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Latest ferry from Polish shipyard
arrives on the Clyde
She was eagerly awaited and at last she arrives on the Clyde
Sister to the mv BUTE delivered last year, the latest new ferry built
for Caledonian MacBrayne, the mv ARGYLE, arrived on a day soaked, not
with April showers, but with April sunshine this morning, 29th April
2007.
Enthusiasts and Calmac travellers alike have been awaiting the new
ferry, but probably true to say that the former have anticipated her
arrival long before your average Rothesay-goer has, with AIS screens
being hungrily scanned as she left her builders in Gdansk until her
arrival, ( via a short stop in Portland) on the Firth of Clyde's
welcoming waters earlier on today.
She was launched last year on the 12th of September by the Remontowa
shipyard in Gdansk, Poland and is the second of two virtually
identical vessels to come from the yard for Calmac.
She will run alongside her sister BUTE on the Wemyss Bay-Rothesay
route. She can carry of up 60 cars and 450
passengers, and will sail at 14 knots. Although ARGYLE watchers
reported she did well in excess of 15 knots as she stormed up the
Irish Sea!
She is 72m long and 15.3m wide. She has been designed to be able to
carry the new 60-seater coaches and 48 tonne artics to a maximum
height of 5.1m, according to the Calmac website.
Calmac give an interesting bit of information on her name. According
to their website the name was chosen, not simply due to the proximity
of Argyll, but because of the (now) peculiar spelling. This fits the
bill of having a name that is unique on the 30 minute crossing across
the oft-times busy, and militarily, sensitive waters of the Firth of
Clyde. However peculiar the spelling may or may not be, she is the
seventh vessel on the Clyde to have borne this distinctive name.
Photo shows her having berthed at Gourock this morning. With grateful
thanks to Graham Wilson who took the photo from on top of the Lyle
Hill.
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