Bristol Post

Balmoral Historic ship ‘comes home’ in harbour shuffle

- Tristan CORK tristan.cork@reachplc.com Balmoral

ONE of Bristol’s most historic ships is moving ‘back home’ across the Floating Harbour today.

The MV Balmoral, which is thought to have visited more British ports than any other ship, has been moored at Mardyke on the northern side of the harbour near the Grain Barge.

But at lunchtime today she is being brought back across the harbour to her more familiar location right in front of the M Shed at Prince’s Wharf.

The boat was moored next to Prince Street Bridge from around 2017, when she came in for refurbishm­ent.

The Balmoral, built in 1949 initially as a ferry between Southampto­n and the Isle of Wight, needs a lot of work to get back out cruising around the Bristol Channel and beyond, and that work was put on pause by the pandemic.

The 62-metre craft spent most of her years as a cruise ship touring the coast of Britain and is said to be the ship that has visited the biggest number of British ports.

Until 2017, she had been plying her trade mainly up and down the Bristol Channel, but a rough crossing between Liverpool and North Wales made the headlines.

After being moored outside the M Shed, she became a film star, too, doubling up for passenger boats in postwar London in the 2018 Lily James film The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society, and then as a transatlan­tic ship bringing Laurel and Hardy to Ireland and the UK in Stan & Ollie.

The Balmoral was moved in 2019 to make way for the STS Lord Nelson,a tall ship that had spent years as a base for the Jubilee Sailing Trust to teach people with disabiliti­es to sail, but moved to Bristol to be mothballed.

The Lord Nelson spent the pandemic in the most prominent spot on the Floating Harbour, by Prince’s Bridge, but has now moved across the harbour, and at 1pm today the Balmoral will move back.

Dave Bassett, a trustee of the charity set up to preserve the Balmoral, said it was a case of ‘going home.’

“It’s nothing more complicate­d than the Balmoral needs power to keep the ship warm over the winter, so we really appreciate Bristol City Council and the harbourmas­ter accommodat­ing us over by the M Shed,” he said.

“We’re just shifting berths, but we’re really pleased that we’ll be taking the

home.”

 ?? K Ollis ?? The MV Balmoral on the northern side of the Floating Harbour
K Ollis The MV Balmoral on the northern side of the Floating Harbour

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