A woman from Liverpool is on course to make local maritime history by becoming the first female captain of the iconic Mersey ferry linking the Wirral peninsula.
Thirty-year-old Ellie Vondy, a qualified diver and marine biologist, is studying in the first year of a three-year apprenticeship course. This could lead her career to become a skipper of a Mersey Ferries cross-river vessel for the first time in its near 800-year history.
This would involve her taking the helm of the 464-ton Royal Iris, built in 1960, which has a capacity for 650 passengers.
Commenting on the significance of the role, Anfield-born Vondy said, "It's sad that no women have occupied this space before," but added her mission to become skipper was a "step in the right direction."
Up until the era of modern-day sailings that emerged during the 1960s, Benedictine monks had organized river crossings across the Mersey since 1150 AD. Since then, for hundreds of years, the captaining of vessels has historically been the exclusive preserve of men.
At this stage of the apprenticeship course, Vondy is currently in the training phase, which involves splitting time between theory classes and learning about safety and firefighting, along with practical onboard work experience on the 65-year-old ferry.
For more on the Merseyside story, BBC News reports.
The veteran ferry, Afloat highlights, was launched as Mountwood and made a first out-of-river charter across the Irish Sea to Dublin Bay. This was to facilitate its tender role during a historic one-off naval visit of the US Navy aircraft carrier, USS John F. Kennedy, at anchorage off Dun Laoghaire Harbour in 1996.
The 60,728-ton aircraft carrier, the only one of its type, was commissioned in 1968 and served for almost four decades until decommissioned in 2007 and was followed for scrapping a year ago.

















































