Ocean Countess

Ocean Countess at Helsinki, 5 July 2010.
History
Name
  • 1975–1996: Cunard Countess
  • 1996–1998: Awani Dream II
  • 1998–2002: Olympic Countess
  • 2002–2004: Olympia Countess
  • 2004–2005: Ocean Countess
  • 2005–2006: Lili Marleen
  • 2006–2007: Ocean Countess
  • 2007: Ruby
  • 2007-2014: Ocean Countess[1]
Owner
Operator
Port of registry
Builder
Yard number858 (B&W)[1]
Launched20 September 1974[1]
CompletedJune 1976[1]
In service14 August 1976[1]
Out of service22 October 2012 (retired) [3]
IdentificationIMO number7358561
FateCaught fire and scrapped at Aliağa, Turkey in 2014
General characteristics
Tonnage17,593 GRT
Length537 ft (163.68 m)
Beam75 ft (22.86 m)
PropulsionDiesel
Speed17 knots
Capacity800
Crew350

Ocean Countess was a cruise ship owned by Majestic International Cruises of Greece. She was completed in 1976 as Cunard Countess for Cunard Line and was a popular ship in the Caribbean cruise market for 20 years. After leaving Cunard service in 1996, she had a number of owners before being purchased by Majestic in 2004. She was retired in 2012 and scrapped in 2014 after a fire destroyed the ship.

History

[edit]

Cunard Countess was built in Denmark in 1974-75 and initially registered in Southampton, England. The vessel was fitted-out at the INMA shipyard at La Spezia, Italy, from where trials were conducted and the vessel completed in July 1976. The ship proceeded to her Caribbean Sea base port of San Juan, Puerto Rico, via Barcelona, Spain and Antigua. A part-ship charter group of passengers was carried on this maiden voyage, between Barcelona and Antigua. On the eve of entering full commercial service in August 1976, Cunard Countess was christened at San Juan by Janet Armstrong, then wife of Neil Armstrong, the first man to walk on the Moon.[4]

Cunard Countess docked in Martinique, 1982
Olympic Countess off of Mozambique in December 2002
Ocean Countess anchored off Santorini, July 2008
Ocean Countess arriving at Greenock, August 2012

The '4-star-Premium' style Cunard Countess, with her almost-identical sister ship Cunard Princess of 1977, became popular with the North American and British/European market, particularly for their contemporary facilities and variety entertainment. They were well known for their cruises in the Caribbean and middle Atlantic Ocean, becoming a staple at the San Juan ship dock and later at Miami, Santo Domingo and many other places around the area. Cunard Countess was notably one of the few ships to regularly visit the Caribbean island of Grenada during the revolutionary period of that island (1979–1983) and thus played a major role in supporting the local tourist industry during those years. Two of Cunard Countess's competitors in the Caribbean during the late 1970s-1980s were the much older but also very popular SS Amerikanis and Carla C, all three being of similar dimensions and capacity (recently built cruise ships are generally far larger). Other contemporary ships in this market were the P&O/Princess Cruises' Sun Princess and Island Princess, both also having similar dimensions and capacity to Cunard Countess.

In October 1982, after the conclusion of the Falklands War, the ship was chartered for six months by the Ministry of Defence (United Kingdom) to support troop movements between Ascension Island and the Falkland Islands while Port Stanley Airport was being reinstated.[5] Families and friends of British personnel lost in the conflict were also carried on one round voyage, to enable commemorations both at sea and ashore. At the end of the charter, Cunard controversially awarded the contract for the refurbishment of the vessel to Malta Shipyards at a reported cost of £2 million.[6] Cunard Countess returned to Caribbean cruising in July 1983. In 1990 the ship's port of registry was changed to Nassau, The Bahamas.

In 1996 - before Carnival’s buy-out of Cunard Line in 1998 - Cunard Countess was sold to Awani Cruises and renamed Awani Dream II, to cruise along with the original Awani Dream. The Awani cruise company ran into financial trouble and in 1998 the ship moved to Royal Olympic Cruises, as Olympic Countess under the Greek flag.

Purchased in 2004 by Maximus Navigation Ltd, a subsidiary of Majestic International Cruises, she was renamed Ocean Countess and registered in Madeira on the International Shipping Register of Portugal. She was chartered as Ruby to Louis Cruise Lines in May 2007, resuming the name Ocean Countess in December of that year. During this employment, cruises usually departed from Piraeus, visiting destinations like Mykonos, Patmos, Crete and Santorini in Greece as well as Kuşadası in Turkey. During 2009 the ship was leased by the Spanish operator Quail Cruises for a series of Mediterranean cruises from Valencia.

In April 2010, the refitted Ocean Countess joined Marco Polo in an extensive cruise programme from British ports for the recently formed company Cruise & Maritime Voyages (CMV).[7] In late 2012 Ocean Countess left the CMV fleet, with a final 13-night Canary Islands & Madeira “Farewell Voyage” which ended in Barcelona instead of returning to Liverpool; she was replaced by the MV Discovery.[8]

On 30 November 2013 the central superstructure of the ship caught fire at Chalkis, Greece while laid up prior to an anticipated return to service in 2014. The five caretaker crew were all accounted for.[9] She sustained heavy damage from waterline to funnel.[10] She has been sold to a scrapyard in Aliaga [11] and departed Chalkis under tow on 7 March 2014. [12]

Facilities

[edit]

The fully air-conditioned Ocean Countess had 7 passenger decks (passenger decks 3 to 7, 9 and sun terrace deck 10) plus three further crew-only decks (decks 1, 2 and bridge deck 8). There were deluxe cabins and suites as well as inner and outer standard cabins. All cabins featured private facilities. Passenger capacity was approximately 800 in 400 cabins with a crew of 350. A small number of cabins could be adjusted for guests with special requirements.

The sun terrace (top deck), exterior boat deck and aft lido deck were sheathed in traditional teak. The accommodation, public rooms and decks were refurbished and renamed with British themes in early 2010, in preparation for Ocean Countess' charter to Cruise & Maritime Voyages. New flat screen televisions with satellite channels were also installed in all cabins as part of the refurbishment.[13]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Asklander, Micke. "M/S Cunard Countess (1975)". Fakta om Fartyg (in Swedish). Retrieved 15 March 2014.
  2. ^ a b c d Boyle, Ian. "Cunard Countess". Simplon Postcards. Retrieved 15 March 2014.
  3. ^ Dake, Shawn. "Swapping Ships". MaritimeMatter.com. Retrieved 15 March 2014.
  4. ^ "Cunard Countess". Chris' Cunard Page.
  5. ^ "Kenya & Uganda". MerchantNavyOfficers.com. Retrieved 15 March 2014.
  6. ^ "Cunard Countess". INT Source. Retrieved 15 March 2014.
  7. ^ "New Cruise Line Formed August 13, 2009". CruiseInd.com. 13 August 2009. Retrieved 15 March 2014.
  8. ^ "Discovery to Join Cruise and Maritime After Drydock (7 September 2012)". Cruise Industry News. 7 September 2012. Retrieved 15 March 2014.
  9. ^ Knego, Peter. "Ocean Countess on Fire". Maritime Matters. Retrieved 10 March 2014.
  10. ^ Mortimer, Dennis. "Ocean Countess - IMO 7358561". ShipSpotting.com. Retrieved 10 March 2014.
  11. ^ "Ship demolitions 15/2/2014". Merseyshipping. Retrieved 10 March 2014.
  12. ^ "Piraeus, outskirts, main Greek ports and shipyards roundup/7 March 2014". shipfriends.gr. Retrieved 15 March 2014.
  13. ^ Ward, Douglas. "Ocean Countess (Expert Review)". UK Telegraph. Archived from the original on 29 September 2011. Retrieved 15 March 2014.
[edit]