hidden europe 33

Scotland: fast ferries

by Nicky Gardner

Summary

Kintyre Express, the shipping offshoot of Scottish bus company West Coast Motors, has an ambitious plan to create a new fast ferry link between the Mull of Kintyre and the Antrim coast of Northern Ireland. We take a closer look.

The news in February 2011 that there is to be a new passenger shipping link between the Mull of Kinytre (in western Scotland) and Northern Ireland is certainly very welcome. Kintyre Express already have experience with a fast ferry link between Troon on the Ayrshire coast and Kintyre, where a 75-minute boat journey is a credible alternative to a three to four hour drive by road. Now the company is expanding its horizons with a new link from Campbeltown to Ballycastle, a 90-minute crossing that will deliver passengers directly to a very beautiful stretch of the Antrim coast.

Don’t expect cruise ferry comforts on these Kintyre Express routes, for the services are operated by fast Redbay RIBs topped off with a heated cabin. Passengers wear lifejackets at all times, so this is sea travel for travellers who are looking for something more adventurous than a traditional cross-Channel ferry. Kintyre Express’ 2011 season kicks off on 1 April with the Campbeltown to Troon route. Campbeltown to Ballycastle starts on 27 May. Both services are scheduled to run through till late September. One-way fares are from £30 (about €35).

Related blog post

At the harbour wall: port cities and the ties that bind

Port cities often have a very special feel. Hamburg, Genoa, Liverpool and Bergen have much in common by virtue of their connection to the sea. Berlin writer Paul Scraton explores the quaysides of the Norwegian port of Bergen and reflects on the cultural, economic and social ties which enliven port cities across Europe.

Related articleFull text online

An English Eden: Tresco

Join us as we visit an archipelago of islands in the Atlantic off the southwest coast of England. The Isles of Scilly are a remarkable outpost - lush, verdant and, at their best, almost Caribbean in demeanour.