dunedin
Well-Known Member
Calmac used to have a (fearsome?) reputation for proceeding in all weathers to get their hardy passengers to their destinations, in spite of whatever the weather gods threw at them - perhaps a bit late, perhaps a bit shaken up (and minus lunch), but safely and where they wanted to get to. But seems to have changed ?
Recently I heard on the BBC that the Tarbert Portavadie ferry was "cancelled till further notice, due to fog". (And had heard similar "delays or cancellations" earlier in the year even for the main Rothesay ferry.)
Listening to this on the car radio as the Edinburgh / Glasgow bus hammered past me at 60mph through the fog on the M8, I wondered ..... why can't a relatively slow speed Calmac ferry proceed, albeit at reduced speed and making appropriate sound signals, in a bit of fog ?
I could understand why a ferry like the one in the Sound of Harris could be fog bound, as it needs to navigating an intricate course through shallow channels past rocks. Ditto I can see why a high speed ferry in the Channel Islands should go a LOT slower in their dangerous waters.
But the Tarbert Portavadie route has a low speed ferry, with radar and GPS, doing a relatively simple & safe route in quiet, minimal tide waters - and with high ground by both terminals allowing easy validation of position for docking via radar if necessary.
Also, as soon as strong winds are forecast, everything other than the hardy types on the Stornoway ferry seem to be cancelled more frequently than ever before.
Is the famed Calmac going soft ? (And this was before they used Uist rock and visitor pontoons as a means of slowing
Recently I heard on the BBC that the Tarbert Portavadie ferry was "cancelled till further notice, due to fog". (And had heard similar "delays or cancellations" earlier in the year even for the main Rothesay ferry.)
Listening to this on the car radio as the Edinburgh / Glasgow bus hammered past me at 60mph through the fog on the M8, I wondered ..... why can't a relatively slow speed Calmac ferry proceed, albeit at reduced speed and making appropriate sound signals, in a bit of fog ?
I could understand why a ferry like the one in the Sound of Harris could be fog bound, as it needs to navigating an intricate course through shallow channels past rocks. Ditto I can see why a high speed ferry in the Channel Islands should go a LOT slower in their dangerous waters.
But the Tarbert Portavadie route has a low speed ferry, with radar and GPS, doing a relatively simple & safe route in quiet, minimal tide waters - and with high ground by both terminals allowing easy validation of position for docking via radar if necessary.
Also, as soon as strong winds are forecast, everything other than the hardy types on the Stornoway ferry seem to be cancelled more frequently than ever before.
Is the famed Calmac going soft ? (And this was before they used Uist rock and visitor pontoons as a means of slowing