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Greencastle gets €200,000 boat 07.10.11

St Finnian “a world class piece of kit”

by Linda McGrory

A SAFER and faster €200,000 Coast Guard lifeboat will be launched tomorrow at a naming and blessing ceremony in Greencastle.
The local unit has received one of only three 9-metre rescue boats recently assigned to the Irish Coast Guard.
The new vessel, made by Delta in Stockport, is fitted with state-of-the-art communications technology, can travel further distances at higher speeds and can carry up to six crew.
The top class boat will be unveiled at a blessing ceremony at Greencastle Coast Guard station on Saturday and, we can reveal, will be named St Finnian. Deputy Joe McHugh will represent the Minister for Transport, Leo Varadkar, for the unveiling.
Greencastle Coast Guard crew members give St Finnian a test run ahead of its official unveiling.
Officer in charge, Charles Cavanagh, said he and his 25 crew members were "very proud" to have received one of the top class vessels.
"This is a cutting edge, new generation boat that gives us a greater range and capacity. It is very powerful with a total of 450 horsepower and can travel at speeds of between 45 and 50mph,” he said.
"It gives us greater safety and is more fitting for the sea conditions we get here off the North coast.
"There are six shockwave seats with better suspension which reduces the impact for the crew when we take a hit on the waves especially at speed. It's a world class piece of kit."
The new vessel is a Rigid Inflatable Boat (RIB) with a fibre-glass hull. It has electronic chart plotters, radar, VHF and an automatic vessel tracking system (AIS).
It brings to two the vessels now available to Greencastle Coast Guard which comprises 21 male and four female crew members. Nationally, the Irish Coast Guard operates 54 stations with some 1,000 volunteer crew.
The Coast Guard stations in Bunbeg, Co Donegal and Doolin, Co Clare received the other two 9m Delta vessels while Killala, Co Mayo has received a new 8m vessel.
The Greencastle station was among those chosen for one of the new boats because it is one of the busiest in the country not least because it operates on a cross-border basis and is on call to both to Malin Coast Guard and Belfast Coast Guard.
The local crew, who undertake both sea and cliff rescues, cover some 200 miles of coastline as well as the 19,000 hectare Foyle estuary and beyond.
Saturday will also be a special day for Greencastle's Sean McLaughlin and David McLaughlin of Shroove who will receive long service medals for their 20 years' dedicated service to the local Coast Guard.
As for the naming ceremony, the officer-in-charge insists there won't be a champagne bottle anywhere near St Finnian.
"We're not into smashing bottles on boats. We wouldn't want to put a mark on her," he quipped.
The ceremony, to include interdenominational blessing, will take place at Greencastle Coast Guard station on Saturday, October 8, at 3pm. Members of the public are invited to attend and light refreshments will be provided.
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