Aug 21 2008
The Sea Stallion from Glendalough returns home after a six weeks voyage
![]() Pic:Novopress |
The Viking replica longship Sea Stallion returns to home waters in Roskilde today, after a 2,800 nautical-mile round trip between Denmark and Ireland.The return of the ship with 60 multinational crew - under sail or rowing, depending on weather - will be greeted by countless vessels at sea, and up to 10,000 people ashore.
Young pupils from Dublin’s St Patrick’s Cathedral School and choir, along with members of Dublin Civil Defence were among an Irish welcoming party who flew to Denmark from Dublin yesterday. |
Mr Sorensen was on board the ship last year on its outward leg from Denmark, via the Scottish coast, when the vessel experienced several rudder breakages and heavy weather. His colleague Soren Nielsen said that the journey from Dublin to Land’s End over the Celtic Sea involved baling out heavy seas “as never before”.
The ship “coped fantastically”, Mr Nielsen recorded in his personal log.
It crawled “over swell after swell, the whole hull twisting and shaking with every wave it met, but continuing undaunted”. New rudder tackle fitted to the longship had also proved particularly successful.
Conditions on board for the crew of adventurers, sailors, shipbuilders, historians and archaeologists under skipper Carsten Hvid have been very basic, sleeping on an open deck with no shelter and no privacy.
The vessel finally reached Danish waters just over a week ago and navigated through the Limfjord down south to Roskilde, spending time in harbours “waiting for wind” for its one mainsail.
The Sea Stallion replica was modelled on one of five Viking ships excavated at Skuldelev in Denmark in 1962, including a vessel believed to have been built in Dublin in 1042 from oak felled in Wicklow’s Glendalough.
Visit the Sea Stallion website
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