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 Re: News articles re foreign ferries
« Reply #175 on Oct 3, 2009, 3:01am »

Two reports today:

http://marinelink.com/en-US/News/Article/332046.aspx

Another Double-Ended Ferry on the Garonne

The double-ended ferry La Gironde has been in service at Europe’s largest river mouth, the Garonne estuary, since 2002. With the sister vessel L’Estuaire even more tourists will now be able to pass the popular river mouth in order to reach the sea faster by car.

Each of the structurally identical ships is fitted with four Voith Schneider Propellers (VSP) class 21 GII/135, driven by four 1080 kW diesel engines. Both vessels have to meet draught limits of just 8.5 ft but still reach a speed of 13.6 knots.

Other external obstacles that the ferries have to overcome are the tidal differences in the estuary caused by strong tidal currents. La Gironde excels by its high sailing stability and reliability. The operator Conseil Général de la Gironde therefore ordered a structurally identical second vessel, which has been built by Chantier Piriou shipyards in Concarneau in Brittany. L’Estuaire has a total length of 256 ft and is 60 ft wide. Apart from 600 passengers, 138 cars or six trucks and another 93 cars can be accommodated on the crossing from Verdon sur Mer to Royan.

In the near future, another two double-ended ferries with VSPs will enter service. On the Rhone, it will be the Barcarain V, measuring 141 ft in length and 46 ft in width, fitted with two VSPs size 16R5 EC/120-1.

The new ferry is driven by two 520-kW engines and can carry a maximum of 200 passengers and 36 cars (or 24 cars and four trucks). The ferry operates on 22 hours every day and has to comply with strict environmental regulations in the conservation area of the Camarque.

The Bac 23, another VSP-driven double-ended ferry, is about to enter service on the Seine. It features four VSPs type 12R4 EC/75-1 and is driven by four 260-kW engines. At a length of 104.6 ft and a width of 57.4 ft, it can hold 200 passengers and 28 cars. Both ferries are operated by public authorities.

(www.voithturbo.com)

http://marinelink.com/en-US/News/Article/332045.aspx

UK Report, Truck Breaks Loose on Ferry

he UK Marine Accident Investigation Branch (MAIB) issued the report of its investigation of the shift of an articulated road tanker on board a roll-on roll-off high-speed sea service cargo ferry in Loch Ryan, Scotland on 28 January 2009. The truck driver left the truck out of gear and did not apply the parking brake. Neither the ferry’s deck securing points nor the truck’s ferry securing points accorded with applicable international or national standards. The lashing straps were of insufficient strength. The truck broke loose as the ferry accelerated on departure from port and trimmed by the stern. The semi-trailer portion of the vehicle crashed through the stern door of the ferry and came to rest on the vessel’s port water jet units. The ferry was able to return to port. Report No. 21/2009 (10/1/09).
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 Re: News articles re foreign ferries
« Reply #176 on Oct 14, 2009, 4:47am »

http://marinelink.com/en-US/News/Article/332146.aspx

Nathans Auditor of Swansea-Cork Ferry Ops

Ireland-based accountant and consultant Moore Stephens Nathans has been appointed auditor to the group of companies recently set up under the name Fastnet Line to operate a new passenger and freight ferry link between Swansea in Wales and Cork in Ireland. The service is scheduled to begin on March 1, 2010, providing the first crossing since 2006.

The cessation of the old Swansea-Cork ferry operation in 2006 caused an estimated annual loss of $51.7 to businesses in Ireland, which relied on the service to bring large numbers of UK and EU tourists into the south-west of the country. Since the service ended, a number of lobby groups in both Ireland and Wales have been campaigning for a return of the ferry link, the absence of which has involved an additional three-to-four hours’ travel from Rosslare, the closest alternative port to Cork, for motorists and hauliers. The new year-round service will take approximately ten hours and will offer most hauliers and motorists a round-trip saving of more than 600km over alternative sea crossings.

To operate the service, Fastnet Line has acquired the 1982-built ferry Julia at a cost of $11.5m, $9.3m of which was funded by Aktia Bank in Finland. The 505.2-ft long vessel has capacity over ten decks for 1,860 passengers, 440 cars and 30 trailers, with more than 300 passenger cabins. It has most recently been operating between Helsinki and St Petersburg.

Ned Murphy, a partner with Moore Stephens Nathans, said, “There has been a strong and growing demand for the Swansea-Cork ferry operation to be resurrected, and we are delighted to be involved in the project as auditors on behalf of the investors. Approximately Euros2.5m was raised as equity from a share subscription in the West Cork Tourism Co-op, with each member contributing Euros10, 000. An additional Euros2.5m is expected to be raised, primarily for working capital purposes, by way of secured bonds in slots of Euros50, 000, each returning a coupon (interest payment) of ten per cent per annum, repayable after four years.

“The Fastnet Line is set to have a very positive impact on the economy of south-west Ireland when it begins operating in March next year. Provisional projected turnover for 2010 is Euros8.9m, rising to Euros12.1m in 2013.”
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 Re: News articles re foreign ferries
« Reply #177 on Oct 16, 2009, 10:22am »

Sea France has taken the big step of no longer carrying foot passengers. The falling volumes, partially due to the Chunnel and the economy were the likely cause. I read an article in either Shipping Monthly or Ship Review to that effect. When you go to their website there is no foot passenger option. It means reduced expenses dealing with the foot passenger bridge, cleaning of the waiting lounges and other associated costs.

From their website, "Can I travel as a foot passenger? From 1st October 2009 SeaFrance will no longer take foot passengers on their services to Calais. Demand for this type of ticket has been falling steadily over the years to a point now where it is no longer viable to run the buses needed to get the foot passenfers to and from the ship.

SeaFrance will continue to offer a service for foot passengers travelling in groups who can use their own coach services to get from the terminal to the ship and to those travelling by bicycle."
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 Re: News articles re foreign ferries
« Reply #178 on Oct 19, 2009, 8:31am »

http://fairplay.co.uk/login.aspx?reason=....020091019000005

New crew ends Oz stand-off

A BASS Strait inter-island ro-pax company is expected to resume trading today after the owners replaced crew who last week tied the ship up over a back-pay claim. Southern Shipping owner Geoffrey Gabriel said he has recruited 12 seafarers from the Australian mainland to enable the vessel Matthew Flinders III to resume its government-subsidised contract service between Tasmania and Bass Strait islands. Crew members, chasing A$30,000 ($27,500) in allegedly unpaid wages, walked off the ship at Lady Barron on Flinders Island and refused to move it.
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 Re: News articles re foreign ferries
« Reply #179 on Oct 26, 2009, 11:53am »

Okay, tough one to classify...things you don't usually hear or ferries abroad...
http://www.cbc.ca/cp/Oddities/091026/K102608AU.html

Norwegian ferry passenger accused of skin-crawling snake smuggling scheme

OSLO, Norway - A man has been arrested in Norway trying to smuggle two dozen snakes and geckos into the country by hiding them under his clothes.

Customs agent Helge Breilid said Monday the 22-year-old Norwegian citizen was apprehended in the southern town of Kristiansand after getting off a ferry from Hirtshals, Denmark. He said the man had 14 royal pythons and 10 albino leopard geckos under his clothes.

Breilid said the non-venomous snakes - the smallest species in the python family - were hidden in stockings duct-taped to the man's abdomen. The geckos were in boxes taped to his thighs.

Customs officials found the reptiles, which are not endangered, Sunday during a search following the discovery of a tarantula in one of the man's bags.
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 Re: News articles re foreign ferries
« Reply #180 on Oct 30, 2009, 6:39pm »


Oct 26, 2009, 11:53am, D'Elete BC in NJ wrote:
Okay, tough one to classify...things you don't usually hear or ferries abroad...
http://www.cbc.ca/cp/Oddities/091026/K102608AU.html

Norwegian ferry passenger accused of skin-crawling snake smuggling scheme

OSLO, Norway - A man has been arrested in Norway trying to smuggle two dozen snakes and geckos into the country by hiding them under his clothes.

Customs agent Helge Breilid said Monday the 22-year-old Norwegian citizen was apprehended in the southern town of Kristiansand after getting off a ferry from Hirtshals, Denmark. He said the man had 14 royal pythons and 10 albino leopard geckos under his clothes.

Breilid said the non-venomous snakes - the smallest species in the python family - were hidden in stockings duct-taped to the man's abdomen. The geckos were in boxes taped to his thighs.

Customs officials found the reptiles, which are not endangered, Sunday during a search following the discovery of a tarantula in one of the man's bags.


OH MY GOD!.. :-X Talk about a body crawling with critters!
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 Re: News articles re foreign ferries
« Reply #181 on Oct 31, 2009, 12:26am »

Sounds like the plot for the long-awaited sequel to that wonderful movie Snakes on a Plane

This gives me the Heebies and the Jeebies!
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 Re: News articles re foreign ferries
« Reply #182 on Nov 4, 2009, 12:14pm »

From Fairplay:

Lost ferry was full of holes

A SAFETY inquiry has listed a catalogue of serious safety hazards in the sinking of the Tongan ferry Princess Ashika.

Included were: holes in the decks, heavily corroded hull and deck sections, blocked scuppers and vents, worn safety rails and ropes, damaged access gates and fresh paint over badly rusted areas.

The 1972-built vessel capsized and sank in calm weather on 5 August, 280km from the Tongan capital of Nuku‘alofa while on an inter-island voyage.

At least 75 people, including many children, were lost in the casualty and remain entombed in the wreck, which is unlikely to be recovered.

Royal Commission investigators have examined graphic photos of its unseaworthy condition, which were introduced into evidence by government marine engineer Mosese Fakatou.

Mosese told investigators that he “stepped carefully” around the ship for fear of falling through: in one instance he could see the ocean through a hole in the vehicle deck.

John Jonesse, general manager of the government-owned Shipping Corp of Polynesia, originally told the panel that he honestly believed the ship was in “good mechanical condition”, but later conceded that the evidence was to the contrary.

Jonesse personally oversaw the ferry’s purchase from Fijian owners but told investigators that he had relied on advice from surveyors. Its passenger certification had already been reduced from 405 to 160 under Fijian control, but it was carrying 180 on the night of the disaster.
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 Re: News articles re foreign ferries
« Reply #183 on Nov 13, 2009, 10:54pm »


Quote:
Ferry rolls over in heavy seas

Tokyo - Japanese rescuers averted a disaster on Friday when they evacuated 28 passengers and crew from a ferry that rolled onto its side in rough seas in the Pacific Ocean, the Japan Coast Guard said.

Ariake, a commercial ferry carrying 3 300 tons of cargo, started tipping onto its side at around 5.20am (20.20GMT) some 20 kilometres off Mie, western Japan, leaking fuel and belching black smoke.

The coastguard mobilised six patrol boats and four aircraft and rescued the seven passengers and 21 crew from the ferry, which was headed from Tokyo to the southern island of Okinawa, a spokeswoman said.

Some people were lifted off the vessel by helicopters, while others were saved by coastguard patrol ships after jumping into the sea, news reports said.

One passenger, a 70-year-old man, and the chief engineer suffered minor injuries, Jiji Press said. - AFP

Found here: http://www.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=1&....95413629C869292
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 Re: News articles re foreign ferries
« Reply #184 on Nov 15, 2009, 8:26pm »

Not news, but on the CBS TV show "The Amazing Race":

- the racers travelled by ferry from Stockholm to Tallin (Estonia), on Silja / Tallink line.

It was a 16-hour trip, and the ferry looked like a jumbo NorEx.
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 Re: News articles re foreign ferries
« Reply #185 on Nov 22, 2009, 4:09am »

File this one under "Things that go bump in the night!"

The M/V Marko Polo (former Stena Nordica) went HARD aground.

http://www.cargolaw.com/2009nightmare_marco-polo.html

Awesome photos. Cargo Law is a great website that chronicles a lot of "bad days at work."

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 Re: News articles re foreign ferries
« Reply #186 on Nov 25, 2009, 11:01am »


Nov 22, 2009, 4:09am, M/V LeConte wrote:
File this one under "Things that go bump in the night!"

The M/V Marko Polo (former Stena Nordica) went HARD aground.

http://www.cargolaw.com/2009nightmare_marco-polo.html

Awesome photos. Cargo Law is a great website that chronicles a lot of "bad days at work."

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The Marko Polo actually looks eerily similar to the Queen of the North. Definitely a common design lineage. Maybe there is some feature built in to that design style that is very attractive to reefs and islands which tend to want to reach out and grab the ships.
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 Re: News articles re foreign ferries
« Reply #187 on Nov 26, 2009, 9:44am »


Nov 25, 2009, 11:01am, The Essential Mill Bay wrote:
The Marko Polo actually looks eerily similar to the Queen of the North. Definitely a common design lineage. Maybe there is some feature built in to that design style that is very attractive to reefs and islands which tend to want to reach out and grab the ships.


Or at least attractive to crews that aren't paying attention, as has been heavily alleged in the QotN incident.
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 Re: News articles re foreign ferries
« Reply #188 on Dec 4, 2009, 5:13am »

I'm still looking for more info on this, but I heard a report on BBC this morning that a small passenger vessel collided with a ferry either this morning or last night with the loss of 30 lives.

EDIT:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/8394891.stm

Bangladesh ferry sinks - at least 46 are dead

A river ferry has capsized and sunk in Bangladesh, killing at least 46 people - the second such incident in a week.
Half of the victims of the latest accident were children, and most of the rest were women.
The boat they were travelling on collided with another vessel on the Daira river, about 100km (62 miles) north of the capital Dhaka.
According to police, the boats struck each other on a bend in the river in foggy conditions.
As many as 100 people were travelling on the vessel which sank and it is feared the number of dead will rise.
Rescue operations are continuing.
The BBC correspondent in Dhaka says ferry accidents are fairly common on Bangladesh's vast river network. Last week more than 80 people drowned when an overcrowded ferry capsized.

The previous incident referred to in the story above.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/cbbcnews/hi/newsid_8380000/newsid_8385000/8385040.stm

Dozens killed as ferry capsizes
A crowded ferry has capsized in southern Bangladesh, killing at least 51 people.
The MV Coco-4 ferry is thought to have been carrying up to 1,500 passengers when it ran aground as it arrived at the town of Lalmohan on Bhola Island.
It's thought the weight of passengers rushing to get off the ferry may have caused it to tip and start to sink.
Rescuers are still searching for dozens of people who are feared to be trapped inside the triple-decker vessel.

Emergency workers have now got the ferry upright again, making it easier for rescuers to reach the cabins inside.
Most of the passengers had been going home to celebrate the Muslim festival of Eid.
It's not uncommon for disasters like this to happen in Bangladesh where lots of people travel on ferries.
The accidents are often blamed on unsafe, ageing boats and overcrowding.


As a really off track aside, I found this link on BBC's site very interesting http://news.bbc.co.uk/cbbcnews/hi/newsid_2330000/newsid_2333800/2333893.stm

The second story I posted is on a section of their website which is aimed at kids...there is no sugar coating of the facts, but BBC apparently has realized children may need additional attention to deal with/process some of the harsh realities of life. I did a quick, slightly random survey with Google, and didn't really see anything quite like BBC's approach to children's news services. Most of the sites I looked at really seemed to favour a sticky sweet approach to world news...I just found BBC's approach refreshing...
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 Re: News articles re foreign ferries
« Reply #189 on Dec 4, 2009, 7:32am »

Catamaran ferries in Tasmania:



Quote:
Cats shape up as ferries

DAMIEN BROWN
December 04, 2009 06:25am

TASMANIAN ship builder Bob Clifford has told TT-Line if it wants a custom-built ship he can oblige.

Mr Clifford said the catamarans that were now being built by the Hobart company would be able to provide a reliable service across the often unpredictable Bass Strait.
When the Incat ferries were first introduced to the Bass Strait run in 1997 they proved unsuccessful because rough seas over four metres resulted in numerous cancellations and hundreds of stranded passengers.

During one of the final seasons of the Devil Cat in 2002 there were seven cancelled sailings in a period of just two weeks.

But Mr Clifford said the vessels were too short, at around 80 metres, to handle the Bass Strait.

"The size of the ships we are building now are five times larger and the real issues relate to displacement," Mr Clifford said.

"The early Bass Strait cats were about 3500 tonnes, the last ship we built was over 110 metres and had a displacement of 11,500 tonnes.

"These size ships are capable of trouble free travel on Bass Strait."

The comment followed an announcement by TT-Line chairman Denis Rogers that the state-owned company was already looking for a replacement for the two Spirit of Tasmania vessels.

The two ships that are just 11 years old and have only been on the Melbourne to Devonport run for seven years, are due for replacement in 2017.

And instead of a second-hand vessel, which has been the general practice of TT-Line, Mr Rogers hinted Tasmania may gets its first purpose-built ship at a cost of more than $500 million.

Mr Clifford said there was a 130-metre, 16,000 tonne catamaran on the drawing board that would be targeted at the European market -- the largest ever produced by Incat.

"The technology is changing all of the time and we are very capable of building a reliable ship for TT-Line.

"If they [TT-Line] come to me and ask me for a ship I'll absolutely give it due consideration."

He said the world shipping market was in recession which made it easy for companies to build vessels economically.

"But while there is a downturn at the moment we are expecting big things in the next year or two, and a lot of shipyards around the world will be working on bigger and better prospects."


from here: http://www.themercury.com.au/article/2009/12/04/113531_tasmania-news.html
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 Re: News articles re foreign ferries
« Reply #190 on Dec 23, 2009, 9:04pm »

http://www.cbc.ca/world/story/2009/12/23/manila-bay-accident023.html

Another Philippine ferry accident. This one hit a fishing boat in Manila Bay. It was a wooden-hulled ferry, so it sank as well. So far 47 people missing. I don't think it was one of the "major" ferry lines in the Philippines, but they have not been exempt from disaster in the past.

The article mentions another ferry disaster that happened in the Philippines 22 years ago - maybe the worst ferry disaster of all time. The Dona Paz of the Sulpicio Lines (very bad accident record) collided with an oil tanker which caused a massive fire and both vessels to eventually sink. There were 24 survivors from the ferry. Survivors said that the life jacket lockers were locked and that that water all around the ship was on fire. It took 8 hours for the Philippine authorities to hear about the disaster and another 8 before a rescue was operational.

The Wikipedia article states that 4,375 people died in the accident. The official passenger manifest claimed there were only 1,493 passenger, but most official and government sources concede that there were likely more than twice that many. Wikipedia references an article that says "of the 21 bodies identified 5 days after the accident, only one of the fatalities was listed on the official passenger manifest."

This happened 22 years ago this past Sunday - December 20, 1987.
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 Re: News articles re foreign ferries
« Reply #191 on Dec 27, 2009, 3:50am »

And again!
http://www.cbc.ca/world/story/2009/12/26/philippines-ferry-sinking026.html

Philippines ferry sinking leaves 3 dead, 22 missing

A passenger ferry sank in the northern Philippines in a second sea disaster in three days. Three bodies were recovered and 22 people were missing, the coast guard said Sunday.

Search-and-rescue teams rescued 63 passengers and crew of the MV Baleno-9 and were scouring the seas for others still unaccounted for, the coast guard said in a statement.

It quoted survivors as saying the vessel took in water coming from the bow ramp and listed before going under while traversing the area of Verde Island Passage off Batangas province, south of Manila.

On Christmas Eve, a wooden-hulled ferry with 73 people on board collided with a fishing vessel near the mouth of Manila Bay and 24 people are still missing.

Three bodies and 46 survivors have been recovered from that accident, which prompted President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo to suspend operations of the companies involved in the collision.

Officials suspected Thursday's accident was likely caused by human error, but a formal inquiry was expected to begin Monday.

Sea accidents are common in the archipelago because of tropical storms, badly maintained boats and weak enforcement of safety regulations.

Last year, a ferry overturned after sailing toward a powerful typhoon in the central Philippines, killing more than 800 people on board.

In December 1987, the ferry Dona Paz sank after colliding with a fuel tanker, killing more than 4,341 people in the world's worst peacetime maritime disaster.
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 Re: News articles re foreign ferries
« Reply #192 on Dec 27, 2009, 4:13pm »


Dec 27, 2009, 3:50am, D'Elete BC in NJ wrote:
And again!
http://www.cbc.ca/world/story/2009/12/26/philippines-ferry-sinking026.html

Philippines ferry sinking leaves 3 dead, 22 missing

A passenger ferry sank in the northern Philippines in a second sea disaster in three days. Three bodies were recovered and 22 people were missing, the coast guard said Sunday.

Search-and-rescue teams rescued 63 passengers and crew of the MV Baleno-9 and were scouring the seas for others still unaccounted for, the coast guard said in a statement.

It quoted survivors as saying the vessel took in water coming from the bow ramp and listed before going under while traversing the area of Verde Island Passage off Batangas province, south of Manila.

On Christmas Eve, a wooden-hulled ferry with 73 people on board collided with a fishing vessel near the mouth of Manila Bay and 24 people are still missing.

Three bodies and 46 survivors have been recovered from that accident, which prompted President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo to suspend operations of the companies involved in the collision.

Officials suspected Thursday's accident was likely caused by human error, but a formal inquiry was expected to begin Monday.

Sea accidents are common in the archipelago because of tropical storms, badly maintained boats and weak enforcement of safety regulations.

Last year, a ferry overturned after sailing toward a powerful typhoon in the central Philippines, killing more than 800 people on board.

In December 1987, the ferry Dona Paz sank after colliding with a fuel tanker, killing more than 4,341 people in the world's worst peacetime maritime disaster.


I'm thinking if I ever visit the Philippines, I'll skip taking any ferry excursions. :o
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 Re: News articles re foreign ferries
« Reply #193 on Dec 28, 2009, 5:45am »


Dec 27, 2009, 4:13pm, EGfleet wrote:

Dec 27, 2009, 3:50am, D'Elete BC in NJ wrote:
And again!
http://www.cbc.ca/world/story/2009/12/26/philippines-ferry-sinking026.html

Philippines ferry sinking leaves 3 dead, 22 missing

A passenger ferry sank in the northern Philippines in a second sea disaster in three days. Three bodies were recovered and 22 people were missing, the coast guard said Sunday.

Search-and-rescue teams rescued 63 passengers and crew of the MV Baleno-9 and were scouring the seas for others still unaccounted for, the coast guard said in a statement.

It quoted survivors as saying the vessel took in water coming from the bow ramp and listed before going under while traversing the area of Verde Island Passage off Batangas province, south of Manila.

On Christmas Eve, a wooden-hulled ferry with 73 people on board collided with a fishing vessel near the mouth of Manila Bay and 24 people are still missing.

Three bodies and 46 survivors have been recovered from that accident, which prompted President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo to suspend operations of the companies involved in the collision.

Officials suspected Thursday's accident was likely caused by human error, but a formal inquiry was expected to begin Monday.

Sea accidents are common in the archipelago because of tropical storms, badly maintained boats and weak enforcement of safety regulations.

Last year, a ferry overturned after sailing toward a powerful typhoon in the central Philippines, killing more than 800 people on board.

In December 1987, the ferry Dona Paz sank after colliding with a fuel tanker, killing more than 4,341 people in the world's worst peacetime maritime disaster.


I'm thinking if I ever visit the Philippines, I'll skip taking any ferry excursions. :o

Oh, where's your sense of adventure? Toothbrush...check...underwear...check...wet suit...check...SpareAir...check...EPIRB...check...
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Chester-Hadlyme Ferry on the Connecticut River
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