I found this on the sailboatowners.com web site. I am currently reading Chinook's log of their travels through the Inside Passage and thought many of our members would be interested in this. I hope I posted the link correctly.
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/l ... ks23m.html
B C Ferry Sinks
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Randy Smith
- First Officer
- Posts: 254
- Joined: Mon Oct 11, 2004 11:31 am
- Location: "Breezy" 26X Boardman,Or
- Night Sailor
- Admiral
- Posts: 1007
- Joined: Mon Dec 26, 2005 4:56 pm
- Sailboat: MacGregor 26X
- Location: '98, MACX1780I798, '97 Merc 50hp Classic, Denton Co. TX "Duet"
Beautiful and risky
Those who have sailed the Inland Passage know that staying on the straight and narrow is very imortant, especially with wide tide swings, 10 knot currents, whirlpools, etc. There are reputedly 6000 islands in the whole route, and twice that number at low tide. All rock. Some large rocks underwater at high tide but visible at low I've estimated are within 200 yards of channels where passenger liners are traversing at up to 25 knots in the dark.
It's a tribute to the care about safety of the shipping and ferry companies that more accidents don't happen in foul weather. One small glitch in a navigational device, or one sneeze at the wheel can send a fast boat onto a reef in a matter of seconds. The captains and pilots at the border are very experienced in those waters and weather. It will be very interesting to see the results oftheir investigation. I intend to sail those waters again, and the BC ferries are the only way to go if you have limited cruise time.
It's a tribute to the care about safety of the shipping and ferry companies that more accidents don't happen in foul weather. One small glitch in a navigational device, or one sneeze at the wheel can send a fast boat onto a reef in a matter of seconds. The captains and pilots at the border are very experienced in those waters and weather. It will be very interesting to see the results oftheir investigation. I intend to sail those waters again, and the BC ferries are the only way to go if you have limited cruise time.
- Terry
- Admiral
- Posts: 1487
- Joined: Thu Feb 19, 2004 2:35 pm
- Sailboat: MacGregor 26M
- Location: Vancouver, B.C. Canada. '03 26M - New Yamaha 70
BC Ferry
Yes, it is big news here, front page with inside pictures and stories, plus second section foldouts and stories. The Queen of the North sank like the Titanic, it was gone in an hour. Amazing everone survived it, thanks to the efforts of the local community it was less traumatic than it could have been, not to mention the Coast Guard was close by. It was an older ferry, single compartment hull (no floatation) long overdue for replacement for which we can only blame goverment dithering. By the looks of the diagrams the ship was way off course, not even in the main channel, what they were doing off the tip of that island is anyones guess, but an inquiry will best determine that. Another odd piece of information is that there are no rocks showing in the charts for the area, it is all deep water and locals of the area are a bit perplexed. Rumors of hitting a submarine are bound to follow.
The ferry was also a supply ship for the communities so there is bound to be some economic hardships to follow. Ferry accidents are few and far between here so it is quite an incident and historical event. Imagine the insurance claims, there had to be a few container trucks on that ship as well as personal vehicles, and I doubt that folks had much time to collect their luggage being woken from sleep and given less than an hour to be on a lifeboat. Also have to wonder about the response rate given the numerous practice drills we experience in life, how many passengers dismissed it and rolled back over before being called by ships personnel. We tend to respond pretty slow here in our workplace when the fire alarm goes off, no one takes it seriously. Must have been a very serious sounding alarm on the ship, & likely passengers worst nightmare come true, what an experience! It is going to be front & center news for the next week here in BC and it will be interesting to find out why the ship was so far off course. 
- Chinook
- Admiral
- Posts: 1730
- Joined: Sun Feb 26, 2006 7:20 pm
- Location: LeavenworthWA 2002 26x, Suzuki DF60A
Re: B C Ferry Sinks
[quote="Win"]I found this on the sailboatowners.com web site. I am currently reading Chinook's log of their travels through the Inside Passage and thought many of our members would be interested in this. I hope I posted the link correctly.
We encountered the Queen of the North a couple of times during our sojourn through the Inside Passage last summer. I think I may have a picture of her on our website. I know we took pictures of her on the trip. Pretty amazing that all passengers and crew got off without injury. Quite a contrast to ferry accidents that make the news from other parts of the world.
We encountered the Queen of the North a couple of times during our sojourn through the Inside Passage last summer. I think I may have a picture of her on our website. I know we took pictures of her on the trip. Pretty amazing that all passengers and crew got off without injury. Quite a contrast to ferry accidents that make the news from other parts of the world.
- Night Sailor
- Admiral
- Posts: 1007
- Joined: Mon Dec 26, 2005 4:56 pm
- Sailboat: MacGregor 26X
- Location: '98, MACX1780I798, '97 Merc 50hp Classic, Denton Co. TX "Duet"
picture of ferry in better times
Picture and specs of Queen of the North at:
http://www.bcferries.com/about/fleet/pr ... north.html
http://www.bcferries.com/about/fleet/pr ... north.html
