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Rosemount - PD313
Uploaded by
Steve Ellwood
, Jul 02 2011 06:09 PM
- Owner: Steve Ellwood (View all images and albums)
- Uploaded: Jul 02 2011 06:09 PM
- Views: 2,319
- Category: Peterhead (PD)
Rosemount - PD313 in Peterhead Harbour, Scotland on 23rd June 2011.
Former : INS10 KILORAN
Main Gear type : PTB - Bottom pair trawls
Hull material code : 2 - Metal
Year of Construction : 1983
Place of Construction : CAMPBELTOWN
LOA : 26,00
Beam : 7.20
Draft : 3.00
Tonnage GT : 176,00 T
Engine : Deutz SBA-12m
yikes!
its a shame seeing boats look lis
Aye, its had its problems - this from the Aberdeen Press and Journal @ http://www.pressandj...le.aspx/1267760
Crew brings Peterhead trawler back to harbour after sinking scare
By Jamie Buchan
Published: 18/06/2009
A fishing crew who battled to keep their trawler afloat in the North Sea arrived back into port yesterday morning.
The Peterhead-registered Rosemount began flooding early yesterday, while fishing some 60 miles off the north-east coast.
A coastguard helicopter, Fraserburgh’s lifeboat and another fishing boat came to her aid, just after 1.30am.
The 86ft vessel managed to drain most of the seawater using pumps lowered on to the deck from the coastguard helicopter which had been sent from Sumburgh.
The Rosemount, with a crew of six including skipper David Marr, limped back into Peterhead harbour yesterday morning, escorted by sister vessel Sunrise and the RNLI crew.
It’s not the first time the boat has run into difficulties.
In January 2007, the boat had to be refloated after she became grounded near the St Fergus gas terminal.
It took 24 hours to get the Rosemount off the sandy beach at Rattray Head.
Yesterday a spokeswoman for the boat’s owners, Grampian Sea Fishing Ltd, said: “We’re still trying to find out what happened. There was a lot of water coming into the fish hold, but they managed to pump most of it away.
“They came back to Peterhead under their own steam.”
She said the Rosemount was being checked by engineers at the port’s ship lift.
Mr Marr, of Towerhill, Peterhead, declined to comment.
A spokesman for Aberdeen Coastguard said last night: “We got the first call at 1.30am from the vessel.
“The boat was taking in quite a bit of water and they were struggling to cope with the pumps they had on board.
“The Sunrise was standing by to offer assistance and a helicopter was sent out from Sumburgh.”
At the time the leak was discovered, the sea had been relatively calm.
Just before Christmas 2007, a Norwegian military helicopter was scrambled to the Rosemount, 180 miles off the Aberdeen coast, when a man on board collapsed.
Crew brings Peterhead trawler back to harbour after sinking scare
By Jamie Buchan
Published: 18/06/2009
A fishing crew who battled to keep their trawler afloat in the North Sea arrived back into port yesterday morning.
The Peterhead-registered Rosemount began flooding early yesterday, while fishing some 60 miles off the north-east coast.
A coastguard helicopter, Fraserburgh’s lifeboat and another fishing boat came to her aid, just after 1.30am.
The 86ft vessel managed to drain most of the seawater using pumps lowered on to the deck from the coastguard helicopter which had been sent from Sumburgh.
The Rosemount, with a crew of six including skipper David Marr, limped back into Peterhead harbour yesterday morning, escorted by sister vessel Sunrise and the RNLI crew.
It’s not the first time the boat has run into difficulties.
In January 2007, the boat had to be refloated after she became grounded near the St Fergus gas terminal.
It took 24 hours to get the Rosemount off the sandy beach at Rattray Head.
Yesterday a spokeswoman for the boat’s owners, Grampian Sea Fishing Ltd, said: “We’re still trying to find out what happened. There was a lot of water coming into the fish hold, but they managed to pump most of it away.
“They came back to Peterhead under their own steam.”
She said the Rosemount was being checked by engineers at the port’s ship lift.
Mr Marr, of Towerhill, Peterhead, declined to comment.
A spokesman for Aberdeen Coastguard said last night: “We got the first call at 1.30am from the vessel.
“The boat was taking in quite a bit of water and they were struggling to cope with the pumps they had on board.
“The Sunrise was standing by to offer assistance and a helicopter was sent out from Sumburgh.”
At the time the leak was discovered, the sea had been relatively calm.
Just before Christmas 2007, a Norwegian military helicopter was scrambled to the Rosemount, 180 miles off the Aberdeen coast, when a man on board collapsed.
whats going to happen with the rosemount it looks in a bad way it needs a lick of paint.
Crackin pic (pardon the pun)......
Aye, just lying there wasted!;-)
was this one no ashore once or twice
Will be back fishing shortly new partner on an oil job!
Quote
was this one no ashore once or twice
Definitely been on the "rocks", so to speak.
So there's something in the pipe then?