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Ocean Liner History and Stories from the Sea, Past and Present. With an In Depth focus on Holland America Line

Author: Captain Albert (page 7 of 7)

08 Oct. 2018 Civitavecchia, Italy.

Rather un-expectedly I ended up on the Koningsdam for one cruise. My original schedule called for joining the Nieuw Statendam on October 05 but that was rescheduled to October 26, leaving me with a small gap in the program. Hence the option came up to go for one cruise to the Koningsdam for a project that will also be useful for the Nieuw Statendam when she starts sailing. It all has to do with fine tuning a special safety feature the ships have that were constructed after 2014. More about that during one of the coming days.

Our coming 10 day cruise called Mediterranean Mosaic

The Koningsdam is currently making Mediterranean cruises from Civitavecchia and today it will commence a West Mediterranean cruise with a length of 10 days, sailing from Civitavecchia to Cartagena (Spain), Ceuta, Spanish Morocco, Cadiz, Barcelona, Marseille, Monte Carlo and Livorno. Then the next cruise will go to the East side of Italy to Croatia and Greece. The cruise world is still monitoring the situation with Turkey so for the time being the cruise ships (of all the major company’s) are not doing the longer loop cruises which would include Kusadasi and Istanbul.

Captain Noel O’Driscoll has been at sea for 24 years of which 19 with Holland America. See his bio on this blog site.

Master of the ms Koningsdam is Capt. Noel O’Driscoll formerly of the ms Veendam who joined this ship in June  after having played with the 3rd oldest ship in the fleet, he is now in charge of the newest ship in the fleet. In the olden days of yore the youngest captain would start on the oldest or smallest ship and then go by seniority to the larger and newer ship once those ahead of him had moved up and the oldest, normally the commodore, retired. Then we had a period when each ship had a senior master and a Jr. Master would fill the gap when the Sr. went on vacation.  When we went to the 3 on 3 off schedule that did not work anymore either as both captains now served equal time and the younger one did not fill in anymore when it was just convenient for the Sr. Captain.

When the 3 on 3 off schedule for all captains (and other Ships staff members) was established, the company went to teams and that made it possible that a very senior captain would sail on an older and smaller ship and a less senior on a newer and larger one. It came down to personal preferences and where the gap was when you started out. Nowadays the whole system fluctuates even more as several captains do stints at our Simulator school in Almere and when they step out, those gaps have to be filled by whoever is available. The company does like to keep captains with their teams on the same ship but you will see more variation in who is on board a ship nowadays than a few years ago. Once the Nieuw Statendam is in operation, there will be a re-alignment again as it means an addition to the fleet with no ship leaving.

The first ship that will leave will be the ms Prinsendam on 1 May 2019 but in the period afterwards there might also be some captains retiring and that will start another musical chair dance. (I cannot say who is going to retire as they might change their mind again……….. sailors love playing with their boats and the thought of having only a rubber duck in the bath tub to play with, does make many change their mind)

Today in port we have the Costa Magica and the Vision of the Seas so at 17.00 hrs. or just thereafter we should have a nice sail away from the port and heading into the Thyrrenian Sea. It is and will continue to be a beautiful day here, mid 70’s and sunny with a gentle sea breeze and that will give a good start to our new cruise. We have quite a few back to back cruise guests on board who are spending 3 weeks on board and then have the chance to see both the east and west Mediterranean during one vacation.

Most of them took the train to Rome or walked into Civitavecchia today to avoid the mayhem of change over day. Tomorrow we are at sea then we will have our first port of call Cartagena Spain, which came to cruise prominence after the year 2000 and although very popular is still a bit off the beaten track. Yes you can buy the T shirt there but you have to look for it.

 

 

03 June 2018; Hamburg Day 1.

We have two overnight stays in Hamburg as it is impossible to get to Hamburg early from Rotterdam. It is simply too far up river. Staying overnight also ties in with the company policy of trying to offer at least one evening’s long stay in a port which in this case translates into an overnight stay, with a bonus for a 2nd one, as the Kieler Kanal is only 4 hours downstream. Those with a taste for German nightlife will be very pleased. For the sort of cruises that the Prinsendam makes – Explorer cruises – this is quite normal. You cannot see Hamburg in one day, even two days is not really long enough. So an overnight with a full afternoon and a full day is as best as one can do.

The good ship ms Prinsendam is in the capable hands of Captain Dag Dvergastein who has been commanding cruise ships for the last 30 years and came to us via Seabourn. The company is slowly starting to mix the officer teams from both company’s and we now have two HAL captains with Seabourn and a Seabourn Captain with HAL.  Late last evening the white curtain lifted and the Captain could switch off the fog horn much to the delight of the guests who occupied the suites right under the Radar Mast. You get the best cabins on the ship with the suites and also the best view from your balcony but you then also have to accept that you live close to the navigation part of the ship and that includes a lot of honking on the horn if weather or traffic so demands.

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02 June 2018; Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

And thus real life started again and I returned to sea by means of the ms Prinsendam. I was supposed to join the Koningsdam first, but the Prinsendam will be celebrating her 30th. birthday on June 11 and I was asked by the ship to do a few lectures in relation to HAL and our Elegant Explorer. Thus we juggled the schedule around and here we are combining work and hobby-pleasure.  Before we dive back in the real world; a small side step with something that happened while I was at home. Also in relation to the history of the company and in relation to the original reason we have a Veendam sailing in the fleet.

Explaining who W.A Scholten was. This is the ship from 1874 with it’s first Master, Captain Hus Top right and its last Master Captain Taat Lower Left. (Photo courtesy Mr. Ruud van Deventer, son of ex HAL Captain Van Deventer)

Back in the grey mists of time, 145 years ago, Holland America was founded and went public with having a listing on the Dutch Stock Exchange. Out of nowhere a rich industrialist from the Northern part of the Netherlands popped up and bought so many shares that the company was able to finance a complete ship from it. Thus the company named this ship after him. Mr. W.A Scholten was inspired to invest in HAL because he only saw German shipping posters at the various railway stations he used while traveling between his various factories in the Netherlands and as far as Poland. The ss W.A Scholten sank in 1887 but the company replaced it very quickly. By that time the DAM naming system had come in vogue and thus they could not repeat the personal name.  But no problems here, Mr. Scholten was born in Veendam and thus in 1888 the ss Veendam (I) started sailing for the company.  And for most of our history we have had a Veendam in the fleet. The current Veendam being nbr IV.

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29 April 2018; Zeebrugge, Belgium.

Zeebrugge is an entry port for Belgium, same as Antwerp but on a much smaller scale. Although with Antwerp you dock in the middle of the city (as long as your ship fits in the turning basin) and in Zeebrugge you are in the middle of nowhere but it is much less time consuming than the run up and down the river Scheldt and the whole long stretch over the Westerschelde through Holland. Zeebrugge is the Gateway City for Bruges and Bruxelles but is not so bad itself. The port runs a shuttle bus service to downtown Zeebrugge which is a small but homely town with a nice shopping street. But it also has a boulevard with a beach and that is very nice in the summer time. Especially if you like Mussels and Frites (= the Belgium version of French Fries). Today the weather was not that great for a beach day, with a light but cold wind and occasional rain but it was still good enough to be able to enjoy the tours to the hinterland.

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