Drop Down Menu
  Search...
 
  Business Directory Ad  

 

All in a day’s work for Pilots 26.05.11

by Linda McGrory

THESE dramatic pictures below show the Foyle Pilots at work during the worst May storm in living memory.
Anyone would think the lads were actually scrambling to make it back to shore as rising waves lashed their 30ft boat in wind speeds gusting to over 140km/h on.
But Foyle Pilot boatman, Tommy McDaid, said it was just a ‘normal’ day’s work, albeit it in ‘rowdy’ weather conditions.
The Foyle Pilot boat battles the storm. Photos courtesy Charles Cavanagh.
“It might look dramatic and, there’s no point denying it, the weather conditions were horrendous, but it was just a normal day for us,” laughed Tommy.
“We did about nine runs that day and none of them were storm related.”
The job of a pilot is to board large vessels at the mouth of Lough Foyle and guide them through the safe deep water channel to Lisahally Port in Derry. It is compulsory for ships over 50 metres long to be piloted.
On boat duty during storm ‘Udo’ on Monday were Tommy and fellow boatman, Danny McCann, who is a seventh-generation McCann working on the lough.
That stormy day they, and pilot Michael Hegarty, were servicing a number of large cargo ships including two coal boats, one carrying cullet (crushed glass) and another with pumice.
Among their tasks was a ‘lightening’ job whereby a smaller ship is guided alongside a larger carrier to be loaded with cargo.
Tommy added: “Those big boats weren’t in to shelter from the storm or anything. They were just doing what they would normally be doing.
“And anything we did that day was just our normal work, it was just a bit slower and a bit jumpier than usual,” he added. “Let’s just say it was a bit rowdy and wasn’t very pleasant,” he quipped.
Tommy, who worked on fishing trawlers for 18 years and who has been working with the Foyle Pilots for the last eight, said he and his colleagues are used to high waves.
“The Foyle would be rough with us fairly often, it’s just that on Monday, it was that bit excessive.
“We would normally meet big boats, over 120 metres, off Shroove and we would be used to it being fairly dramatic. But on Monday, the wind speed was 72mph on the clock in the station. It was exceptional weather with some of the strongest winds I’d ever seen for May.” The Lough Foyle Pilots are: Michael Hegarty, Georgie Hegarty, Con O’Donnell and Billy Kelly while the boatmen are: Larry Kealey, Tommy McDaid and station manager, Danny McCann.
Add to Favorites :: Return to > Top Stories    > News    > Home