Haynes World - ships, ferries, a laugh on the ocean wave, and other interesting things...

Showing posts with label ANEK. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ANEK. Show all posts

03 August 2018

Ferrying in July 2018 Part 3


Monday 16th July 2018 (the morning)
We woke early today, ready for EL VENIZELOS to arrive back in Piraeus at 7 a.m. There was time to remember that far more information about the ship's history, and many photographs of the ship in 2008, can be found at: http://www.hhvferry.com/elven.html I'm told that the El Ven has had a few more adventures since 2008, including her charter to GoInSardinia when ANEK cancelled the charter and sneaked her back to Piraeus. This was when we sailed on her to Chania four days after having had a cancelled booking on her in Sardinia.

The hot sun shone down on us as the ship berthed and we could see much activity in the busy harbour.

Hellenic Highspeed


Nissos Mykonos


I was standing near to the El Venizelos


Phivos leaving on one of her early trips to Aegena


Adamantios Korais, and look at what's coming from her funnels


Highspeed 4


As soon as we disembarked we hurried round to another part of the harbour. We have time at the moment for a quick trip across to Aegena (Egina) providing we can leave quickly.


Flying Dolphin Athina


It was decided to take the hydrofoil, for its speed, and so we had time to buy a cheese pie, coffee and orange juice to go, as we watched FLYING DOLPHIN ATHINA coming alongside. I know this craft was built in 1977 in Georgia, USSR, and can go at 28.8 knots once out of the harbour, but I and many others do find it really horrible to queue nearby because of the smell and sight of the engines, fuel, and exhausts. It's nearly as bad inside the hydrofoil, I think, but my coffee helped clear the throat. The saving grace was that all the arriving passengers soon got off and then we got on quickly, the doors were shut and we were away, soon racing fast across the calm water to the island of Aegena.


On board


My friends and others went to stand outside the stern doors, with permission. My attention must have been on my cheese pie or coffee, but I was told that we passed very close indeed to CELESTYAL CRYSTAL (ex-SILJA OPERA) which was just entering port. The MYKONOS PALACE had just returned, rather late, from her maiden round trip on Minoan Lines' new Piraeus-Chania route in competition with the EL VENIZELOS and was being prepared for some open day/press event with balloons etc.

Less than half an hour later we arrived at Aegina and quickly disembarked. At the end of the quay we could see our next ship: the lovely red-hulled PHIVOS of Nova Ferries. She sails frequently between Piraeus and Aegina, with an approximate journey time of an hour.


Phivos at Aegena


PHIVOS is a lovely little ship, one of four Spanish sisters who have been scattered to the four winds, one (her) in Greece, one in Cyprus, one in Benin and one sadly scrapped. She was built as PUNTA EUROPA in 1980 at 3,437 gross tons but since 2004 this fine looking little ship has been named PHIVOS and we always enjoy travelling on her. She seems to load vehicles and passengers quickly at both ports and as soon as we bought our tickets at the ticket booth at the end of her quay we made our way along to embark for our return journey to Piraeus. She seems to keep to her schedule.


One of her red funnels


Greek flag


Deck plan


I liked the blue curtains and blue lampshades in the lounge


As soon as we disembarked from her we could get on the free port bus to go round the harbour to where we had parked the hire car.


Festos Palace


Kriti II


Ionis


Mykonos Palace dressed overall


With bags in the boot it was time to head to the airport: El Venizelos by name!


Anemos, ex Moby Baby, seen from a road


A slight detour near the harbour gave us a view of ANEMOS, the ex-MOBY BABY, as we joined all the traffic also heading out on the motorway towards the airport. We had to buy fuel on the way but we were soon parked and returned the hire car; we had checked in en route and simply had to head for the Volotea airline bag drop. They saw the rucksacks and suggested we take them round to the Oversize luggage desk. We did that, they were happy, and we could then head for the boarding gate. By now we were in air-conditioned public spaces and this was wonderful - this morning in Piraeus it had been 38 C.

Eventually we were able to board the inevitable small bus to take us to the aircraft. Our plans are to fly from Athens to Bari in Italy, then get a train down to Brindisi, ready to embark on the good ship ST. DAMIAN this evening. We embarked on the Boeing 717-200 of Volotea Airline, and then had to sit and wait for clearance to leave.

Volotea Airline Boeing 717-200, from the passenger bus


We left about an hour late, not all of it waiting on the plane, and finally flew off to Bari.


Ships seen: El Venizelos, Celestyal Crystal, Horizon, Blue Star Paros, Blue Star Naxos, Blue Star Delos, Blue Star 2, Nissos Samos, Ionis, Highspeed 4, Adamantios Korais, Phivos, Nissos Mykonos, Flying Dolphin Athina, Apollon Hellas, Achaoes, Flying Dolphin XVIII, Flying Cat 1, Mykonos Palace dressed overall, with balloons, Kriti II, Anemos (ex Moby Baby), Aqua Solution, Zakinthos 1, Hellenic Highspeed


To be continued...


30 July 2018

Ferrying in July 2018 Part 2


Sunday 15th July 2018
At the Skopios Sea Side Hotel we enjoyed a good breakfast at 7.30 and were packed and checked out by 8.15, ready to drive to the Great Harbour of Piraeus. Last night the harbour seemed fairly empty for a Saturday night, but now it was filling up nicely with many ferries and we could take photographs. We parked near one quayside and soon boarded ANEK's big ship EL VENIZELOS, ready for departure at 10.00 a.m. We have a day cabin to use and enjoy, during our long sail south to Chania, Crete, where we are due in at 7 p.m.


Blue Horizon


Festos Palace


El Venizelos


Her funnel


For some of the background to the ship, maritime author Anthony Cooke says that in 1988, Fred. Olsen began planning a new 26,000-ton ‘mega-ferry’ to be given the hopeful name of BONANZA. The origins of this vessel were somewhat unusual. She was one of four over-night ferries which had been ordered from Polish builders by the Stena Line of Gothenburg as long ago as 1979. The shipyard workers of Gdansk and Gdynia were, of course, at the forefront of the brave Polish struggle for independence from Soviet domination in the 1980s but in the process they frequently ‘downed tools’ and disrupted production. By 1986, only two of the four ships had been delivered and Stena’s patience finally ran out. They cancelled the orders for the remaining pair.

The third vessel had been launched in 1984 without name or ceremony (although apparently the original intention had been to call her STENA BALTICA) and she lay, engined but otherwise unfinished, until 1988. Olsens saw an opportunity and bought her through a London finance company. They announced plans to send her to the Bremer Vulkan yard at Vegesack for completion as by far the largest ferry yet to run on their Kristiansand-Hirtshals route. However, in the event, she remained laid-up in Poland until the following January, when it became known that Olsens had sold her to the Cretan line ANEK. It was rumoured that they had made a pleasant profit on the transaction. Her new owners had her towed to Perama, near Piraeus, where she was completed. She entered their service as KYDON II in 1992, later being renamed EL. VENEZELOS.

My friends had told me about this chequered history and it certainly is out of the ordinary. She is 36,261 gross tons, registered in Greece, with her home port in Chania, in Crete.

Two of us have been on this ship before, but for my other friend it was to be what we described as a 'mini-cruise'. We were up on deck watching all the surrounding arriving and departing vessels in Piraeus, and I noticed that here on board the swimming pool was empty of water and netted. Oh dear, I'm getting used to that sight - what a shame. As we sailed away I remembered my out-of-date chart at home of Piraeus and the surrounding areas. Our car journey yesterday was so interesting because I could trace our route to Perama, on the ferry across to Salamis Island, and then our drive around part of the island hillside roads to look down or across to the ships.


Piraeus Harbour


Perama to Salamis Island


We set off on our long journey south to Crete, from here in Piraeus Great Harbour, and I was pleased to see that the broken harbour entrance light and jetty has been repaired. An MSC cruise ship damaged it a few years ago (goodness knows how), so I do hope they have paid for that building work.


Here we go


Mykonos Palace


Hellas Liberty

Nissos Chios


New harbour light and jetty


After we left the harbour I was able to walk around the ship and enjoy what I could see today. We spent time in the forward lounge, then walked aft, enjoying the flow of the design of this big ro-ro passenger ship.


Part of the Restaurant


Part of the Self-Service Restaurant


The double-height Disco and seating area


A ticket cover


We are at sea


Calm seas


List of decks


Forward Bar and Lounge


Routes


Real cabin keys


I loved the styling of the stairs


Life ring, earlier in the day


The sea was calm, the sun shone, we had the day ahead of us to chat, eat, sleep or do nothing to our hearts' content, and that's what we did.

By late afternoon we had to prepare for arrival in Crete and in fact we arrived earlier than expected at 6 p.m.


We had just disembarked at Chania


Lovely light in the golden hour


We disembarked in beautiful late afternoon sunshine, took a few more photographs, and then walked into the small town of Chania. A nearby cafe was offering cool delights and we could also watch part of the World Cup Football Match of France against Croatia: no wonder there was little traffic on the roads nearby.

A little later we could return along the quayside and check in for our return journey on EL VENIZELOS back overnight to Piraeus. We were able to board soon after 8 p.m. ready for departure at 10 p.m.

It had been a wonderful first day at sea on a very interesting ship.

Ships seen:
El Venizelos (ANEK) Line, Blue Horizon, Festos Palace, Apollon Hellas, Hellas Liberty, Nissos Chios,


To be continued...

31 January 2016

MORE FERRYING IN '15 Part 5


Friday 18th September 2015
I slept like the proverbial log during the night and awoke to find ships passing in Piraeus Roads seemingly not very far away from the terrace of my bedroom. It was another gloriously sunny day and down below and just across the local road was a rocky beach and a couple of local fishermen. Just to the left of them was some kind of monument and a Greek flag, placed on a small concrete area, and to the left again was an inlet where I later saw several people swimming. Ships came and went in the wonderful morning light of 7.30 a.m. for an hour or two.


View from the terrace


Blue Star Delos


Superfast XII


Blue Star Paros


Two Cosco ships


Prevelis


Pelagitis


El Venizelos


Posidon Helas


Several swimmers now down there


Platitera Tonouranon - a day-cruise ship


Agios Nektarias Aeginas of ANES Lines


Celestyal Olympia


After the ship parade it was breakfast time and we went down to the Reception area. We were shown to a large table beside the picture windows, looking out at the rocks and water, and two cheerful ladies served us what I could only describe as a sumptuous meal. The food kept on coming out of the kitchen. We did it justice but finally had to call a halt.

Ships seen from the hotel:
Aegean Paradise, Champion Jet 2, Panagia Agiasou and Macedonia of SAOS Ferries in Piraeus Roads, Phivos, Blue Star Delos, Superfast XII, Prevelis, Blue Star Paros, Flying Dolphin Athina, Talos, Pelagitis, Flying Dolhin XVIII, El Venizelos, Agios Nektaras Aeginas (see http://hhvferry.com/blog/?p=3378), Posidon Hellas, Konis, Flying Cat 6, Blue Star Patmos, Celestyal Olympia, Platitera Tonouranon: a local day-cruise ship

N.B. Blue Star Patmos was leaving empty on her ongoing charter to bring migrants from the islands. El Venizelos was arriving, seemingly full, in the same trade. Spare space is also being block-booked on the scheduled ferries e.g. Nissos Mykonos last night, and Ariadne etc.

Ships seen in Piraeus Harbour:
Panagia Tinou, V Kornaros, Ariadne, Nissos Mykonos, Andreas Kalvos, Adamantios Korais, Celebrity Reflection, Blue Galaxy, Blue Horizon, Festos Palace, Speedrunner IV, Highspeed 6

We eventually checked out and took a taxi to Piraeus Harbour port gate 8, to catch a local ferry POS(E)IDON HELLAS for Aegina. I was able to take these photographs.


Superfast XII


El Venizelos


The old disused terminal is still standing, and it was still odd not to see Jetferry 1 alongside


Alexandros


Macedonia of Saos Ferries


Aqua Maria laid up


We left at 11.45 a.m. and arrived on the island just over an hour later. She was built in 1998 at 1802 gross tons, and used to sail for Hellenic Seaways, but was actually sold earlier this year and now operates for and wear the colours of 2wayferries. They have expanded quite a bit in recent years, I am told, from their original Corfu-Igoumenitsa route.


'I've seen it all before...'


Blue seating, roofing and sea


Lounge


Posidon Helas of 2wayferries


We arrived and walked out onto a long quay


Aegina Map


I haven't been here for a long time so I was interested to see a map of the area. It was a long quayside but there was shade at the town end of it, and we were soon amongst the narrow streets and enjoying the shaded heat. All kinds of products were available to buy, some useful and some not at all, but all interesting to see. We found a tree-covered terrace restaurant alongside one of the narrow pedestrianised streets and enjoyed a light meal in the shade there.

Ships seen on trip to Aegina:
Alexandros, Theofilos, European Express, Aqua Maria (laid up), COSCO Kaohsiung

Sometime later we had to head back to the quayside to catch something really different: the FLYING DOLPHIN ATHINA. She is a High Speed Craft (Hydrofoil) built in 1991 at 161 gross tons, and this speedy little thing has an average speed of 32 knots once she is 'up'. It was nice to be greeted at the tiny steps to board by two members of staff. We had no luggage that they needed to help bring on board so they simply smiled. We chose to sit mid-ships and I admired the dolphin figure on the seat headrests. A glass-framed picture on one wall was of an old sailing ship in very rough seas, which didn't seem quite appropriate but never mind. We contemplated the thought that it was more expensive by about a third to travel on the hydrofoil rather than the ferry, but not surprising.


Flying Dolphin Athina


On board


The Flying Dolphin logo


Less than an hour later we entered Piraeus harbour and said our mental goodbyes to one of my favourite ports - I suppose it is that sense of anticipation of sea travel that it always engenders...

Then it was time to find another taxi to take us to Athens Bus Station, some distance out of the city. Our taxi driver knew the fast route and then the back roads to get there, so we were soon amongst the hundreds and hundreds of people in the Bus Station. It is very organised, both to buy tickets and find the right bus, but it is a vast place and one must be very alert for people going in every direction. I am of shorter height than average and often notice that tall people forget that some of us walk nearer the ground than others...

Once we had our tickets for allocated seats and checked where to board the bus for the nearly three hour journey to Patras, we both decided to brave a visit to the toilet facilities. The ladies room is still down in the basement and, oh my, they still have the hole in the floor facility, albeit behind a locking cubicle door. They haven't changed at all over the years.

Our air-conditioned coach left on time at 4.40 p.m., and we were soon out of the city traffic and heading west to Patras. The route is mostly along a dual-carriageway road, alongside the water, and I managed to keep my eyes open long enough to see us drive over the road bridge over the Corinth Canal. That brought back some good memories!

My friend has memories about getting between Athens and Patras and said: "there used to be a very serviceable main road, partly motorway and part main trunk road. It had its pinch points but it worked. And, running parallel for much of the run was the fantastic narrow gauge railway which we took when we first came to Greece in the 1990s."

"One of the great Greek pieces of infrastructure building in the 2000s was the project to replace the railway with a standard gauge one and upgrade the road. The new railway got around a third of the way out of Athens but they then dismantled the rest of it from Kiato (near Corinth) to Patras – the plan being the line would be rebuilt at the same time the road was turned into a motorway. The projects are years behind schedule (possibly abandoned altogether for the time being?) and both road and rail are in a complete mess with the railway destroyed and the road left with non-stop roadworks for around 50 miles! We drove the other way in our hire car and to say it was frustrating and hair-raising would be an understatement."

"From my window seat on the right hand side of the coach heading back to Patras it was sad to see the remains of the narrow gauge railway with the now naked trackbed hugging the coast above steep embankments above the sea and, every now and then, a bridge with the rails still intact or piles of wooden railway sleepers stacked up. The bus just isn’t the same!"

We arrived in the town of Patras in darkness of course and disembarked into the evening heat at 7.30 p.m. At first all we could see were armed Police officers everywhere near the bus station, but we kept walking towards the centre of town and joined the hundreds of locals enjoying Friday night in a lovely atmosphere. We found some interesting ship postcards to buy in one little shop and the pleasant man inside told us that the Police presence and associated protests, if there were any, was in relation to the second anniversary of this event - the murder in Keratsini of an anti-fascist rapper by a member of the fascist political party Golden Dawn.


Postcard 1: Copyright D. Haitalis, taken possibly between 1995-2000
Ionian Island or Galaxy, Superfast I or II, Laurana (see Ferrying in '15 June blog) with 3 tug black marks at stern


Postcard 2: Copyright Haitalis, taken possibly between 1995 and 2000
Top down - El Venizelos, Agios Andreas, Superfast III or IV, Ionian Island or Galaxy, Superfast I or II, Mediterranean Sky, Venus, Fedra


Postcard 3: Copyright Michaelis Toubis S.A. Editions (http://www.toubis.gr)

Here I can't do better than quote from Matt, www.hhvferry.com who says

"Left to right in the Patras postcard-

The stern of the El Venizelos
The Raffaello/Brindisi ex-Ferry Hankyu ( http://www.faktaomfartyg.se/ferry_hankyu_1968.htm )

The pair sideways on-
(distance) Marline’s Baroness M (ex-P&O’s Lion) ( http://www.faktaomfartyg.se/lion_1967.htm )
(nearer) Marline’s Viscountess M (ex-P&O’s Dragon) ( http://www.faktaomfartyg.se/dragon_1967.htm )

Minoan Line’s Daedalus ( http://www.faktaomfartyg.se/orion_1973.htm )

Lastly on the right is Marline’s Countess M (ex-P&O’s Leopard) ( http://www.faktaomfartyg.se/leopard_1968.htm ). She was the sister to the Viscountess M/Dragon along the quayside and the pair were amongst my favourites. One of my most treasured ferry memories is of a sailing on her from Portsmouth to Le Havre in 1985, a few months before she was withdrawn from service.

Just the other day on BF Enthusiasts someone posted a link to a Pathe reel on an appearance the Dragon made in London before she was introduced in the 60s which it might be nice to share:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jleLUvnutLo

All in all a spectacular line-up!

He also notes that the Dragon video reminds him that there is a PR video (http://bruizer.co.uk/2013/01/arthur-lowe-in-felixstowe/) of Arthur Lowe sailing with Townsend Thoresen from Felixtowe!


Postcard 4: Copyright Michaelis Toubis S.A. Editions, taken possibly between 1992 and 1999
Left to right Daedulus, Countess M (ex-Leopard), Saturnus, Venus


Lots of shops, cafes and restaurants in these back streets were all open and it was a delight to see so many families and young children enjoying themselves. I stopped to look around and immediately one small girl playing with a tiny doll on the pavement showed it to me and we each discussed the doll and the clothes in our own languages, whilst her parents looked on amused. I finally thanked her and said goodbye.

We could see an Eatily restaurant on a nearby corner, with lovely smells coming from whatever was being cooked so we sat down in the open-sided seating area, had a glass of local white wine and I ordered a chicken risotto in lemon sauce. It was wonderful.

We eventually had to leave this part of the city and make our way to the new port. We are to sail on ANEK's big OLYMPIC CHAMPION from here in Patras for two nights up to Venice. Earlier in the evening she had been berthed in the old port, together with IONIAN QUEEN, but she was then moved to the new port. After checking in at the terminal we could board her and look forward to two nights and a day at sea on this interesting vessel.


Olympic Champion


Getting nearer


Walking on board


She was built in 2000, at 32,694 gross tons for ANEK Lines as a roll-on/roll-off passenger vessel and makes only occasional voyages to Venice so this is one good reason to sail on her. My outside cabin was spacious, with a small fridge included, and I was pleased to note that the linen and blanket on my bunk was all marked with the ANEK name.


Forward View


Forward Bar


Restaurant


Ships seen in Patras:
Ionian Queen, Olympic Champion


To be continued...