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

Showing posts with label Ausonia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ausonia. Show all posts

13 August 2015

FERRYING IN '15, 23rd June, Laurana


Tuesday 23rd June 2015 (contd)

We set off south then to Naples, on a good dual-carriageway road. The middle of the road was full of bougainvillea in full flower, and safely behind big concrete blocks. Swallows were flying overhead in places as they had been for some days and we enjoyed the route with mountains on our land side and occasional views of the sea on the other.

At one point we passed high above the port of Civitavecchia and could look down and see a Cunard liner which might have been QUEEN ELIZABETH, an AIDA cruise ship and another ship which could have been either BONARIA or AMISCORA, the pair of ex-Minoan Lines 'Palaces' which are now employed by Tirrenia.

We provided our own entertainment, without distracting the driver too much, and this began with singing. I am in a local singing group and we have just done our two summer concerts, and many melodies were in my head. My two friends had been in school choirs some years ago, which surprised us all. We sang what I thought was a well-known piece called "The Teddy Bears Picnic", written in 1932, which was fun with our contrasting voices. My choir concerts entitled "Ages and Seasons" included various pieces such as that one, Mozart's "Ave Verum" which is beautiful, and of course "Summer is icumin in" which was huge fun when sung with 4 groups of us starting to sing in turn as a round.

We had a good lunch break at an auto-route complex with time to eat and relax before heading south again, with the beautiful flowers and views around us. This time it was decided to play the classic I-SPY, and we took it in turn to spy something inside the car. My diary noted that just 3 items (one each) took a long time to guess, with much hilarity, and then we needed time for silent contemplation.

We arrived in the vast city of Naples, which had more cobbled streets than we knew about but the directions from the driver's mobile phone proved efficient and we eventually drove into the appropriate parking place for the hire car offices. After that drive in Naples I think we all made mental notes to avoid doing it again in future, if at all possible, although our driver coped heroically.

A taxi took us to the port and we could soon see LAURANA, of Siremar, at the Naples Maritime Terminal building. She was built in 1992 in Italy, at 10,977 gross tons, and we are to sail on her overnight with an unusual itinerary, on our way to Milazzo in Sicily.



Laurana in Naples



Once checked in at 7.30 p.m. and on board, it was interesting to see the map of the Siremar routes around the coast of Sicily, and the location of the islands near to the African coastline.


Sicily and outlying islands


Volcanic area (from Google)


We wanted to leave our bags before going on deck for 8.00 p.m. departure, so headed for our outside cabins. I put the card in my door lock, turned the handle and took a step into the room. To my amazement one of my friends was standing there, and I have to confess I let out a shriek of surprise. I discovered we had adjoining cabins with a door between, and someone had decided to go through the door and stand in front of me as I went in my cabin!

After apologising, we examined our beds and bedding, and were amused to find that although we were on a Siremar ship, our bedding was unexpectedly named. My pillowcase, sheet and duvet cover were all marked with the Tirrenia logo, but a blanket in the wardrobe was bright red, with a large letter 'A' emblazoned on it. That was 'A' for Adriatica, or anything else one chose...


Outside cabin 58


Tirrenia linen on my bunk


Linen


Dressing table and chair


A for Adriatica etc.


The LAURANA was built for Adriatica, hence the blankets. My friends said that in fact she was the very last ship built for that most famous of shipping companies. She wasn't quite the AUSONIA or, for car ferry enthusiasts, the APPIA, but she was the last in a long and very distinguished line.

Photographs took up a few minutes, but eventually we went on deck by the short stern staircase we found just beyond our cabins.


Two of the few pieces of artwork on board


Meanwhile there was lots to see from the open decks - the cruise ship ISLAND ESCAPE was just leaving so we could watch her, and then see SOVEREIGN arrive. The sun was starting to set over the Maritime Terminal and the golden hour was beautiful, whichever way we looked. Volcanic Vesuvius was steaming gently on the other side of the bay, and many ferries could be seen around the bay. The RHAPSODY, previously known to us as the NAPOLEON BONAPARTE, could be seen nearby.


Island Escape leaving


Through the window


Sovereign


Rhapsody, ex-Napoleon Bonaparte


Dimonios


Sovereign stern


Laurana builders plate



Fauno


Capri, in Naples


I liked this


Maritime Terminal at Naples


The Pilot boat


A new Grimaldi ship in drydock


Don Peppino



Moby's Bastia


Volcanic Vesuvius



Another empty pool



We eventually sailed after 8 p.m., watched the Pilot leave, and headed up to the self-service Buffet Restaurant for a meal.


This was as we approached the Restaurant



The food was plentiful, well-presented and excellent value; the Restaurant was full, with people constantly coming and going, and it all seemed to work well. We joined lots of other passengers in the nearby Bar, and admired the lighting around the room.


The islands route



Tomorrow we are due to arrive at Milazzo, on the Italian island of Sicily, at about noon, with several ports of call on the way. Our first call tomorrow morning is just before 6 o'clock so I set my alarm to get up in time - it is to be the volcanic island of Stromboli!

I was really excited about this, along with most of the passengers on board LAURANA I think.

I can remember sailing round one side of the island in darkness once before, standing on the Bridge of the chartered VICTORIA during the Union-Castle Line Centenary Voyage in January 2000. Then we could clearly see the glowing lava and embers coming out of the top of the volcano and flying up into the night sky. I was a director of the re-launched company, and a few of us had been working on the plans for a Centenary Voyage since 1995. My late husband had planned the most wonderful itinerary, calling at ports historically linked with the Company, and once we had the business plan and financial backing, we knew all might be well. The good ship VICTORIA was chartered for 66 days, and I was invited to sign the charter party document on behalf of Union-Castle Line. Even more hard work then commenced. I was not involved in the day-to-day running of the office but as an ex-employee of the Company (as a sea-going Purserette), I was in a unique position to join the management team. I sailed on the Centenary Voyage both as a director of the re-launched company and as liaison between my boardroom colleagues and the Captain, and it was extremely hard work and a bitter-sweet experience on board.


Ships seen in Naples: Laurana, Demonios, Rhapsody, SNAV Lazio, Rafaelo Rubatino, Cartour Gamma, Fauno, Driadne, Island Princess, Don Peppino, Sovereign, Celestina, Moby Bastia, Grimaldi's new vessel in drydock, Patrizia, Ala, Rosa d'Abundo, Nilo (new hydro-foil? on stocks), Ponza Jet, Zenit, Marine Club, SNAV Orion, SNAV Aurora, Vetor 944 ? hydrofoil, SNAV Achione (old Norwegian ferry, still with black hull), Isola de Procino in dry dock, Anna Maria Lauro, Paolo Veronese, Antonio Amabile, Superfast Canarias, Arv 2, Achernar, SNAV Aquila


To be continued...

03 October 2013

LOUIS AURA (ex-ORIENT QUEEN) 14th September 2013


I have enjoyed five Louis Cruises, starting with the lovely IVORY (ex-AUSONIA) in August 2006, and been lucky enough to visit two others, so I was really pleased to think I was going to join the newly named LOUIS AURA, who changed her name from ORIENT QUEEN only on 6th September 2013.

I flew to Istanbul, Turkey, one Friday morning ready to meet up on the Saturday sailing day with a travelling companion. Thanks to the wonders of e-mail however I had an unusual date for the Friday evening, when I was to meet the maritime journalist, historian and photographer Mr Peter Knego (http://maritimematters.com) who had disembarked that morning from the SEA DREAM 1.

From Ataturk Airport on my arrival I took the Metro for a few stations, and then got on the local tram which would take me to my little hotel at Karakaoy, just beyond the eastern end of the Golden Horn Bridge. The journey was fascinating, and I was so glad to avoid all the traffic jams that were everywhere in the vast city.

I checked in and was welcomed at the Hettie Hotel and was soon greeted by Peter as he and Mike arrived in Reception. Peter is working on the production of the third in his Alang DVD series, which will include the wonderful Union-Castle Line 1960-built flagship WINDSOR CASTLE; he wanted to include my recollections of the ship. I had been a Purserette at sea with Union-Castle Line when I was younger so Peter was interested in recording my answers to his interview questions about my job and connections with the WINDSOR CASTLE in particular. He has a copy of my book “Union-Castle Line Purserette”, published in 1999, so he already knew a lot about my job, and we have been friends and met several times since then.

That was the strangest hour I have spent for a long time – Peter lives in the USA, I live in the UK and we were doing the filming and interview in Istanbul!

Work completed, we were able to go out for dinner in a delightful Turkish restaurant nearby, before saying fond farewells.

Saturday 14th September 2013
A 7 a.m. alarm call started the day in my hotel room, as I switched on one of the little chandelier wall lights and again admired the white furniture with black and silver bed coverings and voluminous curtains.

My room

My Singapore-based travelling companion soon arrived from the airport and joined me for breakfast down in the dining room, with many local ferries speeding past the windows as we watched the nearby Bosphorus.

Hotel Hettie

This far from the water

There was constant movement and we were soon outside and part of the crowds alongside the waterfront. We could see several masts and funnels beyond the port fencing but had to walk some distance to be able to identify the ships. On the way we went into the old Turkiye Denizcelik Isletmeleri A/S building, and met a friendly security man who was happy to let us look around the entrance hall. It wasn’t hard to imagine passengers calling here for tickets over the years, and admiring the portraits, woodwork, ship’s bell from S.S. ANKARA of 1949, and various other items of memorabilia. The guard was also pleased to show us the air-raid siren and demonstrate its use! Huh, hearing that sound twice in one year was becoming too much of a habit (see Costa Classica, 14th April 2013, in Malta).

The TDI building

SS Ankara 1949

Air raid siren in use

Other items

Further on we could see several cruise ships at the quay, and discovered we could check in after 11 a.m. so went back to the hotel to collect luggage and return to the Cruise Ship Terminal.

Economical extension

Roof top view, with seating

We could then walk up the gangway of LOUIS AURA and locate our respective cabins, before disembarking and going to photograph the other ships nearby. CELEBRITY REFLECTION was nearest the Galatea Bridge, then LOUIS AURA, SERENISSIMA, TERE MOANA of Paul Gauguin Cruises, then WIND SPIRIT. We were just walking along the quayside inside the fencing when a rope-man arrived, and suddenly behind us there was a loud ship’s whistle and OCEAN MAJESTY came into view and berthed right beside us. That was a good surprise.

Louis Aura (ex-Orient Queen)

Gangway and red carpet

Louis Aura stern

Ocean Majesty arrived

Ocean Majesty stern

Tere Moana

My companion wanted me to try and get postcards from these ships (doing my English smiling female thing) so I did my best for him, but most amusement came from the mooring ropes on Tere Moana, which had the usual metal discs on them to repel rats. On this ship however a talented artist had painted a cat’s face, with prominent eyes, on one disc.

Cat rat repellant!

Back on board LOUIS AURA we had time to go to the Deck 8 Mermaid Restaurant for lunch, with the windows from three sides of a swimming pool set into the room. That is the most disconcerting thing one can imagine…

Of course, the nearby Aquarium Bar had three very large fish tanks dividing the room into two halves, so everybody seemed to call that the Fish Bar.

On board were many large parties of Australian passengers, so lunch was enjoyable as we made new friends.

LOUIS AURA had been built as STARWARD in 1968 in Bremerhaven for cruising for Norwegian Caribbean Cruise Line; in 1995 she was sold to Festival Cruises and became BOLERO. With the collapse of Festival in 2004 she was laid up before being bought by Abou Merhi Cruises in 2005 and renamed ORIENT QUEEN to sail to ports including Beirut, but that was abandoned and AMC chartered her to Louis Cruises; in fact she sailed again to Beirut under charter to rescue stranded Americans. I first saw her on a short visit in Piraeus in July 2007 after she had been acquired by Abou Merhi Cruises and chartered to Louis Cruises.

Her tonnage is 15,781, with 364 passenger cabins with 895 maximum passenger capacity, with eight passenger decks.

Venus Deck 7

I had an inside cabin 7009 for single use, with a tiny bathroom containing toiletries and plentiful towels, and a small wardrobe with no space to hang a dress. The big bed was comfortable and everything was spotlessly clean so I was happy to sail finally on what I knew as ORIENT QUEEN, with her distinctive Venus Bar level 2 up on Panoramic Deck. Louis Cruises have just renamed the ship in keeping with Greek mythology and as their company have become the foremost Ambassador of Hellenic Cruising. The ship also has a charter to South America over the winter and I imagine this new name of LOUIS AURA will continue to promote the company’s image.

After lunch we walked along to see some of the local ferries, and fell into conversation in English with a Turkish Contract lawyer over cool drinks. Then it was back to the ship for a rest, unpacking, and then tea, followed by some time up on Venus Deck 2, which I loved and enjoyed every day. The styling is so distinctive with little sea breezes coming in through the open side doors and panoramic views.

Reception

Venus Decks 1 and 2

Celebrity Reflection sailed

Serenissima was astern

On deck at the stern, looking forward

Across the Golden Horn

Paqize over on the Asian side

Old Barrack Hospital of Scutari

Venus Deck 2

Looking aft

Lifeboat drill was next, and then preparations for departure from Istanbul as the sun started to set.

Masts and minarets

The Pilot disembarking from Wind Spirit

Sunset over the Bosphorus

Sunset on board

Preparing to sail

First star

The moon over the Galatea Bridge

Last view of Istanbul

The views were magical as the sun went down over the city and the Bosphorus, with local ferries constantly crossing the many waterway routes to and from the Asian side and the European side, and to and from the Golden Horn ferry terminals. We had buffet dinner out on the aft deck as we sailed away to start the seven night cruise, content with the heat, food and surroundings on this much-admired little ship.

Ships seen: Celebrity Reflection, Louis Aura, Serenissima, Ocean Majesty, Paqize, Tere Moana, yacht Radiant, Sh-Fatih, Belyaka, Aydin Guler, Belyaka, Gulsenim, Hakki Reis, Wind Spirit, lots of other ferries, and cargo ships passing through the waterway towards the Black Sea.


To be continued....