. While many competing explanations for the problems have been put forward, there has been broad political consensus that the workforce themselves are not to blame. One of the committee's recommendations is that workforce representatives be given a greater role in board meetings. The MSPs noted that the yard remained hopeful of securing orders for three small CalMac ferries in the second phase of the small vessels replacement programme. A report on their recent site visit also revealed that management had asked ministers to consider directly awarding a forthcoming contract for a replacement for MV Lord of the Isles, an 85m long ferry which was previously built by Ferguson's. |
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News EventMonday, July 7, 2025 @ 0615 |
CALEDONIAN ISLES (1993- Passenger and vehicle ferry 308 feet 94m long of Caledonian MacBrayne, Gourock) |
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Caledonian MacBrayne bid to reclaim costs for fault-prone Arran Ferry CALEDONIAN ISLES |
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From BBC Scotland online news 7 July 2025CalMac bid to reclaim costs for fault-prone Arran ferryChristopher Brindle
MV Caledonian Isles is now back at Greenock after new technical problems delayed its long-awaited return
Ferry operator CalMac is trying to recover millions of pounds of repair costs for a ship that has been out of action for 18 months - and is still not fixed. The repair bill for MV Caledonian Isles, which has been sidelined from the Arran route since January 2024, has already risen to nearly £11m. CalMac is now seeking compensation from Cammell Laird over problems discovered when the ship returned to Scotland last September, after the Merseyside firm carried out the first phase of work. The claim relates to deformation of the ship's hull, which has required months of remedial work. Cammell Laird has declined to comment. The £10.8m repair bill for the vessel is equivalent to a quarter of last year's maintenance budget for the entire CalMac fleet. The publicly-owned ferry operator confirmed to BBC Scotland News that action was under way to recover some of those repair costs following an investigation into the cause of the hull deformity. "As this is commercially sensitive and subject to legal proceedings, we cannot comment further," it said in a statement. Dan Hitchens
Caledonian Isles spent months in dry dock at Birkenhead last year
Problems with "Caley Isles", as the ship is known, began in January 2024 when annual maintenance inspections in Scotland revealed extensive steel corrosion. The 32-year-old ship was moved to the Cammell Laird shipyard in Birkenhead for a "highly complex" repair operation which required removal of the ship's engines. That meant the ferry had to spend months in a dry dock, a narrow basin which is drained, leaving the ship out of the water and supported by blocks. The work, said at the time to cost around £5m, was completed last September but when the ship sailed back to Scotland the crew noticed a gearbox problem and metal shards were discovered in a filter. Further investigation revealed that eight frames, the ribs of the ship's structural skeleton, were deformed and that more steel replacement was required. CalMac engaged a naval architect to report on the root cause of the deformation, while more repairs were carried out in Greenock, by a different ship repair firm. The ferry was due to resume sailing from Ardrossan last month, but a new fault affecting its variable pitch propellers, essential for manoeuvring in harbour, was identified during sea trials, and the ship is still out of service.
The prolonged absence of MV Caledonian Isles has added to pressures on the west coast ferry network, and had a major impact on Ardrossan where the new Arran ferry MV Glen Sannox is too big to berth safely. Glen Sannox operates instead from Troon, 15 miles down the Ayrshire coast, which involves a longer crossing to Arran and fewer daily sailings. Meanwhile, Ardrossan, normally the main gateway to Arran, has been left without ferry sailings for six months, with campaigners claiming the economy has suffered. Sailing from the port will finally resume later on Monday with the 41-year-old ferry MV Isle of Arran drafted to provide temporary cover during July while Caledonian Isles remains out of action. Why are CalMac's ships breaking down so often?The particular issues facing MV Caledonian Isles are part of a wider problem as CalMac tries to maintain services with an increasingly ageing and unreliable fleet. CalMac does not own its ships - instead it leases them from another government-owned company CMAL which is responsible for harbours and ferry procurement. But CalMac does have to pay for maintenance, which has proven costly due to delays in the provision of new vessels.
The annual repair bill has nearly trebled over the past 10 years. When MV Glen Sannox entered service in January, it was the first new large ship provided to the ferry operator by CMAL in nearly a decade. Half of CalMac's 10 major vessels have now reached or are beyond their 30-year expected service life. Aside from rust issues, there are difficulties replacing equipment which is often so old that spares have to be specially manufactured. To make up for a shortage of vessels CalMac has chartered a catamaran, MV Alfred, from Pentland Ferries at a cost of £1m per month since May 2023. By the time the charter ends in October, it will have paid out around double the £14.5m it cost Pentland Ferries to build the vessel. The pressures should begin to ease from next winter onwards as the first of five new major vessels currently under construction for CMAL start to arrive. CMAL
MV Isle of Islay, the first of four ships being built in Turkey, should arrive in the autumn
The first of four ships being built in Turkey, MV Isle of Islay, is on track for delivery by the end of September, about a year later than originally planned. The second Turkish ship, MV Loch Indaal, should arrive in the spring of 2026, with the other two following on at six monthly intervals. The long- delayed MV Glen Rosa is expected to be ready by the end of June next year, and is earmarked to join its sister ship MV Glen Sannox on the Arran route.
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News EventMonday, July 7, 2025 @ 1145 |
ALFRED (2019- Ro-ro passenger catamaran ferry 84m overall on charter to Caledonian MacBrayne from Pentland Ferries) |
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Catamaran ALFRED on time charter to Caledonian MacBrayne on lay-by at Port of Ayr (Scotland) |
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Contributed by Veronika |
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News EventWednesday, July 9, 2025 @ 0927 |
ROYSTERER (in 1980s Large ocean-going tug of Royal Maritime Auxiliary Service, London) |
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Royal Maritime Auxiliary tugs ROLLICKER and ROYSTERER at Gourock in 1980s |
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------------------------------------------------------------------------ E-mail from Sandra B (Gourock) 9 July 2025 The other day was walking at Cardwell Bay, Gourock and reminded of the large, powerful ocean-going Auxiliary tugs ... think their names were ROLLICKER and ROYSTERER .... which were stationed at the jetty in 1980s. When at Gourock they seemed immobile, seemingly stationary there for weeks or months on end. Why were they there and why Cardwell Bay. The long spindly jetty was quite a strange place to berth an ocean going tug. Sandra B. -------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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Ship EventWednesday, July 9, 2025 @ 1059The date is correct but time is unknown and the time shown here is only our best estimate |
MEDWIN OWL (in 2024 Tug / workboat of Offshore Workboats Ltd., Clydebank, Scotland, UK) |
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MEDWIN OWL making crew change on Hopper Dredger VOX ALEXIA off Clydebank (River Clyde) |
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Contributed by Robert McManus These four lovely images show hopper dredger VOX ALEXIA in the River Clyde (Scotland) off the town of Clydebank, and, having earlier dumped her load of spoil at the dumping ground at the entrance to Loch Long was now making her way upriver to resume dredging around King George V Dock at Glasgow. The first image shows the small tug / workboat MEDWIN OWL leaving the dredger for Rothesay Dock, Clydebank, having made a moving crew change for VOX ALEXIA. |