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MS Isle of Innisfree (2021)

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(Redirected from MS Calais Seaways) Passenger and car ferry ship For other ships with the same name, see MS Isle of Innisfree. "MS Ostend Spirit" redirects here. For the other ferry known by this name, see MS Pride of Calais.
MS Isle of Innisfree arriving at Dover
History
Name
  • 1991-1998: Prins Filip
  • 1998-1999: Stena Royal
  • 1999-2002: POSL Aquitaine
  • 2002-2003: PO Aquitaine
  • 2003-2005: Pride of Aquitaine
  • 2005-2010: Norman Spirit
  • 2010-2011: Ostend Spirit
  • 2011-2013: Norman Spirit
  • 2013-2021: Calais Seaways
  • 2021-present: Isle of Innisfree
Owner
OperatorIrish Ferries
Port of registry
RouteRosslare - Pembroke Dock
BuilderBoelwerf shipyard, Temse, Belgium
Cost$100,000,000
Yard number1534
Launched1 March 1991
Completed1991
IdentificationIMO number8908466
StatusIn service
General characteristics
Tonnage28,838 GT
Displacement11,853 Tonnes
Length163.4 m (536.1 ft)
Beam27.6 m (90.6 ft)
Draft6.2 m (20.3 ft)
Installed power4 Sulzer 8ZA S40 diesel engines
Propulsion2 propellers
Speed21 knots (39 km/h; 24 mph)
Capacity

MS Isle of Innisfree is a passenger and car ferry operated by Irish Ferries between Rosslare and Pembroke Dock. Originally built at Boelwerf as the Prins Filip originally sailing between Dover and Ostend, later between Ostend and Ramsgate, she has since 1997 operated for a variety of companies.

Design

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The Isle of Innisfree is the only one of her class. She was ordered by the Belgian state-owned Regie voor Maritiem Transport in response to the anticipated opening of the Channel Tunnel. She was launched as the Prins Filip in 1991 for the company's Ostend-Dover operations.

The ship is 163.4 m (536.1 ft) long by 27.6 m (90.6 ft) wide with a 6.2 m (20.3 ft) draught, and has some 1,745 lane metres of cargo space for cars, lorries and other vehicles, with three decks accessible to passengers. Uniquely, the ship had a bow door on the starboard (right) for the upper vehicle deck for side loading and unloading in Ostend. Dunkirk West also had this port facility. However, after 1997 the door was sealed shut.

History

RMT

The Prins Filip was built for Belgian operator Regie voor Maritiem Transport (RMT) in 1991, entering service in 1992 on its route between Ostend and Dover. In 1994 the RMT entered into a partnership with Sally Line and traded as Oostende Lines. Its UK port was switched to Ramsgate until RMT's operations ceased in 1997.

On 14 September 1994, an accident resulted in 6 deaths when a linkspan collapsed. Foot passengers were boarding the Prins Filip at Ramsgate. All publicity at the time was focused on Sally Line and Thanet District Council, the port owners, and not RMT or the Prins Filip.

P&O Stena Line

Following a lay-up in Dunkirk, she was acquired by Stena Line in 1998, renamed Stena Royal and initially used on freight services between Dover and Zeebrugge on charter to P&O Stena Line. In 1999, P&O Stena Line decided to extend the charter and transferred the ship to its Dover-Calais route. Stena Royal was extensively refurbished to include the P&O Stena 'Brand World' concept and entered service on the Calais route as the POSL Aquitaine, following the naming pattern for P&O Stena Line vessels.

POSL Aquitaine (ex-Prins Filip) fails to stop.

In 2000, the POSL Aquitaine failed to stop whilst berthing at Calais due to a propeller fault. The crash caused many injuries and extensive damage to both the ship and berth.

On 9 October 2002, a crew member died in a chute during a routine raft evacuation trial.

P&O Stena Line was a short-lived venture, ending in 2002 when P&O acquired Stena Line's share in the operation. However, the POSL Aquitaine remained in service, initially under the name PO Aquitaine, then as the Pride of Aquitaine from early 2003 until May 2005 when she was withdrawn following the introduction of two new P&O ferries.

LD Lines

In October 2005, she began sailing on the route between Portsmouth and Le Havre as Norman Spirit. LD Lines, a French-owned company with existing ferry operations on the Mediterranean Sea, began this service following P&O's withdrawal from it the previous month.

Ostend Spirit as MS Norman Spirit

In June 2006, Norman Spirit was re-flagged to the British registry from the Italian second registry. She was now registered in Southampton rather than Genoa, although when she entered service with LD Lines she was registered in Dover.

In September 2009, LD Lines announced that from November 2009 the vessel would be used on its service between Boulogne-sur-Mer and Dover.

TransEuropa Ferries charter

In March 2010 the Norman Spirit was chartered by TransEuropa Ferries. In a joint service between TransEuropa Ferries and LD Lines, the ship was renamed Ostende Spirit and began sailing between Ostend and Ramsgate.

DFDS

After changing the vessel name back to Norman Spirit, it was announced on 28 November 2011 that DFDS Seaways would charter the vessel from LD Lines to operate on its Dover-Dunkerque service. This was to help alleviate unexpected traffic pressure on the route caused by the announcement that SeaFrance was going into administration.

At 13:00 on 17 February 2012, the Norman Spirit was 'relaunched' by model and actress Kelly Brook to start a new service for DFDS Seaways and LD Lines, with up to five return crossings per day on the Dover-Calais route.

Following the merger between the two companies in February 2013, and a technical stop for fifteen days in shipyard Gdańsk, Poland, to redevelop the passenger reception, the Norman Spirit made her return to the port of Calais on 17 March 2013, sporting a new name Calais Seaways, and a new colour.

Calais Seaways laid up at Dunkerque East, July/August 2021 after Côte d'Opale replaced her on the Dover-Calais service.
The Isle of Innisfree arrives at Calais on 20 December 2021.

In 2018, DFDS announced an order for an E-Flexer class ferry from Stena RoRo in order to replace Calais Seaways. The new vessel is named Côte D’Opale, or in English, Opal Coast. The vessel was delivered in May 2021, entering service on 4 August 2021 after sea trials in April, and a lengthy delivery voyage from Weihai, China, where she was built.

On the same day as the Côte d'Opale was phased into service, the Calais Seaways was retired from DFDS service. Shortly afterwards she sailed to Dunkerque East, where she was laid up.

Irish Ferries

Shortly after the Calais Seaways was laid up, speculation and rumours started circling that the ship was sold to Irish Ferries and was to be renamed Isle of Innisfree. Speculation continued throughout August, September and October and into early November without confirmation. However, the speculation came to a close when on 4 November 2021 Irish Continental Group announced the ship's purchase from DFDS, alongside confirming the ship will be renamed to Isle of Innisfree.

Shortly after the purchase, the ship was reflagged from Le Havre in France to Limassol, Cyprus, in line with the Irish Ferries fleet. On 17 November she was moved into a floating dry dock at Damen Shiprepair Dunkerque for works before entry into service in December 2021, complementing the Isle of Inishmore. The Innisfree then departed Damen Dunkerque on 14 December early in the morning, arriving in Dover after anchoring off Calais and awaiting a harbour pilot just outside of Dover. The ship then started service the next morning for Irish Ferries, with the first commercial passengers sailing on 16 December.

In June 2024, Isle of Innisfree was displaced from the Dover-Calais routing by Oscar Wilde. After being docked at Falmouth Harbour for maintenance work, it was redeloyed to the Rosslare - Pembroke Dock service, freeing up fleetmate James Joyce to be diagrammed onto other services within the Irish Ferries network.

Fire in the English Channel

On 3 March 2023 a fire broke out in the engine room while the ship was sailing from Dover to Calais with 183 people on board, consisting of 94 passengers and 89 crew members. A French tugboat and three British lifeboats were dispatched to assist. No injuries were reported and the fire was overcome by crew members.

References

  1. ^ The many lives of Innisfree Ships Monthly February 2024 pages 20-25
  2. "Ship-Overview | Dover to France Ferries | DFDS". DFDS Seaways. Retrieved 14 November 2016.
  3. "doverferryphotos". Archived from the original on 20 March 2008. Retrieved 12 April 2010.
  4. "Accident Investigation Report". UK Government. 23 January 2015.
  5. "CALAIS SEAWAYS - Vessel's Details and Current Position - 8908466 - 228006800". Archived from the original on 11 April 2013. Retrieved 17 March 2013.
  6. "MS Calais Seaways Past and Present". Dover Ferry Photos Forums. 10 October 2021.
  7. "Irish Ferries Acquires Additional Dover - Calais Ferry From Competitor". NI Ferry Site - The Ferry News and Information Site. 4 November 2021. Retrieved 4 November 2021.
  8. "Irish Continental Group PLC acquires "Calais Seaways"". Irish Continental Group. 4 November 2021.
  9. "Irish Ferries to double frequency on Dover Calais route with second ship". www.irishferries.com. Retrieved 4 November 2021.
  10. Ferries Pembroke-Rosslare run for Isle of Innisfree Western Telegraph 19 May 2024
  11. "Irish Ferries Fleet Changes for Rosslare Pembroke and Dover Calais Routes". www.irishferries.com. Retrieved 23 June 2024.
  12. Irish Ferries’ Isle of Innisfree sets sail on new route Pembrokshire Herald 7 July 2024
  13. "Lifeboats launched after fire breaks out on passenger ferry in the Channel". Sky News. 4 March 2023. Retrieved 4 March 2023.

External links

Ships of P&O
Current fleet
English Channel
Irish Sea
North Sea
Former fleet
   

European Seaway

- Denotes order in which different vessels carried the name

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