Showing posts with label Colm Newport. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Colm Newport. Show all posts

13 September 2008

Asgard II Crew returns home as Inquiries open

The crew of the Irish brigantine and sail training vessel Asgard II (archive photo above) which was lost at sea off the coast of Brittany on Thursday morning (for details see my entry from September 11th), has returned home to Ireland yesterday evening.
Captain Colm Newport, five regular crew members and twenty trainees who had to abandon ship in pitch-darkness after a sudden ingress of water had turned their vessel into a floating hulk, arrived save and sound at Dublin airport.

After being rescued by the French Coast Guard, they had spent a day on Belle-Île-en-Mer, an island off the southern coast of Brittany, close to the Quiberon peninsula and Quiberon Bay.

Despite the shock and sadness over the loss of the nation's only proper sail training vessel, the good news is that no human life was lost and no-one suffered injuries. Some of the trainees still looked a bit shaken when they landed in Dublin last night, but that will pass. They all behaved in a professional and disciplined way, even under extreme and traumatic circumstances, and that shows that their training has been successful after all.

Meanwhile the Irish Marine Casualty Investigation Board (MCIB) and its French equivalent, the Bureau d'enquêtes sur les événements de mer, have begun their separate inquiries into the circumstances of the sinking of the Asgard II.

As the brigantine is now in waters about 90 metres deep, it is doubtful if an attempt to raise and salvage her can be made or would be sensible. A detailed survey in respect to that and to the vessel's current condition has yet to be conducted and might take a while.

However, the general opinion in Irish maritime and sailing circles is that building a new vessel as replacement for the Asgard II might be the better and more likely option. Unfortunately the loss comes just at the beginning of an economic recession in Ireland, and one has to wonder if Finance Minister Brian Lenihan (who is not the seafaring type) will find enough money in the treasury for such a project.

But all is not lost, even if the Irish government should decide that it has no money for another sail training vessel. We could employ a procedure which has been used with great success in the past, and especially throughout the 19th century (when most people had a lot less money than they have today). I am thinking of Public Subscription, a joint effort of many individuals, putting together as much money as they can afford to give, in order to create a large project. Carlow cathedral, Wellington's obelisk in Phoenix Park in Dublin, and the municipal Clock Tower here on the Quay in Waterford are three examples of works created entirely by using that system.

I am neither a politician, nor rich, so I have neither the power nor the money to start a possible public subscription campaign. But I have pitched the idea already to a cabinet minister and a TD (member of parliament) yesterday, in the hope that it will sink in and influence the government in a positive way.

In less than three years Ireland and Waterford will host the start of the annual International Tall Ships' Race again. It would be very desireable to have a proper national sail training vessel in service again by then.
I still remember how the Asgard II (accompanied by the other two Irish tall ships Dunbrody and Jeannie Johnston) led the Parade of Sails out of our port and down the river Suir in 2005. It was the first and only time that all three Irish tall ships were appearing together.

Speculations that for the time being the Dunbrody and Jeannie Johnston might temporarily be drafted in as sail training vessels might have some substance, but it is doubtful if that would be a good idea and a workable solution. Both barques are replicas of 19th century originals and the main purpose they have is to be a floating museum. The Dunbrody does not even have a full certificate for the high seas, which the Jeannie Johnston was granted after a major struggle with the Irish bureaucracy. Both vessels also operate an extensive programme of corporate entertainment and that provides a significant part of their budget. So it is more than unlikely that they could really function as proper sail training vessels like the Asgard II did.

Having put my idea forward into the political channels, I hope it will be taken up, so that the gap created in the sail training community by the loss of Asgard II will be filled as soon as possible.

The Emerald Islander

11 September 2008

Asgard II lost at Sea

This morning very sad news came across the sea from France, sad for the whole of Ireland, and also for the large community of sailors, seafarers and tall ship fans everywhere.

It has been reported that the Asgard II (photo above), our country's beautiful sail training vessel, was lost at sea at 8.25 am local time (7.25 am Irish time) about twenty nautical miles off the French coast, south of Brittany and southwest of Belle-Île-en-Mer.

The two-masted brigantine had earlier been abandoned after taking on a lot of water, turning her into a floating hulk (see photo right).

The alarm was raised in total darkness shortly before 2.30 am this morning. Shortly after the vessel's Master, Captain Colm Newport, had no choice but to give orders to abandon ship. The five regular crew members and twenty trainees, most of them Irish, transferred to life-rafts (see photo left).

Captain Newport said that the vessel was abandoned in an orderly fashion and with no injuries, and that all 25 people were off the Asgard II in four or five minutes. They stayed alongside the stricken vessel while communicating with the French Coast Guard and sending a distress signal.

Within twenty minutes from the initial alarm, they had to move the life-rafts away from the vessel, which had water up to its deck at that stage.

Crew and trainees were rescued by the French Coast Guard who despatched two lifeboats and two helicopters to the scene.
They were taken to a hotel on the island of Belle-Île-en-Mer.

In an interview with RTE Radio Captain Newport said that he has no idea what caused the ship to sink, adding that it would be foolish to speculate. He explained that there was a "sudden ingress of water", which caused the vessel to lose stability.
All those on board were now in contact with their people at home, were in warm clothes and being looked after well by the people on the French island. However, they had been through a traumatic event. (Being a sailor myself, I can well imagine how traumatic it was, especially for the young and inexperienced trainees...)

The Irish Ambassador to France, Anne Anderson, is traveling from Paris to Belle-Île-en-Mer to meet the crew and trainees.

It is still not clear what caused the loss of the Asgard II, and at this stage it is doubtful if it will be possible to salvage her, even though her last position has been documented. Should a salvage not be possible, it is further doubtful if - in the present recession Ireland experiences - there will be funds to build a replacement. However, the early 1980s were a difficult time for the Irish nation as well, but nevertheless the government still saw fit to build and commission the vessel.

The Asgard II is Ireland's official national sail training vessel. A beautiful traditional brigantine with her hull painted in a deep emerald green, she was designed and built in Arklow, Co. Wicklow by Jack Tyrrell and commissioned in March 1981 by the then Taoiseach Charles J. Haughey. She has a traditional figurehead in the form of a carving of Granuaile.
Her name was taken from the yacht Asgard (now preserved in Kilmainham Jail museum in Dublin), which played a special role in Irish history, in particular as the vessel that brought rifles for the Irish Volunteers from Germany to Ireland in preparation of the 1916 Easter Rising.

Owned by the Republic of Ireland, the Asgard II is a civilian-run training vessel and managed by Coiste an Asgard (chaired by Minister for Defence Willie O'Dea, TD), which is also a founding member of Sail Training International (STI), the organisers of the annual International Tall Ships' Race.

It fills me with great sadness to learn of her loss, as I remember her very well from many happy encounters at sea and here in the port of Waterford.
Three years ago, when Waterford hosted the start of the International Tall Ships' Race, it was the Asgard II (accompanied by the other two Irish tall ships Dunbrody and Jeannie Johnston) who led the Parade of Sails out of the port and down the river Suir to the race's official starting point at Dunmore East. It was a joy for me to see her leading a parade of 88 tall ships and vessels (28 of them large class A ships), as a sailor and as a member of the team that organised and ran the event.

In 2011 Waterford will host the same event again, and should a salvage of the Asgard II not be possible, she will be missed very much by many, including me,

The Emerald Islander.

UPDATE

For an update please see my entry from September 13th