Asgard II explained

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.[1]

The vessel was owned by the Irish state and operated by Coiste an Asgard (a founding member of Sail Training International). For a period of time in the early eighties, the vessel was commissioned by UCC for use in marine research. Asgard II had a traditional figurehead in the form of a carving of Granuaile.[2] [3]

Sinking

Asgard II sank in the Bay of Biscay on 11 September 2008, 20nmi southwest of Belle-Île-en-Mer,[4] at .

The five crew and twenty trainees had earlier abandoned the vessel after she started taking on water. Asgard II was heading from Falmouth to La Rochelle for some routine maintenance.[5] [6] Assistance was given by and and two lifeboats from Belle Île, Morbihan, France.

Before the end of 2008, a plan to raise the ship was put to the Irish cabinet. It was hoped that the €3.8 million costs would be paid for by the insurers, with the vessel being raised in spring 2009, given favourable conditions.[7]

The vessel was in a relatively good condition on the sea bed with one of her hull planks damaged; it is unclear whether this damage was caused by impact with the sea bed, or was the cause of the sinking, possibly from a collision with a semi–submerged container.[7] She rests under 80m (260feet) of water on a sandy seabed with no rocks, and she was "upright on the seabed and salvageable" in September.[8] An early salvage was desirable before damage from winter storms and fishing nets. On 23 February 2009, the then Minister for Defence, Willie O'Dea, announced that the Asgard II would not be raised. Jimmy Deenihan, spokesperson for the opposition Fine Gael party expressed disappointment:

In 2010, a private team of Irish divers recovered a number of artifacts from the wreck, such as the ship's bell and steering wheel.[9]

Investigation

The loss of Asgard was investigated by the Marine Casualty Investigation Board and its final report was released on 27 September 2010. The most likely cause of the accident, the investigation found, was that the ship collided with a submerged object. Although the maintenance and operation of Asgard II were found to be in excess of that required by the then-current regulations, a recommendation was made that the practice of classing sail training vessels as cargo ships rather than passenger ships should be reviewed.[10]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.defence.ie/website.nsf/document+id/0D8FB5D995738103802570BA005A7CC3 Department of Defence – About Us
  2. Web site: Sail Training Association Vessel Database: Asgard II . Irish Sail Training . 15 January 2004 . 14 September 2008 . https://web.archive.org/web/20040115080335/http://www.tallshipsraces.com/Vessels/Vessel.asp?vessID=29 . 15 January 2004 .
  3. http://www.asgard2.ie/index.php?page=about About the Asgard
  4. Web site: Asgard II sinks off French coast . 11 September 2008 . RTÉ . 12 September 2008. https://web.archive.org/web/20080912093354/http://www.rte.ie/news/2008/0911/asgard.html. 12 September 2008 . live.
  5. http://ireland.indymedia.org/article/89054 The wreck of the Asgard II
  6. http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/europe/article4735380.ece Adventure sailing ship Asgard II sank off the French coast
  7. News: Plan to raise Asgard II from watery grave . The Times. 2 December 2008 . London . 23 November 2008 . John . Mooney.
  8. Web site: Asgard — upright on the seabed, in good condition and salvageable . Afloat Magazine . 3 October 2008 . 19 October 2013 .
  9. http://www.cemsworldwide.com/news_articles/view/latest_news_from_cems CEMS divers on Asguard team
  10. Web site: Report of the Investigation into the Loss of the Brigantine Sailing Ship STV "Asgard II" on 11th September 2008 . . 27 September 2010 . 19 October 2013.