In a rare departure from its homeport of Dublin Port, a tug that has not left port in years headed into the Irish Sea bound for South Wales on Friday, writes Jehan Ashmore.
The tug Giano is the only firefighting and escort tug in Dublin Port, having improved the safety of the capital port to EU port standards since its introduction in July 2019; however, Afloat tracked it when underway to Milford Haven, Pembrokeshire, so as to enable a scheduled dry-docking.
The ‘double-ended’ azimuth stern drive Giano, operated by Purple Water Towing of St. Mary’s Abbey, Dublin, has very much become a feature of the port with its customary berth (No. 18) at the North Wall Quay Extension. This is next to the Tom Clarke (East-Link) toll lift-bridge, where commuters will be familiar with the sight of the 25m blue-hulled as they travel across the Liffey road bridge.
With a 60-ton bollard pull, the London-registered Giano has provided towage in Dublin Port to its customers, agencies, and shipping companies. Like all vessels, they need to dry-dock, and as in the case of Giano, the 2015-built tug is at the Milford Haven facility for a routine 5-year inspection and maintenance as required by the class.
During its transit to Wales, according to its Dublin-based operator, this required an additional crew member; otherwise, when on towage duties within port, there are 5 crew in total. Giano departed the capital yesterday morning and reached its port of destination overnight, following a passage time of almost a day.
The dry-docking period is to take around 10 days; in the meantime, its temporary replacement is the 62-ton bollard pull Kittywake, an azimuth stern drive tugboat from Targe Towage with its head office based in Dundee, Scotland.
As such, the Giano is expected around 10 June to retake its position at berth 18 next to the Tom Clark Bridge, where recent callers to the North Wall have been the trainee tall ship Alxandra von Homboldt II and the anti-whaling campaign vessel, John Paul Dejoria, which on a previous call also this month required Giano for towage assistance while transiting through the lift-bridge. This is when the former Scottish fishery patrol vessel had berthed upriver near the city centre, before occupying the downriver berth, from where, as reported earlier this week, it departed.
Giano is at the Milford Haven dry dock, dating to the 1870s, which, since 2022, saw Port Engineering sign a new lease with the Port of Milford Haven, which operates the UK’s largest energy port. Not surprisingly, among the clients of the dry dock are those focused on the servicing of the local large Svitzer tug fleet and those based in Bristol Channel ports.
The port is also the biggest in Wales, and it is inviting the public to an Open Day and Annual Stakeholder Meeting (ASM) on Wednesday (18th June) to be held at Pembroke Port (also the Irish Ferries terminal for Rosslare). This is where the Welsh port is to highlight recent developments and future plans.
There’ll also be opportunities to join bus tours of the port to get a close-up view of activities. For further details and how to book a ticket for the Open Day and attend the ASM, including a Q&A session, click here.


















































