A Stena Line ferry sailing from Dublin Port in the early hours of this morning bound for Holyhead was forced to make a diversion to Fishguard in South Wales, where it arrived some six hours late, writes Jehan Ashmore.
Stena Nordica was unable to berth at Holyhead Port due to adverse weather conditions, as northeasterly winds developed overnight, associated with Storm Claudia, and had led to the ropax sailing instead for Fishguard, where it arrived this afternoon at around 14:00 hrs.
Met.ie has forecast northeasterly winds reaching gale force 8 today on Irish coastal waters from Belfast Lough to Roches Point and for the Irish Sea, where other Dublin-Holyhead serving ferries continue to be affected. As Irish Ferries, Ulysses could not enter Holyhead and was also forced to take shelter southwest of Anglesey, North Wales, due to gale-force conditions battering the Irish Sea. It was almost a year ago when two ferries during berthing made contact with the integrated twin-berth terminal, which damaged the facility just before the peak of Storm Darragh and led to the resultant port closure.
The Ulysses today had gotten as far as the port’s breakwater but turned around and headed back out to sea to pass the South Stack Lighthouse to enable some shelter from northeasterly winds. Met.ie has forecasted northeasterly force 7 or gale force 8 and gusty, reaching strong gale force 9 at times in the east and south.
Ulysses's scheduled sailing time from Dublin was 08:05, with an arrival to Holyhead at 11:30; however, according to the company’s sailing update, the ferry departed the Irish capital at 08:44 with an ETA of the Welsh port set for 12:30. The operator's sailing update has stated that this afternoon's 14:10 sailing from Holyhead to Dublin will be delayed until tomorrow (Saturday, 15 Nov.) with the 08:15 sailing from Wales.
At the time of writing (16:30 hrs), Ulysses is making just 8.1 knots and continues circling off Holyhead, where there are no other ferries occupying the terminal. Irish Ferries' other route ferry, James Joyce, had all its sailings cancelled. However, Stena Line is also affected by the weather, as Stena Adventurer is taking shelter off Anglesey, having departed Dublin this morning and being scheduled to arrive at Holyhead at 13:45. Not surprisingly, the company announced that the 16:00 hrs sailing returning to Dublin is cancelled and that the next departure will be at 0400 hours on Saturday 15th.
Sailings elsewhere on the Irish Sea have been affected; Stena's Rosslare-Fishguard route chartered in the Manx ferry the Ben-my-Chree, which has not sailed since last night, forcing the chartered ropax to remain at the Pembrokeshire port. However, Afloat tracked the Stena Nordica making its unscheduled rerouting from off Anglesey to Fishguard, which led to the temporary replacement vessel having to vacate the berth and anchor in Fishguard Bay.
Stena Nordica is actually the route's routine ferry, which was relieving on the Dublin-Holyhead service while other ferries undergo planned dry-docking maintenance periods. During the winter a space-charter agreement is in place between the company and Irish Ferries, whereby customers can use either company routes when vessels are dry-docked.
Meanwhile, the route's competitor on the South Wales route, also Irish Ferries, had to cancel sailings linking Rosslare and Pembroke Dock.

















































