Calmac vocabulary

More than half the fleet over 25 years old.... what happened to their rolling investment programme? Small wonder they are having problems with worn out equipment. I am reading that they have not even kept up a proper maintenance programme on some of their older vessels, which seems incredible when they are providing essential 'lifeline' services to the Islands. Makes you wonder how much longer we will see the familiar CalMac colours flying round the Islands?

As for the ''collision with the seabed'... they ran aground! Why cant they admit it? A sad chapter in the History of CalMac.
 
The use of language to obfuscate true meaning is a curse of our modern age. At least they didn't encounter "buoyancy issues resulting in a negative floatation event".
Yes. I see the government have at a stroke got rid of the curse of health inequalities (by rebranding them as "health disparities").
 
From ferry issues to politics. The Old Forge thread is to be deleted because of the drift from a pub buy out to the politics that allowed the buy out.

You can’t really talk about Calmac issues, beyond a bland statement that a service is unavailable, or alternative transport methods, without encroaching on politics.

As this thread does neither should this not be in the ship forum anyway, as it has nothing to do with sailing?
 
So, without getting in to banned territory, who is ultimately responsible for the non-functionality of the mobile road replacement network?
 
Don't worry, the 2 ships at Fergusons will be ready soon.............

It is a debacle. When I first started using CalMac nearly 40 years ago, all the ships in the fleet were built on the Clyde. Now it seems we are incapable of doing that, no wonder they will be looking abroad for the next ones.
I'm sure the Suiliven ( which my neighbour skippered for many years) was built in Norway.
As for the phraseology - well, its hardly confined to Calmac is it?
 
Possibly why the only service withdrawn has been Tarbet/Portavadie. Kintyre is only an island if both bridges at Ardrishaig are open together!
Policy in 1978 & 1979 when I worked on the canal was that both bridges were never opened at the same time - for emergency vehicle access.
 
Spending so much on wages and bonuses, am surprised they can afford ships too. The solution is simple, increase the subsidy, but get rid of all the pesky expensive accident prone labour intensive ships, what were folk thinking when they moved to islands anyway.
 
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