Please allow ads as they help fund our trusted local news content.
Kindly add us to your ad blocker whitelist.
If you want further access to Ireland's best local journalism, consider contributing and/or subscribing to our free daily Newsletter .
Support our mission and join our community now.
Subscribe Today!
To continue reading this article, you can subscribe for as little as €0.50 per week which will also give you access to all of our premium content and archived articles!
Alternatively, you can pay €0.50 per article, capped at €1 per day.
Thank you for supporting Ireland's best local journalism!
The Costa Concordia disaster is a salutary warning about the powers of the ocean
Costa Concordia calamity
Off the fence Áine Ryan
A CAPTAIN abandoning his ship. It is a thought that flouts every notion of the honourable codes and protocols that for hundreds of years have ruled our great seas and oceans. Fine if the ship is about to sink and the captain is the last person aboard. But we all know now that Francesco Schettino left many passengers aboard the luxury vessel, the Costa Concordia, after it went aground off the coast of Tuscany on Friday, January 13 last. There are also serious questions over his steering of the ship too close to the shore. Can you imagine the excitement, the air of anticipation, when just hours earlier passengers from all over Europe and the world boarded this lavish floating hotel. Young honeymoon couples, elderly sweethearts, groups of friends and families, all hauling cases packed full with glad rags, jewellery, swimsuits, perfumes, books, laptops. For some, I am sure, it was about to be the holiday of a lifetime. This cruise would bring them on an odyssey through the Mediterranean, from the Italian ports of Civitaveechia, to Savona, Cagliari to Sicily’s Palermo and then on to Barcelona and Mallorca in Spain. Little did they realise, as they were shown to their cabins, that just hours later and a short 80km into their voyage, the ship would be holed with a 160ft gash and listing dangerously into the sea. There were more than 4,000 passengers and crew on the six-storeyed, 950ft long luxury liner, with many of them in evening dress about to indulge in a sumptuous dinner, when the Costa Concordia hit a reef close to the island of Giglio. Lucky – not for some victims and their families though – there were so few fatalities, in the circumstance. Imagine the breadth of the human tragedy if the seas were stormy or the accident occurred farther out from the coast. The potential enormity of this accident is made even more poignant by the fact that the centenary anniversary of the sinking of the Titanic approaches. INDEED, all last week we were confronted by the elemental power of the ocean as a small fishing community in west Cork fought swells and high winds in a bid to recover the lost skipper and crew of the Tit Bonhomme. Again there were close to the shore when tragedy struck at Adam’s Island at the mouth of Glandore Harbour. Technology was still quite simple when the Titanic was struck by an iceberg one hundred years ago. In 1927, when, on one October night 45 fishermen from Cleggan to the Mullet peninsula were victims of a sudden storm, shipping forecasts were only heard by those privileged few who owned radios. In the interim meteorological services have become very sophisticated, as has GPS and radar navigational equipment. But clearly, while man has become more equipped to challenge the ocean, its venomous and reckless powers have not diminished.
ADVERTISEMENT - CONTINUE READING BELOW
ADVERTISEMENT - CONTINUE READING BELOW
ADVERTISEMENT - CONTINUE READING BELOW
ADVERTISEMENT - CONTINUE READING BELOW
ADVERTISEMENT - CONTINUE READING BELOW
ADVERTISEMENT - CONTINUE READING BELOW
ADVERTISEMENT - CONTINUE READING BELOW
ADVERTISEMENT - CONTINUE READING BELOW
ADVERTISEMENT - CONTINUE READING BELOW
ADVERTISEMENT - CONTINUE READING BELOW
ADVERTISEMENT - CONTINUE READING BELOW
4
To continue reading this article, please subscribe and support local journalism!
Subscribing will allow you access to all of our premium content and archived articles.
Subscribe
To continue reading this article for FREE, please kindly register and/or log in.
Registration is absolutely 100% FREE and will help us personalise your experience on our sites. You can also sign up to our carefully curated newsletter(s) to keep up to date with your latest local news!
Warrior: Dáithí Lawless, 15, from Martinstown, in his uniform and holding a hurley, as he begins third year of secondary school in Coláiste Iósaef, Kilmallock I PICTURE: Adrian Butler
This one-woman show stars Brídín Ní Mhaoldomhnaigh, an actress, writer and presenter who has several screen credits including her role as Katy Daly on Ros na Rún, and the award-winning TV drama Crá
Breaffy Rounders will play Glynn Barntown (Wexford) in the Senior Ladies Final and Erne Eagles (Cavan) in the Senior Men's All-Ireland Final in the GAA National Games Development Centre, Abbotstown
Subscribe or register today to discover more from DonegalLive.ie
Buy a paper
Buy the e-paper of the Donegal Democrat, Donegal People's Press, Donegal Post and Inish Times here for instant access to Donegal's premier news titles.
Keep up with the latest news from Donegal with our daily newsletter featuring the most important stories of the day delivered to your inbox every evening at 5pm.