Search This Blog

Saturday 3 October 2009

HMCS Montréal FFH336
















Preparing to enter KGV dock in Glasgow prior to setting out on a NATO exercise.

HMCS Montréal (FFH 336) is a Halifax-class frigate that has served in the Canadian Forces since 1993.

Montréal is the seventh ship in her class which is based on the Canadian Patrol Frigate Project. She is the second vessel to carry the designation HMCS Montreal.

Montréal was laid down on 8 February 1991 at Saint John Shipbuilding Ltd., Saint John and launched on 28 February 1992. She was officially commissioned into the CF on 29 September 1993 and carries the pennant number 336.

She is assigned to Maritime Forces Atlantic (MARLANT) and is homeported at CFB Halifax.

Friday 2 October 2009

Marida Magnolia


A tanker heading for Finnart on Loch Long to load a cargo of oil,typical West of Scotland weather,sun in the morning,torrential rain in the afternoon .

Thursday 1 October 2009

Wednesday 30 September 2009

Tuesday 29 September 2009

Lough Foyle


A small suction dredger belonging to Londonderry Port and Harbour Commissioners.
She is seen here at the James Watt Dock,having been in dry dock for maintenance.

Monday 28 September 2009

Maersk Lay up ships






Due to the global recession Maersk have laid up some of their ships until business picks up again.These are currently in Loch Striven.

Maersk Beaumont and Sealand Performance are among the ships that I could identify.

Click HERE for some more pictures.

Thursday 24 September 2009

Wednesday 23 September 2009

Bounty











Perhaps one of the most famous replica sail ships afloat,much has been written about the HMS Bounty,here is an article from the official Bounty website.

The British Admiralty purchased a coal carrying merchant ship operating on the coast of England, named Bethia, renamed her Bounty, and re-commissioned her in 1787 for a special mission. Bounty was to sail halfway around the world to the tiny island of Tahiti, collecting sapling breadfruit trees and transport them to the West Indies. Owners of the burgeoning British plantations there needed a cheap source of food for the workers.

To lead the mission, the Admiralty picked 33-year-old Lt. William Bligh, who had been the sailing master on HMS Resolution on Capt. Cook's last voyage of discovery. Though portrayed as an abusive tyrant by Hollywood, Bligh may be one of the greatest seamen who ever lived.

After trying for 30 days to make it westward around Cape Horn, as he had been ordered, Bligh turned about and headed East; around the Cape of Good Hope, across the whole width of the Indian Ocean, then Northeast into the Pacific, arriving in Tahiti after a l0-month voyage. Bligh and the crew set about collecting the more than 1000 breadfruit plants they were to take to the Caribbean. They spent five months in Tahiti, during which time Bligh allowed a number of the crew to live ashore, to care for the potted breadfruit plants. Without the discipline and rigid schedule of the sea, the men went native. Three crewmen deserted, hoping to spend their days in this tropical paradise but they were recaptured by Bligh and flogged.

Three weeks out of Tahiti, en route to the West Indies with the breadfruit plants, Master's Mate (Acting Lieutenant) Fletcher Christian, angered and humiliated over the continual abuse from Capt. Bligh took the ship. Of the 44 men on board, 31 sided with Bligh. Of the 31, 18 went over the side to be set adrift in the Bounty's launch with Bligh. The mutineers, numbering about half of the remaining 25 crewmen, but in command of the Bounty having secured all the firearms aboard, sailed the ship to the island of Tubuai. After an unsuccessful three- month effort to settle on the island, they returned to Tahiti, put 16 of the crew ashore, some loyal to Bligh, some mutineers. Fletcher Christian and eight Bounty crew, accompanied by six Tahitian men and twelve women, one with a baby, sailed away on the Bounty hoping to hide forever from the long arm of the British law.

Bligh, having no charts, navigated the launch 3600 nautical miles to safety in 41 days using only a sextant and a pocket watch. Only one man died on the voyage - stoned to death by angry natives on the first island they tried to land on. The launch voyage was a feat of navigation unparalleled to this day.

The mutineers eventually settled on Pitcairn Island, an isolated rock in the Pacific that was misplaced on British charts. They burned the ship in what is now called Bounty Bay and weren't discovered for 18 years.

After all but two of the fifteen men that settled on Pitcairn had been killed in bloody murders, Midshipman Edward Young and Able Bodied Seaman John Adams began building a society based on the ship's bible. Edward Young died in 1800, leaving John Adams the sole survivor. Today their descendants still live there in a moralistic community, clinging to their tiny rock, struggling to survive in today's technological world.



You can find the official site HERET


Tuesday 22 September 2009

Queen Elizabeth 2




The last Cunard liner to built on the Clyde.
Click HERE for some of my own pictures.