SOFT NEWS Ireland's only surviving wooden cargo sailing boat resumes deliveries to islands

Melodi

Disaster Cat
Another "soft" but really nice news story to help balance the really bad stuff at least a little bit, Ireland's last wooden sailing vessel is being used to deliver and receive shipments from some of the Irish Islands out in the Atlantic.
Ireland's only surviving wooden cargo sailing boat resumes deliveries to islands off the south and west coast
The Ilen left Baltimore in west Cork earlier today.
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The Ilen used to carry cargo between the Falkland Islands

The Ilen used to carry cargo between the Falkland Islands
Image: Gary MacMahon/PA
IRELAND’S ONLY SURVIVING wooden cargo sailing boat revived a tradition lost a century ago when it embarked on a series of wind-powered supply trips to islands off the south and west coasts today.
The Ilen, which was built in Baltimore in West Cork in 1926, is Ireland’s last wooden cargo vessel with a hold, and heir to a centuries-old trading tradition which is now being revived worldwide as an eco-friendly sustainable alternative to powered freight.
The two-week voyage, crewed by locals Con and Denis Cadogan, left Baltimore with a cargo of locally produced cheese, coffee and whiskey to pick up gin from Cape Clear Island.
The cargo ketch served for over 70 years transporting sheep and goods between the Falkland Islands before being brought back to Ireland 20 years ago and restored by a team led by Limerick man Gary MacMahon.

The rotating crew of four will sail to Kilrush Creek Marina on Thursday and then on to Foynes Island on Saturday, home to its original designer Conor O’Brien, who died there in 1952.
Ilen then travels up the Shannon estuary to Limerick on 31 August where locally produced Ishka water, Limerick beer and whiskey will be loaded for the journey to Kilronan in the Aran Islands on 2 September.
More supplies will be unloaded at Dingle before the ketch completes its journey to Cork Harbour on 7 September to deliver the remainder of its cargo.
Ilen now serves as a community floating classroom and cargo vessel – last year visiting 23 ports and making a transatlantic crossing to Greenland as part of a relationship-building project to link youth in Limerick City with youth in Nuuk, west Greenland.
MacMahon said: “The Ilen is a community and training project, and is part of a growing fleet of sailing ships around the world providing an alternative and more environmentally friendly way of delivering cargoes.
“Here in Ireland we have loads of wind, but just one ship that can harness it and the tide to deliver products in a sustainable manner.

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“This symbolic voyage is looking to educate people that we have a network of small ports around the coast and the islands which were built in the 19th century for this purpose, and can be used again for eco-trading.
“This method of cargo delivery was phased out due to the expansion of the road network in the 1920s and 30s, with the last delivery under sail alone taking place in the Shannon Estuary in 1953.
“All over Europe, sail cargo deliveries are springing up and people are using the trade winds to travel to Madeira and the Caribbean, bringing back rum and coffee.
“Worldwide, eco-trading is a growing movement and serious design time is being put into designing full-sized modern cargo ships that can harness the wind and reduce fossil fuel use and air pollution.”


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Melodi

Disaster Cat
That's a cool thing, I wonder if it's profitable?

The whole, "sustainable, eco-friendly, alternative", spin on this...

it just makes my butt itch.
I almost said "ignore that part" these days in Ireland (and the UK) I've noticed that nearly every single article has to have that "spin" on it.

I don't think it is "profitable" but neither are any of the other ways to get goods and services to those Islands, which is why in the 1950s some of them were forcibly evacuated.

That did not go over well and some of the Islands have been populated for thousands of years and are a good draw for tourists who do bring in quite a bit of cash (both to those islands and the rest of Ireland).

But tourist transport doesn't tend to do things like haul loads of live sheep or cargo of cheese, they can bring the mail and smaller things but some of these places are only assessable by either boat or helicopter.

So in the long run, the government subsidizing a ship that was already restored and usable in this way, and adding something for the tourists to look at (and for all I know to book the occasional ride on after travel recovers) makes a lot of sense.
 

Freeholder

This too shall pass.
That's a cool thing, I wonder if it's profitable?

The whole, "sustainable, eco-friendly, alternative", spin on this...

it just makes my butt itch.


I have to agree about the 'green' spin on everything. However, I think it's great if sailing boats and ships can be put back into use for something other than recreation. They are beautiful, historical, and have a great many practical uses; like horses, it would be shame to lose them entirely even if they may always be a small part of the entire picture.

Of course, if something happens and fuel for powered ships and boats becomes too expensive, or unavailable, we will be ahead of the game wherever sailing vessels are still in use. There will at least be some people left who know how to build and operate and maintain them. Ditto with horses and horse-drawn equipment.

Kathleen
 

sy32478

Veteran Member
Very nice. I'd love to visit someday. My family on my paternal grandfather's side a well known craftsmen known for their hookers.

I wonder if there is a genetic predisposition for the love of being under sail. It certainly permeated 3 generations in the US none who've been to Ireland.
 

Zagdid

Veteran Member
That's a cool thing, I wonder if it's profitable?

The whole, "sustainable, eco-friendly, alternative", spin on this...

it just makes my butt itch.
The fuel is free. Might be 'right sized' against the cargo demand. Crew size seems affordable. A better question to ask might be if it's meant to be profitable or only a historic nicety. (wondering if they insure the cargo)
 

Old Gray Mare

TB Fanatic
That's a cool thing, I wonder if it's profitable?
My initial take was: "JIT technology takes a giant step backwards".

However the islands in question aren't the easiest to get to, a shallow draft has its advantages. The seas in the area also have a bad reputation. The best argument is the costs of labor and fuel. OPEC taught us a lesson on how fast fuel costs and availability can change and quickly.
 
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Marthanoir

TB Fanatic
Best be training crew(S) on her so that, in the nearish future they have crews who know how she and her (soonish to be born sisters) behave.

A lot of Irish kids ( They're now adults ) trained on the Asgard II

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Asgard II was the Irish national sail training vessel, until she sank in the Bay of Biscay in 2008. A brigantine, she was commissioned on 7 March 1981 and purpose-built as a sail training vessel by Jack Tyrrell in Arklow, County Wicklow. She was named after the Asgard, a yacht which smuggled weapons for the Irish Volunteers in 1914.
 

jed turtle

a brother in the Lord
Very nice. I'd love to visit someday. My family on my paternal grandfather's side a well known craftsmen known for their hookers.

I wonder if there is a genetic predisposition for the love of being under sail. It certainly permeated 3 generations in the US none who've been to Ireland.
Could you clarify the meaning of “hookers”? Asking for a friend...
 
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