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Displaying items by tag: Waterford Island ferry

#HotelFerryReturns – Mary Fitzgerald, the private ferry of the Waterford Castle Hotel & Golf Resort on Little Island has returned to the scenic Kings Channel route yesterday following dry-docking, writes Jehan Ashmore.

As previously reported earlier this week, the 14 car-capacity ferry, Mary Fitzgerald had undergone works at New Ross Boat Yard having entered the dry-dock on the banks of the Barrow last Monday.

Among the work carried out on Mary Fitzgerald (1972/221grt) were to her Azimuthing Schottel engines which power the ferry. The three-laned vehicle ferry is guided by cable-wires that run along the amidships while she frequently plies the waterway between Ballinakill on the mainland and the 310-acre island.

The passage time of the ferry from the drydock downriver of Rosbercon that faces New Ross to Little Island took some three hours to complete. This involved the former Lough Swilly ferry transiting the swing-bridge section of the Barrow Bridge that connects counties Waterford and Wexford.This bridge used to carry the trains of the Waterford-Rosslare Harbour railway line.

As reported on Afloat.ie Irish Rail Freight's intermodel (container-ship) services reopened almost two years ago in March 2013 to connect nearby Belview, the main terminal for the Port of Waterford and Ballina Co. Mayo.

As for Mary Fitzgerald's predecessor, Loreley, (as previously reported) was withdrawn last August. The vessel is currently laid-up on the Suir along Waterford City quays.

Published in Ferry

#Island&FerrySale – The luxury Waterford Castle Hotel & Golf Resort on Little Island in Waterford Estuary, as previously reported is for sale, however this does not include the cable-ferry Loreley, which is to be sold separately, writes Jehan Ashmore.

Colliers International is seeking in excess of €4.5m for the secluded resort on the River Suir which also includes 48 self-catering garden lodges and clubhouse on the 310-acre island a mile downriver of Waterford City.

The property on Little Island is reached by the private 12-car capacity Loreley which is to be sold for €700,000. She operates between Grantstown and Little Island otherwise known locally as 'The Island'.

Asides this ferry, further downriver is another service, Passage East-Ballyhack in Co. Wexford. Arguably the Little Island ferry is the least known of operations to run on Irish estuaries and across rivers.

The service to Little Island takes a mere three-minute hop across King's Channel, a narrow disused shipping lane along the south side of the island. The other main channel is mostly used by yachts and visiting vessels to Waterford Marina, naval ships and cruiseships while commercial shipping is centred on Belview, a downriver terminal for the Port of Waterford along the banks of Co. Kilkenny.

Last year there was a dispute between the hotel owner and ferry contractor as reported on Afloat.ie over the running of the 1959 German built ferry that operates a round-the-clock service. For another closer-up photo of the ferry published in Ships Monthly, click HERE.

Loreley carries 57 passengers including foot-users, though the vast majority of traffic visiting the hotel and resort is taken is up by vehicles of the 12 car capacity deck. For ease of operations she has double-ended ramps.

It is understood that the first custom built vehicle-carrying ferry to ply the narrow channel was Verolme Cork Dockyard built ferry, Strongbow completed in 1968 and entered service the following year.

She was replaced by a ferry from Scandinavia, a 6-car carrying 24 passenger vessel renamed Little Island Ferry, however she too was displaced by a another Nordic ferry, Elvera, a former Swedish lake-ferry. She was introduced on the Waterford Estuary in 1999. Both she and her predecessors were chain-operated ferries.

The current 110 tonnes ferry originally named Loreley V, served as a River Rhine ferry between St. Goarshausen and St. Goar. She was sold to the Irish hotel and introduced in 2008. Unlike the previous chain-ferries, she is a self-propelled ferry which uses cable-wires to guide her across the river.

According to the Irish Times article, it was suggested that new owners of the property consider the feasibility of providing a bridge across the channel given much cheaper construction procedures have been devised.

Published in Ferry