Week One
Week Two
Week Three
Week Four
Week Five
Week six
Week Seven

Voyage Pictures

LE EITHNE Captain’s Diary - Monday 13th of February
Midday Posn – 17 03.8 N 021 54.7W
Dist to Cork - 2180
Dist to Mar De Plata - 2300
Dist to Equator – 1110
Temp – A simmering 25°C

Today the weather has continued to be good with temperatures now reaching 25°C + and the seawater temperature at over 24 degrees. The wind is fresh and as it is from the North we have a following sea and light airs across the deck. The main point of interest on the African Coast is Dakar which a couple of hundred miles to the South East. In the waters around the ship a number of shark have been sighted including some “hammerheads”. In addition the ships supply staff have been out with their aprons trying the catch some of the flying fish, which have been gliding over the wave crests but so far no good!

The seamen are working hard on deck getting the ship ready for her South American début. Some of the ships crew this morning had a distinctive pink colouring after yesterday’s exposure to the sun, and even the doc who gave a health and safety demonstration on ‘P31 News’ regarding the dangers of exposure to the sun and the application of suncream is a little sheepish.

After yesterdays relaxed Sunday routine the ship is rested and ready for today’s armed boarding exercise, which will commence at 1530hrs. The exercise is like previous evolutions and is designed to test our response to a scenario similar to that which we could easily be expected deliver services in home waters and beyond such as counter narcotics. Using a stand off technique we will deploy our boats in International waters tracking, intercepting and boarding a “virtual” contact. The exercise will terminate with an armed boarding of LE EITHNE by the teams and securing the ship while overpowering a number of the crew who wearing high visibility jackets will be acting as belligerents. The ships boats, which we call “Jaguars”, have a speed of up to 70 km Per Hour. They have a range of 200 Kilometres and are fitted with high speed inboard diesels and counter rotating propellers. LE EITHNE currently has six “Jaguar” coxswains that it has certified these include Able Seamen Alan Purcell, Niall Carney, Jenny Blackwell, Robert Wallace and Niamh Crowley.

There is a BBQ planned for this evening on the fight deck with spicy mince kafkas, pork chops, sausages, burgers, salads and baked potatoes and a range of sauces on the menu.

The darts competition has already thrown up a few close matches, with Seaman Jenny Blackwell just beating Able Electrician Patrick Reidy who were both on the ‘double 1’ for some time. There were also wins for Supply Jackie Shannon who beat Ensign Sean Linehan and Warrant Officer John Walsh and Ensign James Harding also won.

Clocks went back an hour last night so we are now in “N” (November) time zone one hour behind Ireland. “N” time zone is one hour behind “Z” which is the same as GMT. For those reading this elsewhere in the world you will have to figure out the difference yourself. We are scheduled to pass close to the Verde Islands today at around 1600 hrs (local time), that’s 1700 hrs Irish time so we are hoping we might be able to pick up mobile phone coverage. As I close, the Ensigns have just taken the midday position using their sextants and they assure me they know where we are – well lets see if they are right and Cape Verde pops up where it should!


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Captain’s Journal LE EITHNE - Tuesday 14th of February
Midday Posn (Z) Irish Time – 11 43.6N 024 16.7W
Dist to Cork – 2500 nm (nautical miles)
Dist to Mar De Plata – 3550 nm
Dist to Equator – 770 nm
Temp – a warm 24°C

Guess what the Cape Verde Islands were not quite where they should have been!

The weather has continued to be good and air temperatures continue to be high at 24°C + a little less than yesterday because of the slight cloud cover. The seawater temperature is now over 26 degrees. The cloud cover has meant that our Junior Officers Ensigns James Harding and Sean Linehan have been unable to get their midday sights using sextant so I hope we don’t get lost between now and our next landfall which will be the former Brazilian penal colony (now a nature reserve) De Fernando De Noronha 1000 miles ahead and 200 miles off the Coast of Brazil. The wind has freshened some more from the North but LE EITHNE continues to make excellent progress. We are currently 500 nautical miles from the main points of interest on the African Coast the borders between Guinea Bissau, Gambia and Senegal. In our wake last night and now 200 miles astern we left the Verde islands. We had hoped to close these spectacular volcanic structures rising from the mid Atlantic ridge but on closer examination of the charts we were surprised at the extent of uncharted waters that surround these Islands. The number of underwater seamounts rising thousands of metres from the deep ocean to just under the surface of the water is significant. There presence coupled with the fact that the Islands, as we fixed them on radar, were 1.5 nautical miles out of position compared to our charts was enough for us to heed warning notices to mariners. These advised that we should keep at least seven nautical miles off the coast. So the best plans of mice and men to close sufficiently so as to get into mobile phone coverage failed. Fortunately we still have our e-mail, which went down for six or seven hours yesterday – thanks however to our sparks SLt Fergal Tubridy (alias Simon Duvet) the software problem was sorted and we are back on line.

The armed boarding exercise was of value in keeping our teeth sharp. With a fresh wind of force six the tracking and interception by the team of the virtual contact was no cake-walk nor was the boarding of LE EITHNE from the “Jaguars” as they overpowered the nominated criminals under the command of the designated female skipper Communications Operative Tracey Wilkes. The Irish Navy’s capacity for small boat operations is a “niche capability”. Operating in what are statistically some of the most hostile sea areas in the world – the west coast of Ireland – others navies are watching closely at how the Irish navy doctrine in small boat operations is evolving.

This evening the ship will go to action stations as we simulate operations in a hostile environment. Our 57mm Bofors main armament linked to our Lightweight Optronic Director will be put through its paces while our 20mm secondary armament Rheinmetals will fire in support against a ship launched target. As with armed boarding, or, indeed any evolution, the competencies required for service provision in a difficult environment are not such that you can turn them on or off like a tap – so the only way to maintain the required level is to practice, practice and practice.

The BBQ provided an opportunity for our head chef Petty Officer Eddie Staunton and his team to pull off another food miracle while we all dined together on the flight deck in the warmth of the evening setting sun.

The darts competition continues to surprise with our Navigator SLt Patricia Butler being just beaten in a close match by Leading Mechanician Dwayne Mc Philbin – what an athlete! In response, however Able Mechanician Amy Healy beat Petty Officer William Leahy.

In case you didn’t know today is Valentine’s Day and all of the crew send their love to their wives, girlfriends and boyfriends. Some have been lucky to be given cards or packages containing sweets and thongs I mean things with strict instructions not to open until the 14th Feb – I promise we didn’t. Our senior Logistician Senior Petty Officer Sam Fealy was particularly lucky to have a card from his wife delivered by his son Gerard who is also embarked as a Radio Radar Techician.

As previously mentioned we are delighted to receive your comments or questions relating to our deployment captain@eithne.amosconnect.com . I am grateful to Paul Murphy from Mallow now living in the UK who pointed out the mistake regarding the link between Cromwell and the first Irish to settle on Tenerife. I obviously misinterpreted the link made to me by the Irish community on the Island. I suspect that what was meant was that the first Irish settlers to Tenerife must have been descendants of Irish transplanted possibly to Montserrat in Cromwell’s time in Ireland in 1640s. I am fortunate that Lt Cdr Martin Clifford NS Rtd loaned me his copy of Tim Pat Coogan’s book “Wherever Green is Worn” which helped in researching this point.

Right now green is being worn and the Irish Tricolour is flying in the middle of the Atlantic less than 800 miles North of the equator where we hope to cross on Thursday. Soon we will be abeam of Liberia where Irish Troops are deployed but more about that tomorrow.
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Captain’s Journal LE EITHNE - Wednesday 15th of February
Midday Posn (Z) Irish Time – 06 13N 026 54W
Dist to Cork – 2900 nm (nautical miles)
Dist to Mar De Plata – 3190 nm
Dist to Equator – 410 nm
Temp – a warm 27°C

Who spotted that the Cape Verde Islands are nearly eight hundred and sixty miles from the Mid Atlantic Ridge well imagine my surprise – the Cape Verde Archipelago is actually part of the Cape Verde Plateau and well to the east of the Mid Atlantic Ridge! .

Last night not for the first time, these latitudes were disturbed by the sound of Naval gunfire from an Irish Naval Ship. On the last occasion LE NIAMH under command of Lt Cdr Jim Shalloo did her final preparations and test fired her main armament before entering the Port of Monrovia where the security situation was still unstable. She had just embarked an Irish Defence Forces reconnaissance team in Sierra Leone under the command of Col (now Brig General) McNamara. The team were tasked with reconnoitring the security situation and identifying a suitable Camp Site for the first Irish Battalion (Bn) to be deployed to Liberia. LE Niamh provided security and logistical support as well as a means for emergency evacuation out of the Port. As we pass abeam of the Port of Monrovia the mission of the Irish Bn under the command of Lt Col JJ O Reilly is winding up. The Irish Bn acted as the Quick Reaction Force (QRF) and a security assistance force while the Liberian institutions were re-established and while the Demobilisation, Disarmament and Reintegration (DDR) process was completed. Today, onboard LE EITHNE two of our chefs Robbie Meehan and Brendan Fitzgerald as well as our second in command Lt Cdr Aedh McGinn have seen service with Irish Bns in Camp Clara in Liberia..

LE Niamh’s mission, which at the time arose at very short notice, provides a perfect example of why it is so necessary to ensure your operational capacity is maintained at as high a level as possible. At 1600 and 2000 yesterday under command of Petty Officer Brendan Madden and assisted by Able Seamen Purcell and Niall Carney LE EITHNE’s main armament spoke to the latitudes as it projected High Explosive proximity fused pre-fragmented shells out to their maximum safety range of 16 kilometres. LE EITHNE’s gunnery and fire control system (FCS) with its capacity to fire remotely from the ships operations room continues to be quite a sophisticated fit. The Lightweight Optronic Director (LIOD) can automatically track a target picking up its infra red signature giving bearing and elevation to the fire control software. The missing third dimension, which is given by the laser range finder, allows for the computer to calculate the predicted hitting point which is where the gun points. Modern air engagements are about getting the target to pass as close to the gunnery shell where the doppler activated radar fuse will explode when both shell and target are at their closest point. The main armament shoot last night was supported with Seamen Niamh Crowley, Eoin McCarthy and Jenny Blackwell on the Rheinmetall secondary armament firing a thousand rounds per minute of target practice tracer lighting up the sky like fireworks. Chef Mick Rath provided close in support on the 12.7 mm heavy machine gun. The shoot conducted against 57mm rocket illumes and co-ordinated by the ships gunnery officer SLt Kieran Carr (AKA the Beastmaster) was a great success. Obviously the importance of maintaining a clear air and surface range is paramount with the shoot accompanied by safety transmissions on channel 16 and the command safety team scouring the horizons. But having not seen a ship for over two days we were all alone in our exercise. .

The weather has continued to be good and air temperatures rising to 25°C. The seawater temperature is now almost 29 degrees. Together with LE EITHNE’s Marine Engineering Officer Lt Cdr Tony Heery I will shortly visit the main engine rooms where the ambient air temperature is 44 degrees with extremely high humidity making conditions difficult. The current engine room watch with Petty Officer Dominic Russell assisted by Mechanicians Alan Doyle and Brian Hastings must regularly take their rounds in these conditions. Already we are monitoring a number of near alarm statistics such as the forward main engine jacket water temperature and one of the main shaft bearings. .

Yesterday Mechanician Brian Hastings, the youngest member of our crew, dressed up in his white shirt and black bow tie and presented all our ladies embarked with a Valentines package from the rest of us – all because we still believe in romance in the Irish Navy. .

Tomorrow we will cross the line and many of us are trembling in our boots as we think of what is in store for us “Pollywogs”. We will also come close to a lone rocky outcrop rising from the depths called Penedos De Sao Pedro e Sao Paulo and guess what – its on the Mid Atlantic Ridge!

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Captain’s Journal LE EITHNE - Thursday 16th of February
Midday Posn (Z) Irish Time – 01 00N 029 12W
Dist to Cork – 3230 nm (nautical miles)
Dist to Mar De Plata – 2840 nm
Dist to Equator – 60 nm
Temp – a warm 28°C

Thank you for all your positive and constructive comments on the journal, which you have asked to be passed to the scribe. Some have suggested that the author should introduce himself so today that is how I will open. I am the Captain of LE EITHNE Commander Mark Mellett and you can continue to mail your comments to my address at captain@eithne.amosconnect.com

The heat and humidity are such that today I rose early at 0630 to get my run in. But I had to wait a further 30 minutes to get a free machine it seems that the logistics department including Cook Alan Corcoran and Petty Officer Micheal Broderick hardly sleep at all. Before I had finished training, the ship’s Bosun Petty Officer Paul Mc Carthy assisted by Leading Seaman Noel Dunne were already setting the men and women of their department to work in preparation for South America. In addition to being seamen responsible for the deck department, Paul is a radar plotter and Noel is a gunner. They are also key members of our ships diving team and two of the four personnel loaned from LE EITHNE to take part in the difficult diving operation following the tragic loss of the Rising Sun off the Southeast Coast late last year. The diving operation, which lasted almost two weeks at depths of over 50 metres, was complex and extremely dangerous. The crew of LE EITHNE sympathise with the families of those who lost their lives during and following the tragedy.

Today at GMT we are just over four hours from the equator. The wind has dropped to light airs and the sea is nearly flat. We are now in what is known as the doldrums. Last night we had heavy rain showers, which almost blanked out our radars. In the days of sail the area was dreaded because of the fear of becoming becalmed. It is the zone where the trade winds of the northern and southern hemispheres converge and where, after prolonged heating over the equatorial ocean some of the air finally ascends vertically. The term Inter-tropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ) is also used to describe the latter phenomenon.

For days other than flying fish and the very occasional seabird apart from ourselves we have seen no life. In the past 12 hours in particular however the number of seabirds has increased significantly and just on the horizon as I write the Islands of Penedos de Sao Pedro e Sao Paulo are becoming visible. These rocks rise to a maximum elevation of 19 metres and they pull us like a magnet to admire their beauty. They belong to Brazil and have been designated as a conservation area. Though steep-to they need to be approached with extreme caution as the waters surrounding them are not fully charted. In 1974 the Motor Vessel Ana Christina sank after striking an unknown object just 10 miles SW of the Group. We are now just seven miles from the group and I must alter away or else there might be no journal tomorrow!

Today I have a special task and that is to greet King Neptune, Queen Aphrodite, the Judge, the doctor, the court clerk the chief of police and his able assistants who will oversee the ceremonial proceedings associated with crossing the equator. My task will be to secure right of passage for the ship and crew on this historic occasion of the first Irish Naval Ship to pass from the North to South Atlantic. As a pollywog myself, I am sure I will have loads to report on this tomorrow.

Meanwhile planning continues for the delivery of services. Working with the Embassy in Argentina and other stakeholders such as Crumlin Childrens Hospital in Dublin we are still refining the services we will deliver. Besides the diplomatic and ceremonial aspects of our visits, in Argentina, through Crumlin hospital we have established links with a Children’s hospital in Buenos Aires. We will host a number of events and facilitate a number of links between Paediatric Centres in Argentina and in Ireland. These links, it is hoped, will lead to possible education inter-action and health service professional exchange programmes. We also of course hope to host sick children from these centres just as we do with our friends from Our Ladies Children’s Hospital Crumlin. We will also work with the Fahey Institute and as I write we are receiving confirmation that we will host children from this institute in Buenos Aires. The “good Father Fahey” was one of the greatest single influences on the Irish Community in Argentina. In 1843 the 39 year old Irish Dominican was sent to Buenos Aires. Tim Pat Coogan writes that after a lifetime in which he made himself indispensable to the Irish Community, Fahey’s finest hour occurred during a succession of killer epidemics, which struck Buenos Aires in 1867 and 1871. Caring for those sick and dying from cholera and yellow fever no matter what their nationality, Fahey finally died from yellow fever in 1877. Fahey’s biographer Mgr J Ussher says that under Fahey “the Irish in Argentina had been transformed into an important, organised and prosperous community”. His legacy lives on through the Fahey Institute, a boarding school regime providing education for many boys and girls from both the Irish and Argentinean community who when initially established would have remained untaught. He also was responsible for setting up a number of hospitals and bringing the Sisters of Mercy to Buenos Aires where they cared for orphans.

Delivering these services however requires that we make it to Argentina on or ahead of schedule. I spoke yesterday of some of the issues being faced by the engine room staff. I did visit the main engine rooms where the ambient air temperature in the forward space continues at 44 degrees making conditions difficult. The staff were coping well, however, minimising their time on rounds in the space. I also mentioned that we were monitoring a number of near alarm statistics. Mid afternoon yesterday we lost the Port Main Engine as it shut down automatically on alarm. For hours engine room staff investigated the fault – working in shifts in the extreme heat. It was soon narrowed down to an electrical fault. Chief Engine Room Artificer (ERA) Tom Sheridan together with Chief Electrical Artificer (EA) Fergus Heaton, Petty Officer (EA) Fiachra Kelleher and Able (EA) Patrick Reidy continued their investigations up to midnight with the engine coming on-line and shutting down with worrying regularity. Shortly after mid-night satisfied that the shut downs were the result of an electrical fault and not an actual main engine critical status the Marine Engineer Lt Cdr Tony Heery decided to by past the shut-down system and run the main engine overnight monitoring its status regularly. Just before 7 this morning with the electricians back on the case found a break down in the wiring insulation of the shut down system. I have just been advised that the fault has been fixed. This morning’s engine-room watch is headed by PO Eric Stephens with support from Mechanician Jonathan Crawford and ERA Dave Culliton.

Last night we had a quiz night, which was won by team 3 with Lt Olan O’Keefe (aka Olan de Omen) Mech Vinny Sweetman, Bil Tyson and Declan Cassidy. The Naval Service Senior Non Commissioned Officer Warrant Officer John Walsh celebrated his birthday yesterday and I got my haircut by Ensign Sean Linehan. Will my next haircut be voluntary – I don’t know, I have just been called to the bow where we are getting ready to meet our guests – more about that tomorrow,
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Captain’s Journal LE EITHNE - Friday February 17th
Midday Posn (Z) Irish Time – 04 36S 031 43W
Dist to Cork – 3600 nm (nautical miles)
Dist to Mar De Plata – 2480 nm
Dist to Equator – 276 nm
Temp – a warm 30°C
The air temperature has continued to rise and is now 30 degrees with the seawater temperature at 29.8. Over the past thirty-six hours the wind has shifted from the fresh North Easterly we had North of the Equator to a more modest but freshening South Easterly wind south of the equator. These are the trade winds separated by the dreaded doldrums and so valued by sail ships over the centuries. Overnight new constellations that most of us have never seen were visible in the heavens. Just over the horizon the Arquipelago de Fernando de Noronha rises out of the ocean. The main island of the group appears completely mountainous and is covered in vegetation. The islands owned by Brazil have a restricted area surrounding them preventing fishing, hunting and any other action which might affect the environment. In previous times the islands were home to a notorious prison for Brazil’s most hardened criminals. We continue to get some assistance from the south equatorial current, which pushes west. Soon we will be smack in the middle of the Brazilian current, which will assist in bringing us exactly where we want to go along the coast to the river plate. To date out progress has been such that we are now over thirty six hours ahead of schedule. This morning in discussion with Captain James Robinson DSM Naval Service second in command and head of Naval Operations Command it was decided to consider amending our estimated time of arrival in Mar Del Plata to Saturday 25 Feb.

I left you yesterday as the pipe “Captain report to the F’ocsle” was made by the leading hand of the watch Leading Seaman Courtney Gibbons. Fo’csle is an abbreviation for “forecastle” and comes from the time of sail when ships were built with a forecastle to the front of the ship, a main deck in the middle and an aft castle at the back of a ship. By the time I got there His Excellency King Neptune (Cook Brendan Fitzgerald), Queen Aphrodite (Petty Officer (PO) Michael Broderick), the court clerk (Warrant Officer (WO) John Walsh), the judge (Senior Chief PO Robbie Byrne), the doctor (PO Hull Artificer Tom Kennedy), the chief of police (Chief PO John (Bull) Hogan) and his Police assistants (PO Paul O’Brien, Cook Alan Corcoran, Seaman Niamh Connoly, Electrician Rory Galvin) were in situ. I requested King Neptune for the right of passage from the Northern to the Southern hemisphere. In reply King Neptune granted the ship and all her crew permission to cross the equator but required that those who had not done so before be required to undergo an appropriate imitation ceremony. On the flight deck the crew were assembled, and under the supervision of Lt Olan (the omen) O’Keefe, “a shellback”, like Chief PO Tom Sheridan, being the only members of the ships company previously to cross the equator, the ceremony began. A representative sample of those who had not crossed the line before, known as “pollywogs” including PO Cook Eddie Staunton, SLt Fergal Tubridy, PO Michael Harrington, Seaman Niall Cremin, Mr Bill Tyson and PO Maurice Plant were assembled. The court was convened and each pollywog was brought before the court and their crimes were read out. As Captain it was my job to appeal for leniency for each, which I succeeded in doing for all but Bill Tyson. Bill is a civilian member of a TV crew who is making a documentary on the deployment and I just could not find any positive qualities that were sufficiently meritoriuos to warrant a plea of leniency. All the pollywogs were initiated and required to take the doctors medicine, which consisted of eggs, and flour each was then thrown in the water. Just when I thought all was going smoothly things went bad and I found myself seized by the chief of police and brought before the court. My crimes, were so many, that they were unfolded on a roll of paper, which ran across the full length of the flight deck. There was no hope; the crew were silent despite a feeble plea for leniency, which was discarded. I had to take my medicine and after being made jump like a monkey I was thrown in the water. So the ceremony which is hundreds of years old and carried out on merchant and naval ships when ever they cross the line was completed in the South Atlantic for the first time on an Irish Naval Ship.

LE EITHNE has a number of means with which to stay in touch with the outside world. The Fleet 33 e-mail system is new. We would ask anybody e-mailing the ship to keep your message relatively short, as we are restricted in the file size we can receive. The e-mail address is captain@eithne.amosconnect.com . In addition to this we have high speed data links data links (HSD) via INMARSAT B which also gives us voice, telex and fax comms. Other communications facilities include medium/high frequency (MF/HF) radio over telex, HF voice, Ultra High Frequency Voice and Very High Frequency Voice. Other Satellite based communications include INMARSAT C store/forward telex, EMSAT phone and fax and IRIDIUM Sat Phone for world wide voice coverage. The ship is of course fully compliant with the Global Maritime Distress Safety System (GMDSS) requirements. The communications centre under PO Greg Hamilton is manned 24 hours a day. Some of the services provided and supported by the department include monitoring international distress and calling frequencies, supporting rear link communications with Irish Troops in Liberia, transmission of Meteorological reports to Met Eireann and of course all communications between the ship and Naval Operations Command. Greg is assisted by Leading Commop Martin McGuckin, Leading Commop Mark Ansboro, A Commop Thomas Browne, A Commop John Paterson and Commop Tracey Wilkes. Techical staff who support the department are Chief PO Radio Radar Technician (RRT) Sean Newstead Department Head and RRT Gerard Fealy. So far we have just monitored one distress which was over 2000 nautical miles from our position and outside our capacity to provide a meaningful response.

Slowly but surely LE EITHNE’s decks are being transformed as the seamen work their way top down painting as they go. I try to avoid painting unnecessarily. Besides the environmental penalty, there is also the consideration of cost not to mention the time consuming drudgery associated with this task. For once however no body is complaining with perfect weather and the executive officer making sure everyone is properly protected with sunscreen lotion issued to all. The drudgery of the task is more than mitigated by the beautiful weather. It was always our plan to keep this task for the fair weather on passage – good thinking bosun PO Paul McCarthy.

In the logistics department menus for the various functions are being drawn up. We will host, diplomatic receptions, business functions, military functions, chilrdens functions and special focus groups as well as receiving calls of protocol and custom in each port we visit. The ship will be thronged by thousands of visitors and under the watchful eye of thousands more as they walk or drive by this piece of sovereign Irish territory flying the Irish flag proudly in each country we visit.

LE EITHNE has a huge heart, a great crew – we will make sure she looks the part because when all is said and done she is the best little flagship in the world.
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Captain’s Journal LE EITHNE – Saturday18th of February
Midday Posn (Z) Irish Time – 10 22S 034 19W
Dist to Cork – 3970 nm (nautical miles)
Dist to Mar De Plata – 2100 nm

Progress continues to be good. The weather is again in our favour with an air temperature of 29 degrees and seawater temperature over 30 degrees. The East South East Trade wind has eased and is now moderate or light.

We are now just under a hundred miles off the Brazilian coast. The Brazilian current is a God send and giving us almost an extra knot in speed. Abeam to starboard, which is the right hand side of the ship as you look ahead (Port being the left), is Recife one of Brazil’s major ports. During our initial planning for this deployment this was to be our last Port of call before returning to Ireland but in consultation with HE Excellency Martin Green, Irish Ambassador to Brazil, it was decided to travel further up the Brazilian coast to the Port of Fortaleza. Here because of the work of Irish Missionaries the community have been very much influenced by Irish culture. Further up this coast is the entrance to one of the most spectacular waterways in the world – the Amazon. Enough of that, however, for it will be well over a month before we return to these waters to spend some time. So, lets save the storyline till then.

As I write Ensigns Sean Linehan and James Harding have taken the midday sight, which is a relatively straightforward way of getting your midday latitude. Combining this with a sun run sun they will be able to give me an accurate fix of our position without resorting to electronic navigation aids. Bill Tyson, who is doing the documentary, has been getting lessons from Lt Damian McCormack on Astronomical Navigation using a sextant. Declan the cameraman has just said that it is fortunate Bill has learned so fast or we never might have known that we were in Azerbaijan!

Overnight a number of work parties tackled some critical areas and by morning when the first gym customers (Senior Petty Officer (SPO) Sam Fealy and PO Micheal Broderick turned too on the machines, the hangar deck paint was already dry. Training was a little easier this morning and after getting it in we were ready for our usual breakfast of cereal, fruit juice, brown bread and tea. Most of our gym equipment is fitted with an electronic sensor, which can detect your heartbeat when you wear the appropriate chest strap. The beauty of this is that you can set your programme against your heart. My own preference is to exercise at 158 beats per minute, and the treadmill speeds up and changes elevation as necessary to keep me at that work rate. This is ideal especially if the ship has a list because of the weather. This morning I noticed that when both our Executive officer Lt Cdr Aedh McGinn and myself were exercising our speeds were down. Ultimately however its about work rate not speed and extreme care has to be taken exercising in this heat ensuring for example that sufficient fluids are consumed.

Seabirds are now common and the occasional whale has also been sighted. We normally make returns of all sightings to the Irish Whale and Dolphin group as well as University College Cork’s Coastal Marine Resource Centre, which is co-located with our Base on Haulbowline Island Cork. Monitoring cetaceans and sea life provides data that are of value in assessing environmental health. This is just one of the many services the Navy provides.

Another service we provide is the provision of fire fighting services to vessels in distress. Yesterday we carried out a major fire fighting exercise onboard. From my perspective on a day-to-day basis the greatest threats I face are on one hand the dangers associated with flooding as a consequence of collision, explosion, grounding or intake/valve failure and on the other the danger of fire. Every member of the ship’s company is a fire fighter. Using the state of the art fire fighting training facility at the National Maritime College Ireland, where the navy’s college under Cdr Tom Tuohy is partnered with Cork Institute of Technology under Donal Burke, we are put through our paces. There are no hostages taken in this training. In my last training exercise besides losing my own life I also jeopardised the lives of the fire fighting team I was leading. Embarrassing but that’s the place to do it and not out here when you may have to fight a fire for real. We have nobody to turn to and unless we can put out the fire there really is no plan B. Consider our stores, hundreds of tonnes of diesel, tonnes of high explosives and pyrotechnics as well as all the furnishings, deck stores and supplies all perfect fuels ready to complete the fire triangle. But we shouldn’t be pessimistic, however, we train every few days varying the scenario. Our equipment is good. Some of the facilities we have include fixed CO2 fire installations, numerous pump options to charge the fire main, state of the art breathing apparatus and clothing, thermal imaging cameras (TIC), modern fire alarm facility triggered by heat and or smoke, smoke generators for training and a range of standard hoses, nozzles, branch pipes and foam makers. While posing a huge threat in times of hull damage such as after collision, the sea however can be our saviour when it comes to fire fighting, with its water being pumped throughout the ships fire main to where ever it is required and then being applied as is or in conjunction with a foam making facility to good effect. One of our greatest resources is the level of our training coupled with having one the Navy’s most experienced fire fighting instructors CPO John (Bull) Hogan as our CPO Mechanician.

Our exercise scenario simulated an oil fire in no. 3 generator room. An initial investigation by the ship’s standing sea fire party which includes CPO John Hogan, PO Electrician Fiachra Kelleher, Leading Mech Dwayne (Giggles) McPhilbin and Supply Paddy Lawlor leads to their immediate attempts to bring the fire under control failing. The team closes down the area and leaves one member to brief the attack team while Chief Hogan recommends to the Bridge to proceed immediately to emergency stations. This entails all personnel reporting to pre-assigned stations, all equipped with their personal life- saving equipment. The ship’s damage control headquarters springs to life and under the direction of the ship’s Marine Engineering Officer (MEO) Lt Cdr Anthony Heery the scenario is assessed and our best resources are focussed on the problem. The ships organisation provides for damage control parties at the ship’s forward end under PO Maurice Plant and at the ship’s after end under PO Liam (Sammy) Leahy. Each party has a cross section of skills and technical expertise offering the MEO with a variety of options for tackling the fire. One of the MEO’s first actions is to assign a water boundary cooling team to the adjacent and overhead compartments in order to prevent conduction and likely secondary ignitions. His main weapon in this case ultimately comes down to a four-man attack team making an entry into the compartment where the fire is out of control. The team includes one member with a water-wall offering protection to the team, a fire fighter who fights through the water wall, a hose handler and a team I/C. Each is dressed in a fearnought suit of thick fire resistant woollen material together with anti flash gloves and headgear to protect exposed skin, a helmet, fire fighting gloves and a breathing apparatus which is managed to the second by a controller. The Breathing Apparatus controller, who is a little remote from the fire, monitors cylinder pressures and times calculating when the next attack team needs to relieve the 1st. In our scenario the first team consisting of Seaman Lee Coughlan, Seaman Robbie Wallace, Mech Alan Doyle and Mech Brian Hastings, were relieved by the second team consisting of Seaman Fergal McDonagh, Seaman Robert Buckley, Leading Seaman Gordon Cummins and Seaman Niall Cremin who brought the fire under control eventually extinguishing the blaze. Do we all go to tea then, no, sentries must be mounted and the situation monitored until temperatures have dropped and there is no risk of secondary ignitions. All equipment has to be inspected, recharged and replaced ready for what will hopefully be another training exercise. Of course throughout the whole operation the MEO must also be mindful of the amount of seawater used in bringing the fire under control. There is little point in bringing the fire under control only to present me with my other nightmare of a ship so flooded that we are unable to float.

Onboard, however, we have a number of personnel who in addition to other skills make it their business not to float, our ships diving team. Tomorrow we will pass over the Abrolhos shoal with a least charted depth of 10 metres – lets send the divers down to have a look – more about that tomorrow.

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Captain’s Journal LE EITHNE – Sunday 19th of February
Midday Posn (Z) Irish Time – 15 59S 036 55W
Dist to Cork – 4350 nm (nautical miles)
Dist to Mar De Plata – 1720 nm

Today has been probably the most pleasant day since leaving Cork two weeks ago – with an Air Temperature of 31 Degrees, seawater temperature above 30 degrees and a light easterly breeze there is hardly a cloud in the sky. We are now well over halfway through the longest passage ever undertaken by an Irish Naval Vessel – the voyage from Santa Cruz Tenerife to Mar Del Plata Argentina. Flying fish continue to abound. Yesterday I saw a seabird swoop and seize a fish as it glided close to the water surface. I forgot to mention that a few days ago one fish actually landed on the flight deck. I am glad to have embarked at least one aircraft for this deployment. Senior Petty Officer Sam Fealy who picked up the fish on being asked if was dead quickly retorted, “no he is waiting for a bus”!

Having completed my night orders last night and before turning in I was reviewing the Admiralty sailing directions which provides up to date advice to mariners on the dangers to be expected in these waters. To my surprise it cited the coast of Brazil as a hotspot for piracy with reports of pirates successfully over running ships with high freeboards and travelling at speeds of up to 17 knots. My mean speed now is just over 15 knots or thirty kilometres per hour. Attacks usually take place under cover of darkness, most often between 2200 and 0600. While it would be a brave pirate that would board our ship – it is a headache I would rather avoid, accordingly the night watches were briefed and the need for vigilance was stressed. The experience has been that pirates in the area approach their target from the stern. At nighttime depending on the experience of the criminal it is likely under normal steaming conditions with no activity in the hangar that LE EITHNE’s stern light would look no different to that of a merchant or fishing vessel. Other hotspots in the world for piracy include the Straits of Malacca and the West Coast of Africa.

The Arquipelago dos Abrolhos shoal extends far offshore from the Brazilian coastline with a least depth of ten metres at a point known as Banco Inverie just to the East of our planned track. Satisfied that the survey is reliable, this morning I adjusted course to close this point. From this point the shoal tumbles to the deep Ocean and depths of greater than 4000 metres. As part of our programme to keep our teeth sharp today we are simulating an Operation Awkward in which we deploy the ships divers as an emergency response to a suspected terrorist hull attack. First however using our stand off training we will vector the diving team ahead to an estimated position where we will simulate an aircraft ditching 20 kilometres south of the ship on the Banco Inverie. The ships diving officer Lt Damian McCormack gathers the diving team and briefs command as well as the divers. As a diver myself I will also participate in the exercise, firstly to keep my minutes up to date, secondly it allows me the opportunity to assess at first hand our competency and thirdly it provides job enrichment for Lt Cdr Aedh McGinn who will assume command of LE EITHNE for the exercise. The deployment from the ship goes well and the ship prepares to vector us to the supposed aircraft crash spot. Travelling at 35 knots (or 70 kilometres per hour) our rigid inflatable boats are the fastest response we have and can speed ahead of the ship with a 40 kilometre per hour advantage. As a younger officer in the Navy I trained as a Search and Rescue diver with the Royal Navy in Culdrose deploying from helicopters. This was an exciting qualification to have and necessitated the maintenance of a high standard of physical fitness. These days with no helicopter embarked on LE EITHNE it has been impossible to maintain the grade and the qualification has lapsed. Nevertheless much of the doctrine learned still applies when deploying from a RIB. Besides debris, one of the first things to look for when looking for a ditched aircraft will be a fuel bloom on the sea surface. At night time this can often be detected by smell. On this occasion however our exercise has to be cut short as an overheat alarm triggers on the large inboard diesel engine of our Rigid inflatable boat. If responding to a genuine emergency in the circumstances we would accept it and carry on but this is training and we reluctantly acknowledge the alarm and return to ship to change boats. With sunset approaching we quickly move to the second phase of the operation to commence our ships bottom search. Just before we enter the water a shark like fish is spotted on the starboard side. At four or five feet while a consideration on his own he is not a major threat to life or limb once a careful watch is maintained. So the operation continues. Simultaneously while the divers deploy the ship also goes to swimming stations and a shark lookout is posted. The water is absolutely beautiful with visibility in excess of 30 metres. The ships hull is searched and found to be very clean with no cause for concern. Sacrificial anodes are in tact, no ropes or lines on the propellers, rudders or extendable stabilisers and all transducers clear. Meanwhile on the surface it is like water world with virtually every member of the ships company, other than the duty watch, jumping from the flight deck and climbing up the scrambling ladder – after all it is Sunday and if we can’t relax today then when can we.

As the divers wash their kit and charge their bottles they are framed by a beautiful sunset as the ships engines growl into life and LE EITHNE resumes her course to Mar Del Plata. For the first time in a week traffic is increasing as Brazilian fishing boats work the shoals and commercial shipping ploys up and down the coast. Just like last Sunday we had our dinner in the middle of the day and later than usual we settle to our tea at 1930.

Its now 10pm and I must finish my night orders. I will again ask the watches to be vigilant in case we meet a pirate. One thing for sure, however, is that he won’t hit us before midnight unless he the dumbest pirate in the south Atlantic. LE EITHNE is having a talent competition tonight on the flight-deck and most of the ships company will participate. Under the supervision of Warrant Officer John Walsh and with the support of the incredible one man band Leading Seaman Mark Ansboro the sharks, and pirates (that’s if there are any) of Arquipelago dos Abrolhos will be entertained like never before – but more about that tomorrow.

Week One
Week Two
Week Three
Week Four
Week Five
Week six
Week Seven

Voyage Pictures