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FLEET
HISTORIES - Morvern |
Main
The Fleet
Morvern
History |
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MORVERN was the second Small Island
Class bow-loading ferry and, like KILBRANNAN, was just a little too small; the
rest of the fleet were built five feet longer, granting capacity for two
additional cars and, as is usual when a hull is lengthened, a little increase in
speed. But she had a long and useful career, not only inaugurating car ferry
services from Lochaline to Fishnish but also to Lismore and Iona; and, in
addition, converting the Scalpay ferry service from turntable to end-loading
operation.
MORVERN's completion by Lamont's of Port
Glasgow she was laid down in the spring of 1972 was delayed by a strike that
summer. She was finally moved out of the shed to the Clyde's edge early in
November and on 18th December 1972 was launched without ceremony. She
could be readily distinguished from KILBRANNAN as her lifeboat was slung right
at the stern, over an additional staging, rather than on the bridge deck. This
allowed the latter to be used by passengers though new safely regulations
imposed in the mid1990s after MORVERN's departure from the CalMac fleet - now
bar passenger access to the area.
The new ferry also bore two additional
lockers, one on either side immediately forward of the saloon. MORVERN, like the
other Small Island ferries launched in 1973, bore David MacBrayne livery green
metal decking, white masts, and red and black funnel (of a lighter shade of red
than CalMac use today.) But, for a full description of the character and
capacities of MORVERN and the rest of the Small Island fleer, see the history of
KILBRANNAN.
She ran trials on 18th
February 1973 in rather awful conditions showers of snow and winds gusting up
to Force 6 but performed very well on the Skelmorlie measured mile and at the
Largs and Cumbrae slips, observed the West Highland Steamer Club newsletter of
April 1973. A speed of 8.75 knots was recorded at 1400 rpm, full power being
1500 rpm. She then returned to Port Glasgow for finishing touches including the
fitting of VHF radio and deck coating... She ran further speed trials on 30th
March.
Less than a week later, on Friday 6th
April, MORVERN made her first passenger sailings from Largs to Cumbrae Slip,
replacing KILBRANNAN as relief vessel, and performed quite well on the station
despite some early mishaps first a hydraulic fault and then her propeller
fouled by a rope. On 27th April she loaded aboard a large mooring
buoy and two 2-ton Mushroom anchors and sailed for Ardrishaig and the Crinan
Canal, en route to open the service for which she had been named from
Lochaline, on the Morvern peninsula, to Fishnish on Mull.
Matters got off to an appalling start;
she was left for the night on the Crinan Canal's Lock 8 at Cairnbaan, while her
crew retired to lodgings. They returned next morning to find MORVERN sinking,
with her engine room flooded to a depth of eighteen inches. She was pumped out
in less than three hours and hauled out of the lock manually, by ropes to
allow a fishing-boat to pass; the hapless ferry stranded briefly on a mudbank,
and had to be towed off by the self-same fishing vessel.
Fortunately, being only fresh water,
damage was slight and after two days all was dried out and her electrical
equipment overhauled. She reached Lochaline without further incident on Monday
30th April, opening the new ferry service on Tuesday morning and only
a day late. (A chartered launch, the ISLAND QUEEN, had provided a passenger
service the day before.)
MORVERN gave sixteen return sailings
each weekday time on passage was less than fifteen minutes and ten on
Sundays, otherwise resting at her buoy which had been positioned in Miodar Bay,
about half a mile up Lochaline from the new landing slip. (The village pier,
latterly a regular port of call for COLUMBA on the Morvern leg of her run, was
now quit by the Company.)
She was not long to enjoy service on her
eponymous route as it was decided the new BRUERNISH, with her extra capacity,
was better suited to what was fast proving a popular service. On 19th
May the redundant MORVERN left Lochaline for the Clyde, resuming Largs duties on
the 21st. She relieved BRUERNISH late in July the new ferry had
been withdrawn for modifications and then herself underwent like surgery in
midAugust, her car deck being reinforced at the bow to give extra support to the
ramp mountings. MORVERN was finally berthed at Crinan, on the canal just above
the basin, to be convenient for emergency use either on the Firth of Clyde or at
Lochaline. She did in fact relieve at the latter station on Saturday 6th
October until immobilised by a ramp fault.
From 15th October she was
transferred to Oban to assume the Lismore service, having run some trials the
previous week and successful run the first car ferry service to the island,
loading off the new Oban linkspan and disgorging her vehicles on a Lismore
beach, just north of Achancroish pier. (When tides permitted she could also land
cars on the rocks immediately south of the pier.) If there were no vehicles or
livestock offering she tied up at the pierhead like any old boat.
She had to provide an Oban-Craignure
service in emergency on 6th November, for passengers only; there was
still no linkspan at the Mull pier, and late in January 1974 MORVERN relieved
besides on the Toberrmory-Mingary run, also for passengers only. LOCH TOSCAIG
returned to Lismore in March and MORVERN headed south for overhaul.
The work included repainting in the new
CalMac livery. Her funnel was painted a deeper shade of red and acquired yellow
disk and little red lion; her bulwarks and ventilators, too, were painted in the
pale blue Caledonian MacBrayne had adopted. MORVERN also acquired Decca 050
radar.
On 15th April she again
assumed the Lismore service on which she had already proved a considerable
success, interrupted only by another emergency Oban-Craignure run on 14th
May GLEN SANNOX , the regular Mull ferry in 1974, was plagued with engine
trouble for much of that season and then herself broke down on the 27th
with a dodgy crankshaft., and had to be relieved by BRUERNISH, lying at Oban for
repairs and then as spare vessel till 24th July, She resumed the
Lismore station but also included a regular petrol-tanker run to Craignure, on
Wednesdays, in her roster; it was not permitted in an enclosed vehicle deck or
on any ship carrying passengers. MORVERN also neatly incorporated a mini-cruises
in her Lismore schedule on favourable afternoons, making her return to Oban
between Lismore and the Kilcherran islands.
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Early in November 1974 she moved to the
Lochaline-Fishnish station as RHUM had just broken down and, on the latter's
recovery, returned to her Lochaline mooring as spare vessel. After her April
1975 overhaul (in which MORVERN's mast was painted yellow, including the catwalk
and supports) she left Gourock on 5th May for Tobermory and relieved
LOCHNELL on the Mingary schedule. Late in June, MORVERN once again became
Oban-Lismore ferry, taking time out for a Lochaline-Oban livestock sailing on 24th
August and relieving briefly on Fishnish. She had more crankshaft trouble in
October 1975, but recovered in time to replace RHUM as Lochaline-Fishnish vessel
before being displaced by the COLL on 27th January 1976, and in fact
did not again see regular service on the Lismore crossing. |
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MORVERN left Lochaline lay-up late in
February and was then equipped at Gourock for her own part in CalMac's Ardyne
contract, carrying workmen first from Ardyne and then from Tarbert or Ardmarnoch
Bay on LOCH FYNE to a new oil-rig under construction. It was messy work and by
the time her charter duties were completed she needed a particularly extensive
overhaul at Troon. She was then laid up at Greenock's East India Harbour and in
fact spent the whole of 1976 on the Clyde, with rare bursts of duty assisting
at Lochranza, helping out at Largs, and on 30th September bearing
construction equipment to Lamlash on Arran. By October, however, she had been
identified by the Company as the ferry for presiding over the conversion of the
Scalpay-Kyles Scalpay crossing from side-loading.
The Company was keen to withdraw its
last turntable ferry, the second SCALPAY, as relief required the chartering of a
boat from outwith the Company and it was increasingly difficulty to keep this
elderly craft and her obsolete engines in service. The trouble was that no
bow-loading ferry could operate in all tidal conditions off the existing,
side-loading slipways, and while a temporary ramp had been laid beside the
existing Scalpay jetty there was simply no room to do this at the Kyles Scalpay
side. In consultation with Comhairle nan Eilean it had therefore been agreed to
place MORVERN on a shorter-term Scalpay-Tarbert roster until rebuilding of the
regular terminals was complete.
After several bouts on the Largs-Cumbrae
Slip service, then, MORVERN spent the 1976 festive season back in the East India
Harbour and left the Clyde on 6rth January, loading stores at Gourock before
making her longest voyage yet, by Crinan and Oban, Mallaig and Portree. She was
stormbound at the Skye port for two days and but finally crossed the Minch on 12th
January, reaching Scalpay in five hours. She took up her new duties the
following day.
She made six return sailings to Tarbert
daily and 30 minutes was allowed for the passage, using the temporary slips at
Scalpay and another on the Old Fishing Pier at Tarbert low-budget slipways
built largely of rubble and asphalt. (Remains of this slip at Scalpay can still
be seen; the Tarbert one finally vanished early in 2004, devoured by a
land-reclamation scheme.) On 29th March MORVERN took time out to
visit Dun Corr Morr, an islet at the mouth of East Loch Tarbert, bearing a crew
to service its navigation light. From 4th April her roster was
amended to allow proper connection with the HEBRIDES' summer timetable, and on
11th April she made her first call at the remodeled Kyles terminal;
it still awaited the completion of protective piling, but she was able to use it
thereafter as tide (and workmen's requirements) allowed.
From 16th May the Tarbert
calls were discontinued and MORVERN could thereafter operate a regular
Scalpay-Kyles Scalpay service as established since 1965, though like her
predecessors she continued to visit Tarbert once every two or three weeks for
bunkering. The Scalpay people appreciated her speed and comfort, and by the
early Eighties the figures indicate how much commercial traffic had increased
since the advent of bow-loading but it should be noted that the terrifying
road to Kyles Scalpay was hugely improved in the late 1970s, and that many
Scalpay motorists did not appreciate having to reverse on or off their new-style
ferries drive-through being an undeniable convenience of the turntable
design.
But MORVERN was not long to enjoy
Scalpay; the KILBRANNAN arrived on 1st June 1977, exchanged crews and
took over the roster the following day. MORVERN was once again relegated to
spare vessel and, after overhaul on the Clyde, was back to the jobbing life
Tobermory-Mingary in July; then Lochaline-Fishnish; then up to Kyleakin (on 15th
September) to take over COLL's charter-runs to Toscaig and the Howard Doris
oil-platform yard at Kishorn. Later the rig in question was floated into the
Inner Soumnd of Raasay, off the Crowlins, and MORVERN had to sail out there.
She was relieved by BRUERNISH on 6th
October 1977 and then enjoyed a Hydro Board charter from Mallaig to Inverie, an
isolated hamlet on Loch Nevis. MORVERN then relieved at Lochaline, and then at
Lismore, and saw another emergency run from Oban to Craignure on 24th
March 1978 Good Friday. In her annual overhaul her ramp was extended with an
extra 4-feet section KILBRANNAN had already enjoyed this surgery and two
ferry-doors were cut in her bulwarks, either side of her car-deck, on which
removable seats were installed for MORVERN was once again to play pioneer,
replacing the red boats at Iona and not merely providing a vehicular service
to Fionnphort but tendering to COLUMBA on her twice-weekly cruise from Oban.
However, she emerged from overhaul to
relieve LOCHNELL at Mingary, and on her return via the Crinan Canal in July
suffered first engine-failure and then an ensuing collision with the bank, badly
damaging her rudder. After repairs she lay at Greenock until 29th
September when she shifted to Largs as spare vessel there. For some reason the
new terminals at Fionnphort and Iona took an age to complete and, besides
largely from tourists and romantics the idea of a vehicle service in the first
place was fiercely opposed. (It finally hinged on a critical public meeting at
Iona, where the local councilor famously implored assembled dignitaries to
deliver us from the age of the coracle!) The slips were ready by late April
1979 but then dredgers had to do their bit. Thorough all this tedious delay as
MORVERN killed time at Largs, tendered to tankers in Loch Striven, relieved once
again at Lismore and Fishnish and did her traditional emergency Mull sailing,
from Craignure to Oban on Monday 16th April, carrying four cars.
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MORVERN finally opened the new service
on 29th May 1979, after laying moorings in the Bull Hole, near
Fionnphort, from 8th May. She would operate the new service with a
sensible restriction MORVERN carried residents' cars, of course, and utility
or commercial vehicles; but tourists' cars were not permitted. She had finally
found her berth and served Iona for over thirteen years; the only variation in
her life tended to occur around her annual overhaul generally at Shandon on
the Gareloch, and in later years at the Ardmaleish yard on Bute when she was
occasionally deployed on short relief duties at the usual suspects. |
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Like so many of her class, MORVERN was
finally a victim of her own success; her eminent suitability as a tender ceased,
with CalMac Iona cruises, with the passing of the COLUMBA in 1988, and as
commercial traffic to Iona increased and commercial vehicles generally grew
bigger her very limited capacity became rather an issue. Even with passengers,
she could struggle, especially if the Easter weekend a high point in the Iona
calendar fell within the winter timetable and her much more limited winter
certificate. By the end of her career to the Sacred Isle a back-up vessel had to
be laid on for such occasions CANNA, or latterly KILBRANNAN.
The Companty had finally to order a
large purpose-built ferry for the Iona service and when the new LOCH BUIE
entered service on 8th June 1992 the MORVERN was once again
redundant. After lying at Bendoran for some weeks as spare vessel she had a bout
in similar reserve at Tobermory, finally relieving COLL on that station in
October. The seasonal finished on 17th October and in November she
sailed south for overhaul, at Renfrew. In February 1993 she sailed north again
for a swansong in the Outer Hebrides her first passenger service in over four
months, and on charter, relieving Comhairle nan Eilean's EILEAN BHEARNARAIGH
which had just suffered a breakdown.
MORVERN sailed on the short passage from
Otternish (North Uist) to Berneray for a week, until the regular boat returned,
but lay in reserve as there was likely to be further Comhairle use for her. She
was indeed reactivated on 24th April and sailed south to
Lochboisdale, assuming the Ludaig-Eriskay service on the 26th to
allow EILEAN NA H-OIGE time off for overhaul. This was a subject-to-tides
service and her sister RHUM had already relieved here in December 1988.
MORVERN continued as Eriskay ferry till
Saturday 22nd May 1993 and then sailed all the way south to Shandon,
where she languished in lay-up till 22nd October and that was only
to head for Renfrew and her own overhaul. She then lay inert at Shandon again
until 30th March 1994 when she headed north once more to relieve at
Eriskay, taking up the passage to Ludag from 4th April. She returned
sadly south for Shandon on 30th April, for yet more idleness and
did not see service again until early October; when MORVERN was summoned to
relieve at her old haunts on Iona, her first work for her own Company in over
two years. With the return of the LOCH BUIE on 6th November she
sailed round to lie at Tobermory, and then ran a winter car ferry service to
Kilchoan from 10th November 1994 until replaced by the COLL in
mid-December and then another mournful voyage to Shandon followed for the
increasingly irrelevant MORVERN.
It was a ridiculous lifestyle for a
valuable car ferry and this lay-up lasted (sparing one false alarm when she was
summoned as far as Gourock in March 1995) until 15th June, when she
was dispatched across the Irish Sea to relieve at Rathlin Island, in the wake
once again of her sister RHUM. MORVERN's burst of service was the result of a
local and no doubt extremely Irish wedding and the festivities seem to have
lasted three solid days. She was back at Shandon by the evening of Wednesday 21st
June 1995 and did not emerge again until Friday 21st July for another charter
to Ireland, but this time with a view to an all but concluded purchase, by Mr
Cornelius Bonner of Portrush, who had acquired KILBRANNAN two years before in
the name of his company, Aranmore Island Ferry Services.
MORVERN's charter was but for six weeks
amounting to a test-drive for Mr Bonner and she served on the
Portrush-Aranmore service in consort with her elder sister, now named ARAINN
MHOR. Traffic was extremely busy, but MORVERN was a great success and Mr Bonner
duly clinched the deal.
She duly served reliably at Aranmore,
retaining her original name, until her owner acquired COLL and RHUM in 1998.
MORVERN thereafter became surplus to the needs of Aranmore Island Ferry Services
and in 2001 was sold on to another Irish operator, Bere Island Ferries of County
Cork, who operate a ten-minute car ferry service from Castletownbere to Bere
Island. MORVERN still operates on that passage with the 18-car F.B.D. DUNBRODY
and the 4-car MISNEACH and is still called MORVERN. |
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Text Thanks To John MacLeod (C)
GO BACK TO MORVERN |

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