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

Showing posts with label Kiel Canal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kiel Canal. Show all posts

15 January 2020

Vasco da Gama Part 3, Kiel Canal on Freya


I had the FREYA map of our route which showed many new bridges built since Father's time, with road or rail connections.


Map of the route


Into the Kiel Canal



Waiting for the lock gates to close behind us


Nearly done


Our bell on board


Ships and bridges ahead of us


My own bridge picture


Once on our way again I could see two new bridges just ahead of us, and then a little further along was one that looked rather familiar. I took a photograph for my records. I went back to my table for coffee and then back on the forward deck when I could see more bridges ahead of us.


Interesting plates on board


More bridges


Looks like one of my Father's



My own photograph



One page of Father's photographs



Father's original notes



Another page of Father's photographs



This is one of my favourite photos in the album! Father, Junior Engineer on the Blue Star Line cruise ship ARANDORA STAR, sitting on the rim of the non-working funnel, as they sailed through the Kiel Canal. Father is on the right of the picture, and presumably was off-watch at the time.



Father's photo of the other funnel, in use


Stern view of the ship, from the funnel


Ship going the other way - "the ship going the other way" was the "Stefan Sibum"



Local ferry was the ferry "Stolpmünde"


Rendsburg Bridge, thought to be one in Father's photos



Piano and bicycles



Photographs on the lower deck


I was looking at some old framed photographs down on the lower deck and asked the Manager about them. I told him about Father's photographs and he asked to see them. He was really interested and asked to borrow them for a moment and go and show the Captain. That was fine with me. He saw me later and returned the pictures and said the Captain was really interested, and thank you. I noticed that near one of the tables was a Mail Box on the wall - ooh, I'm on a Mail Ship again.


Mailbox on a mail ship


Over the hours we also saw many ferries crossing the water, either with a single ferry, or two ferries because of the traffic demands on both sides.

Soon it was announced that lunch was served (I think about 12.30) on the lower deck and when I went down to see what was available, I was astonished at the vast quantities of food. There were tables of starters, a bigger table of main course dishes, more tables full of desserts and cheese, and when I went back to my table there was a big flask of fresh coffee. The Bar was very busy but there were fruit juices and cold water available to all of us as well. I went back for some dessert and was amazed to see how much food had been consumed. The constantly replenished dishes were left out for over an hour I think as people kept returning for more.


Shipyard and dry dock


"another ferry" was the ferry "Memel"



Windswept me approaching another of Father's bridges


Neuenfelde


Georg Essberger


The ferry "Stralsund"


Annika


Essence



The sun had come out at last and there were more of us on deck enjoying the sights, and I met a friendly lady who spoke good English and we enjoyed talking about our families and home. Yet again there was a broadcast to announce that afternoon tea was now available downstairs and suddenly the inside lounges and decks cleared as passengers headed down to see what was available. Whatever there was soon disappeared but I enjoyed a couple of small cakes, taken back to my table.

I spoke to the young lady behind the bar when she had a few quiet minutes, and asked how many passengers were on here today. She thought about 130, although the day before she said they had catered for about 240 on a shorter trip. I was surprised and really impressed with the catering service on board. I was also surprised to hear though that sometimes during the Canal transit many passengers were seasick, and complained about the rough water. I could hardly believe this, but she assured me that it often happened, although we were doing very few knots along this Canal, and FREYA seemed particularly steady. I wonder if they get many repeat customers...

My English-speaking friend on deck had been invited onto the Bridge and later told me that the Captain thought that one of the bridges in Father's photos was probably the one at Hochdonn. It seems it had been altered at a later date, but it was still recognisable.


The Captain says this is one pictured in Father's photographs, the Hochdonn Bridge


The Hochdonn sign



Still a railway bridge


The other side


Hochdonn bridge 2019



(Soon after I returned to the UK I received an e-mail from Joachim Creutz with some photos he had taken on board, but also sending me a couple of links to websites with other bridge photos. He thought that one of them was probably one of those photographed by my Father in 1931, which had subsequently been slightly altered. It was still recognisable, and I was pleased that the train line was still in use on the day I sailed underneath it. Joachim said:

"Additionally I send you a link, which will lead you to an old picture-postcard of the bridge over the canal at Hochdonn:

https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hochbr%C3%BCcke_Hochdonn#/media/Datei:Anonymer_Fotograf_PC_Hochbr%C3%BCcke_Hochdonn_bei_Burg_in_Dithmarschen_Dortmunder_Union_Louis_Eilers_Nordostseekanalbr%C3%BCcke_Bildseite.jpg

http://www.apt-holtenau.de/holtenau-info/history/prinz-heinrich-bruecke.htm

I think, that was the one."

Thank you again Joachim, that was very kind of you.)


That was interesting as a week ago I had received a note from the lady in the FREYA office telling me that because of weekend events in Brunsbuttel, our ship would finish her trip in Hockdonn, just half an hour earlier than expected. That was fine with me, as I had also booked a seat on a coach returning by road to Kiel, whether from Brunsbuttel or Hochdonn.

About 4 p.m. we could see a familiar looking bridge far ahead and the Captain announced that "this was one of the bridges shown in the lady's photos"; my kind friend Joachim translated this for me, and I waved up to the Captain to thank him. Photos were taken and suddenly the end of the trip was in sight, with the Hochdonn bridge and coaches for us on the quayside.


Freya at Hochdonn, where we disembarked



Goodbyes and handshakes followed as we came alongside with a small bump, and everyone disembarked. I had met FREYA's 'ropesman' earlier and said thank you and goodbye to him too, and to the Purser/Manager, and found the coach taking me back to Kiel. I sat with another congenial German lady I had met on deck and we enjoyed the sunlit drive back to Kiel. She mentioned that she had sailed from Bremen in 1961 on the ship BREMEN to New York because she wanted to travel and work abroad for a while, but she was so homesick for family etc. that in 1963 she sailed home again on the same ship. I said I had also left home in late 1965 to go to work at sea so I quite understood what she meant.

Outside Central Station there were many noisy goodbyes from my new acquaintances as we all went our separate ways, and I headed home after a fascinating day out.


Ships seen: Freya, Gothmann, Stena Scandinavica, Color Magic, Laboe, Alkor, Holltenau, Osterbotten, Maureen S, Stadt Kiel, Bussard, Kiel, Bulk, Gothman, and lots of Canal ferries and ships


To be continued...

14 January 2020

Vasco da Gama July 2019 Part 2, Freya & Kiel Canal entry


Wednesday 17th July 2019
I had an early breakfast in the hotel, packed a few bits into a tiny rucksack for the day, and set off back down to the water and FREYA.

FREYA was built in 1905 in the Netherlands and then sold on in 1933 to a shipyard and then on again in 1935 for use as a bunkering station. Bought again in 1988, restoration started in 1989 with a second-hand compound steam engine dating from 1926 and boiler dating from 1967. In 1990 she was in service as DE NEDERLANDER for charters around Rotterdam Docks, and then sold again in December 1999 to start operations for the 2000 season in the 'nostalgia' market. She has been fitted out in 1920s style and made available for charter with a regular sailing schedule. Re-named FREYA, she was to revive the tradition of paddlers serving the North Sea resorts of Germany, from her base at the offshore sand-bar resort island of Sylt. FREYA now sails mostly on the Kiel Canal and on the Elbe river from Hamburg. She is 52 metres long, with a beam of 11 metres, and can do 8.6 knots at speed.

This is just a little of the information I read about FREYA on http://www.paddlesteamers.info/Freya-DeNederlander.htm, which tells me it is the internet's leading database of Paddle Steamers past and present.

It was another cool and cloudy day but I was going through the Kiel Canal, and Following in Father's Footsteps again, with copies of some of Father's photographs in my bag, taken back in 1931 as he sailed through the Canal.

I walked along and down the now-familiar route between my hotel and the Central Station,


Kiel hbh


Outside the station
Freya at the quayside


and this morning I was soon at the quayside and FREYA. A coach load of German pensioners arrived and were allowed on board first. The rest of us were checked off on a list and welcomed by the Purser/General Manager and each escorted to our individual table. I had a small table to myself up on the top deck starboard side, right at the front, with beautiful china and linen; other tables seated 4 and were soon filled. A flask of hot coffee was on each table and everyone was invited to go down to the lower deck and get a pastry to have with the coffee. This was a good start as the ship prepared to depart at 10 a.m.


Paddle wheel


View down to the engine room


Dials on the wall


Laboe preparing to go through the raised lock gate


The small vessel LABOE prepared to leave the small harbour where we were berthed and so part of the small pedestrian bridge was closed and part of it raised for her to enter the main waterway and then it was our turn to go through. Immediately on our right (starboard side) was the Norwegian ship COLOR MAGIC (see blog for 2008) and on our port side was the Swedish STENA SCANDINAVICA.


Stena Scandinavica



Color Magic


My own table


Looking aft


Further aft


Aft end upper deck


Open deck aft


Freya china


Detail


Lots of jellyfish down in the water beside us


View back to the upper deck and the Bridge


Freya Life ring


Going through the raised bridge gap


Bulk


Bussard


Stadt Kiel


The FREYA Captain was on the Bridge above us and next mentioned that a German submarine was being tugged into the Naval Dockyard on the starboard side; she had been away for about a year and had returned for an overhaul.


The submarine being tugged into the Naval Dockyard;
the submarine was the German U 34 = Nato-Code S 184, escorted by the tugs Robbe ( ahead) and Holtenau (backside)


I found that several other passengers standing near me out on the forward deck were happy to translate into English for me, which was kind, and aided them practising their English too.

I noticed a small ship ALKOR on our port side, which was pointed out to us from the Captain on the Bridge. ALKOR is a research and survey vessel employed in German and European marine research, built in 1990, at 1322 gross tons.

One man told me he was particularly interested in steam trains, but enjoyed ships too. When I mentioned that I had several photographs taken in 1931 by my Father during a transit of the Kiel Canal, he and several people were keen to see them and that started several discussions about the bridges in my photos. That also seemed to answer one or two polite questions about why I was on the FREYA.

I explained that Father worked as a Junior Engineer on the Blue Star Line cruise ship ARANDORA STAR from 1930, and I have a Blue Star Cruising Programme for 1931 which shows that the ship entered the Kiel Canal on Monday 31st 1931 at 7 a.m. at Holtenau like us. They sailed the 115 miles to Brunsbuttel, passing there at 3 p.m. and sailed the 36 miles to Hamburg, arriving there at 6 p.m.; they stayed there for 34 hours before heading for Rotterdam. Father took several small photographs during the transit, so he must have fitted them around his Watch-keeping; the one I find fascinating of course is of him and a couple of fellow engineers sitting inside the rim of the stern funnel of ARANDORA STAR!

Another photo shows the other working funnel, and others show several Canal bridges.

Just to add to my non-family-history thoughts at present, as we arrived at Holtenau and the entrance to the Kiel Canal, I remembered a small book I own, published in 1896, and called "Log of the Tantallon Castle". It records in beautiful detail the occasion that Sir Donald Currie, who founded the Castle Mail Packets Company (yes, of course I have to mention Union-Castle Line), invited many distinguished friends and guests to sail on his seventh Fairfield Shipping Company-built vessel to the Baltic to be present in Kiel 'at the opening of the Canal that links by a fresh bond the Baltic with the North Sea'.

Log of the Tantallon Castle


They left Tilbury in the UK on Wednesday 12th June 1895 and, after calling at Hamburg, they travelled to Copenhagen, before arriving at Kiel to take part in the ceremonies for the opening of the Canal. They had to anchor about 4 miles outside Kiel (probably here at Holtenau) amongst a whole fleet of ships of all nations; on 20th June 1895 the weather was glorious and everyone was awaiting the coming of the Emperor, making the first transit of the Canal.

The illustrations and descriptions in this little book are fascinating and the guest list makes absorbing reading too. Having the Right Honourable W. E. Gladstone M.P. on board pleased Sir Donald too, as well as the Royalty that visited the ship or invited him and his guests to functions ashore. They left Kiel and then travelled to Gothenburg, rather than going straight back to the UK, which by coincidence will be part of my own explorations during this trip.


Kiel Canal entrance ahead


Going into the Canal


Back to the present in 2019 and my own transit of the Kiel Canal, starting at Holtenau near Kiel - where we entered the Canal behind a couple of other big ships, and I watched the gate close behind us.


Ships seen:Freya, Bussard, Bulk, Stena Scandinavica, Color Magic, Laboe, Stadt Kiel, Alkor, submarine,


To be continued...