For Argyll’s gift to ARSN is Kintyre Express 2 inaugural and night at Craigard Hotel

Kintyre Express coming o to Portavadie Marina for its naming ceremony on 24th March 2011

Today (27th May 201) saw the inaugural trip of Kintyre Express 2 – the new fast passenger ferry service Continue reading

CalMac, Western Ferries, Arran, competition and public services

MV Juno Copyright Dave Souza Creative Commons

The core of this situation is that Scotland – and Argyll – has inhabited Continue reading

Online Condolence Register for victims of Islay road accident now has 80 responses

The online Condolence Register was set up by the Islay Weblog after the deaths in a road accident near Bridgend on 2nd December 2008 of Neil MacFadyen, Dougie MacTaggart and his ten year-old son, Jamie.

It now has eighty responses from all over the island, the UK mainland, the other Scottish islands of Skye, Orkney and Shetland and from Dublin in the repub;ic of Ireland, the Netherlands, Ottawa in Canada and New Zealand.

Many are exiled Ileachs, touchingly adding maiden names and nicknames to their messages to reinforce thier connection with the suffering in their home place. Some are from people who come to Islay to study Gaelic at the college there. There are sympathies to the island from regular holidaymakers and from fellow human beings everywhere who simply understand how numb the families and friends on Islay will be and want to offer what they can to help.

One message is from Ballycastle on the north coast of Northern Island, sent by someone from Islay who now lives over there. If you know the territory you will also know that from Ballycastle you can see Islay with the Paps of Jura rising behind it. For an Ileach, this must be a very poignant view just now.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Waste time but have fun – ship-tracking website

If you need a distraction – and, be warned, this can become addictive – try a fantastic ship-tracking website. (You’ll find the link under the ‘Fun’ section in our Links directory, above right.) There’s a drop down map of UK sea areas at the right hand side. Choose your poison. Ship types are colour coded, their movements show as ‘tails’ and you choose how often you want the area you’re looking at to refresh – two minutes is the quickest. All the regular ferries can be seen, tracking their way around the Clyde waterway and out to the islands. The offshore oil industry makes Aberdeen a busy place on the east coast.

We’ve wasted time in the last week watching a destroyer – the Daring – obviously on exercise and dashing about like a mad thing, twisting and turning at speed, around Kilbrannan Sound, the Kyles of Bute and down the east side of Arran (where she is just now. Ahem!).

We’ve trailed the Harvest Caroline, the first boat to come into Furnace pier (MId Argyl) for a very long time. We saw her the night she left, snaking round the corner of Mull from the Sound of Lorn into the Sound of Mull on her way back north to Loch Hourn. And we’ve found her up around the Isles of Lewis and Harris since.

We watched the World Explorer Yacht, Kiring, a vsitor to Inveraray earlier in the season, tour the Clyde Coasts and nip over to Bangor in Northern Ireland.

The site picks up SAR aircraft too, and we’ve seen one streak over the Holy Loch on its way over Mull, probably going out Barra-way.

Then there are the huge ‘self-discharging cargo’ boats (yes – moving the cursor over a boat shape brings up its details) making their way between Glensanda Quarry in Morvern on Loch :Linnhe and the North Channel.

Remember the Claymore? The once-upon-a-time CalMac ferry plying Argyll waters? The ferry that ran the late and lamented Campbeltown to Ballycastle route for the three-years of its existence? The one that was sold for for the route – for £1 – by the then enterprise authority to the Argyll and Antrim Steam Packet Company, set up to operate the service? The one that was sold on by that company reputedly for £1 million when, like Vestas in Campbeltown today, they came to the end of the period of time they’d contracted to serve? Yes, that’s her. We knew she been sold on to a company operating her in the pacific but she came up out of the blue on this site. She’s running the ferry route between Gills Bay near Thurso out to St Margaret Hope in the Orkney islands.

Ayway – you get the picture. Hard to know when to stop.

The service is run by amateurs, same style as ham radio buffs. They each track a sea area around the UK and their data is wired in directly to the site. This voluntary setup means that some sea areas aren’t covered. Some buffs switch off the equipment when they go to bed. Some are late up in the morning. In each of these cases, ships suddenly stop dead in the water, frozen at their last known point of passage.

If you’re reading this, try it, like it, live in an area not currently covered and feel like giving tracking a whirl, contact the site managers and do us all a favour.

Mather welcomes RET trial

Jim Mather, Minister for Enterprise, Energy and Tourism and constituency MSP for Argyll and Bute, has sent the following statement to For Argyll:“Argyll & Bute MSP, Jim Mather, has welcomed the announcement from the government of the trial of Road Equivalent Tariff (RET) which will be tested on all the routes serving the Outer Hebrides for a 30 month period starting in the autumn of this year. Such a trial was a feature of the SNP manifesto during the May elections and has been a standard feature of SNP policy for many years.Jim Mather said, “It has always been the intention of the SNP to first prove the principle of RET by trialling it and then to roll it out to benefit all the communities on islands and on peninsulas dependent upon ferries. This is part of a wider process to open up access and make remote communities more competitive that will also include the removal of the burden of Business Rates from many businesses in the Highlands & Islands.Obviously, the costs of such proposals are borne by the Scottish Budget and our parliament does benefit directly and fully from the resultant economic growth of such moves. These currently accrue to the UK Treasury and that may explain why previous Scottish administrations lacked the ambition to start the process of making Scotland and its West Coast more competitive.Although current resources are limited the ambition of this government to reverse the years of decline in the economies of our island communities is not.And this RET trial is proof that the process has started.Naturally, as MSP for Argyll & Bute, I would have liked to see many more of the routes within my constituency derive the first benefit but I am informed by Highland Councillor Roy Pederson, the architect more than 30 years ago of the concept of RET, that there are sound and informed reasons for the choice of the Western Isles routes, which by default include the Coll & Tiree destinations, as the natural and best choice for the trialling  of RET.And meanwhile, we are budgeting to open up the Campbeltown Ballycastle route that will bring many more visitors and investors to Argyll & Bute.Further light is shone on the situation by Highland Cllr. Roy Pederson, responding to suggestions from Lib-Dem MSP Tavish Scott that the Western Isles trial was “blatant discrimination” against Orkney and Shetland, has stated,“The Western Isles Council, on a cross-party basis, has, over the last five years, undertaken detailed research into the practicalities and relative benefits of adopting a variety of ferry fares mechanisms with particular focus on RET. Neither of the local authorities of Shetland, Orkney, nor for that matter, Argyll & Bute have shown interest in participating in this work. This foundation of research in the Western Isles, therefore, offered the Scottish Government the most convenient platform on which to mount its £22.5 million trial. Two and a half years is the minimum time in which resulting traffic trends and economic impacts can be properly evaluated.The most astonishing thing about Tavish Scott’s claim however, is that Orkney and Shetland are somehow disadvantaged by this. In fact the three NorthLink ferry services are by far the most heavily subsidised in the UK at £31 million per annum. Even the £116 High Season vehicle fare between Aberdeen and Shetland is below the projected RET level which would result on a £130 charge for a car on the 200 plus mile passage. In the case of Orkney, the excellent Pentland Ferries service between St Margaret’s Hope and Gills Bay in Caithness, developed by Orkney businessman Andrew Banks, provides an inexpensive and frequent service without public funding.Contrary to Tavish Scott’s claim, it is in fact Orkney and Shetland that have hitherto had an “unfair advantage” of cheap fares. Rather than make wild accusations, unsubstantiated by fact, Mr Scott should welcome the Scottish Government’s well conceived initiative to enable the Western Isles to catch up.”Jim Mather concluded,“Roy Pederson is far too much of a gentleman to conclude, as I do, that if Tavish Scott can now so clearly see the advantage to be gained by island and remote communities by the introduction of RET it is surely pertinent to ask why he did not make any attempt to introduce this while he and his colleagues were Ministers for Transport for eight long years in the last administration.The record will show that far from doing this Mr Scott has always opposed the principle of RET and dismissed the concept when SNP members raised it with him.”