New cruise tours to Fingal Island in Port Stephens.
A new cruise tour to Fingal Island and its
historic lighthouse, just off the coast of Port
Stephens, has been launched by Imagine Cruises and
its owner, Frank Future, who was the last caretaker
of the lighthouse cottages in the 1980s.
The deserted island lies less than 1km off the
coast of Port Stephens. A now submerged sand bar
between the island and the mainland was used in
Tourism Australia’s famous 2006 ‘Where the Bloody
Hell Are You’ TV advertisement which saw Lara Bingle
and Port Stephens’ own tourist-riding camels on the
beach.
Mr Future, a well-known nature conservationist in
Port Stephens and advocate for the protection of
dolphins and whales, was stationed on the island in
the late 1980s before the 21m-high lighthouse, built
in 1862, and the island was transferred from the
Australian Maritime Safety Authority to the care of
the NSW Government. Mr Future used to see whales and
dolphins off Fingal Island and dreamt of one day
sharing their magic with the public on cruise boats.
Frank later launched Imagine Cruises in Port
Stephens in 1994, with the company now one of the
leading whale and dolphin watch operators in the
Port.
“I loved living on Fingal Island almost 30 years
ago now – it’s a wild and special place and it
became the inspiration for the cruise company I
established in Port Stephens so I hope visitors and
locals alike join our new tours to explore this
magical little island,” Mr Future said.
Departing daily at 10am and 1pm year-round from
the Nelson Bay marina in Port Stephens, the new 3½
hour cruise aboard Imagine Cruises’ fast-cat,
Envision, takes passengers through the bay and out
through the heads south to Fingal Island, with a
good chance of spotting dolphins and, during the
cooler months, whales. Passengers are able to walk
ashore on Fingal Island, which is part of Tomaree
National Park, and visit the lighthouse, a former
Aboriginal fish trap lagoon and ruins of the nearby
cottages, with a nature guide explaining the
island’s history, fauna and flora. Swimming in the
lagoon is also possible.
The island’s south-eastern point, Point Stephens,
was named by Captain Cook in 1770 after his friend,
Sir Philip Stephens, an Admiralty secretary in
England.
Read more at
http://www.etbtravelnews.com
New cruise tours to Fingal Island in Port Stephens.
A new cruise tour to Fingal Island and its
historic lighthouse, just off the coast of Port
Stephens, has been launched by Imagine Cruises and
its owner, Frank Future, who was the last caretaker
of the lighthouse cottages in the 1980s.
The deserted island lies less than 1km off the
coast of Port Stephens. A now submerged sand bar
between the island and the mainland was used in
Tourism Australia’s famous 2006 ‘Where the Bloody
Hell Are You’ TV advertisement which saw Lara Bingle
and Port Stephens’ own tourist-riding camels on the
beach.
Mr Future, a well-known nature conservationist in
Port Stephens and advocate for the protection of
dolphins and whales, was stationed on the island in
the late 1980s before the 21m-high lighthouse, built
in 1862, and the island was transferred from the
Australian Maritime Safety Authority to the care of
the NSW Government. Mr Future used to see whales and
dolphins off Fingal Island and dreamt of one day
sharing their magic with the public on cruise boats.
Frank later launched Imagine Cruises in Port
Stephens in 1994, with the company now one of the
leading whale and dolphin watch operators in the
Port.
“I loved living on Fingal Island almost 30 years
ago now – it’s a wild and special place and it
became the inspiration for the cruise company I
established in Port Stephens so I hope visitors and
locals alike join our new tours to explore this
magical little island,” Mr Future said.
Departing daily at 10am and 1pm year-round from
the Nelson Bay marina in Port Stephens, the new 3½
hour cruise aboard Imagine Cruises’ fast-cat,
Envision, takes passengers through the bay and out
through the heads south to Fingal Island, with a
good chance of spotting dolphins and, during the
cooler months, whales. Passengers are able to walk
ashore on Fingal Island, which is part of Tomaree
National Park, and visit the lighthouse, a former
Aboriginal fish trap lagoon and ruins of the nearby
cottages, with a nature guide explaining the
island’s history, fauna and flora. Swimming in the
lagoon is also possible.
The island’s south-eastern point, Point Stephens,
was named by Captain Cook in 1770 after his friend,
Sir Philip Stephens, an Admiralty secretary in
England.
Read more at
http://www.etbtravelnews.com
New cruise tours to Fingal Island in Port Stephens.
A new cruise tour to Fingal Island and its
historic lighthouse, just off the coast of Port
Stephens, has been launched by Imagine Cruises and
its owner, Frank Future, who was the last caretaker
of the lighthouse cottages in the 1980s.
The deserted island lies less than 1km off the
coast of Port Stephens. A now submerged sand bar
between the island and the mainland was used in
Tourism Australia’s famous 2006 ‘Where the Bloody
Hell Are You’ TV advertisement which saw Lara Bingle
and Port Stephens’ own tourist-riding camels on the
beach.
Mr Future, a well-known nature conservationist in
Port Stephens and advocate for the protection of
dolphins and whales, was stationed on the island in
the late 1980s before the 21m-high lighthouse, built
in 1862, and the island was transferred from the
Australian Maritime Safety Authority to the care of
the NSW Government. Mr Future used to see whales and
dolphins off Fingal Island and dreamt of one day
sharing their magic with the public on cruise boats.
Frank later launched Imagine Cruises in Port
Stephens in 1994, with the company now one of the
leading whale and dolphin watch operators in the
Port.
“I loved living on Fingal Island almost 30 years
ago now – it’s a wild and special place and it
became the inspiration for the cruise company I
established in Port Stephens so I hope visitors and
locals alike join our new tours to explore this
magical little island,” Mr Future said.
Departing daily at 10am and 1pm year-round from
the Nelson Bay marina in Port Stephens, the new 3½
hour cruise aboard Imagine Cruises’ fast-cat,
Envision, takes passengers through the bay and out
through the heads south to Fingal Island, with a
good chance of spotting dolphins and, during the
cooler months, whales. Passengers are able to walk
ashore on Fingal Island, which is part of Tomaree
National Park, and visit the lighthouse, a former
Aboriginal fish trap lagoon and ruins of the nearby
cottages, with a nature guide explaining the
island’s history, fauna and flora. Swimming in the
lagoon is also possible.
The island’s south-eastern point, Point Stephens,
was named by Captain Cook in 1770 after his friend,
Sir Philip Stephens, an Admiralty secretary in
England.
Read more at
http://www.etbtravelnews.com
Read more at
http://www.etbtravelnews.com
New cruise tours to Fingal Island in Port Stephens.
A new cruise tour to Fingal Island and its
historic lighthouse, just off the coast of Port
Stephens, has been launched by Imagine Cruises and
its owner, Frank Future, who was the last caretaker
of the lighthouse cottages in the 1980s.
The deserted island lies less than 1km off the
coast of Port Stephens. A now submerged sand bar
between the island and the mainland was used in
Tourism Australia’s famous 2006 ‘Where the Bloody
Hell Are You’ TV advertisement which saw Lara Bingle
and Port Stephens’ own tourist-riding camels on the
beach.
Mr Future, a well-known nature conservationist in
Port Stephens and advocate for the protection of
dolphins and whales, was stationed on the island in
the late 1980s before the 21m-high lighthouse, built
in 1862, and the island was transferred from the
Australian Maritime Safety Authority to the care of
the NSW Government. Mr Future used to see whales and
dolphins off Fingal Island and dreamt of one day
sharing their magic with the public on cruise boats.
Frank later launched Imagine Cruises in Port
Stephens in 1994, with the company now one of the
leading whale and dolphin watch operators in the
Port.
“I loved living on Fingal Island almost 30 years
ago now – it’s a wild and special place and it
became the inspiration for the cruise company I
established in Port Stephens so I hope visitors and
locals alike join our new tours to explore this
magical little island,” Mr Future said.
Departing daily at 10am and 1pm year-round from
the Nelson Bay marina in Port Stephens, the new 3½
hour cruise aboard Imagine Cruises’ fast-cat,
Envision, takes passengers through the bay and out
through the heads south to Fingal Island, with a
good chance of spotting dolphins and, during the
cooler months, whales. Passengers are able to walk
ashore on Fingal Island, which is part of Tomaree
National Park, and visit the lighthouse, a former
Aboriginal fish trap lagoon and ruins of the nearby
cottages, with a nature guide explaining the
island’s history, fauna and flora. Swimming in the
lagoon is also possible.
The island’s south-eastern point, Point Stephens,
was named by Captain Cook in 1770 after his friend,
Sir Philip Stephens, an Admiralty secretary in
England.
Read more at
http://www.etbtravelnews.com
Read more at
http://www.etbtravelnews.com
New cruise tours to Fingal Island in Port Stephens.
A new cruise tour to Fingal Island and its
historic lighthouse, just off the coast of Port
Stephens, has been launched by Imagine Cruises and
its owner, Frank Future, who was the last caretaker
of the lighthouse cottages in the 1980s.
The deserted island lies less than 1km off the
coast of Port Stephens. A now submerged sand bar
between the island and the mainland was used in
Tourism Australia’s famous 2006 ‘Where the Bloody
Hell Are You’ TV advertisement which saw Lara Bingle
and Port Stephens’ own tourist-riding camels on the
beach.
Mr Future, a well-known nature conservationist in
Port Stephens and advocate for the protection of
dolphins and whales, was stationed on the island in
the late 1980s before the 21m-high lighthouse, built
in 1862, and the island was transferred from the
Australian Maritime Safety Authority to the care of
the NSW Government. Mr Future used to see whales and
dolphins off Fingal Island and dreamt of one day
sharing their magic with the public on cruise boats.
Frank later launched Imagine Cruises in Port
Stephens in 1994, with the company now one of the
leading whale and dolphin watch operators in the
Port.
“I loved living on Fingal Island almost 30 years
ago now – it’s a wild and special place and it
became the inspiration for the cruise company I
established in Port Stephens so I hope visitors and
locals alike join our new tours to explore this
magical little island,” Mr Future said.
Departing daily at 10am and 1pm year-round from
the Nelson Bay marina in Port Stephens, the new 3½
hour cruise aboard Imagine Cruises’ fast-cat,
Envision, takes passengers through the bay and out
through the heads south to Fingal Island, with a
good chance of spotting dolphins and, during the
cooler months, whales. Passengers are able to walk
ashore on Fingal Island, which is part of Tomaree
National Park, and visit the lighthouse, a former
Aboriginal fish trap lagoon and ruins of the nearby
cottages, with a nature guide explaining the
island’s history, fauna and flora. Swimming in the
lagoon is also possible.
The island’s south-eastern point, Point Stephens,
was named by Captain Cook in 1770 after his friend,
Sir Philip Stephens, an Admiralty secretary in
England.
Read more at
http://www.etbtravelnews.com
The plate-cutting ceremony
was recently held at the Marghera shipyard for the “Seabourn
Encore”, the first of two ultra-luxury cruise ships that
Fincantieri will build for Seabourn, brand of Carnival
Corporation.
“Seabourn
Encore”, due to join the Seabourn fleet in the end of 2016,
will be built according to the standards and technical
solutions that make Seabourn one of the most prestigious
brands in the ultra-luxury segment and will continue the
fleet modernization that began in 2009.
The all-suite ship will be approximately 40,350 gross tons,
210 metres long and 28 metres wide and will be able to reach
a cruising speed of 18.6 knots. It will carry up just 600
guests, based on double occupancy. Every suite will feature
a private veranda.
Safety will be one of this
ship’s major strong points.
It will be built using the very latest technologies, whose
standards will exceed the requirements of the relevant
legislation. Fuel consumption will be significantly reduced
by optimizing the ship’s hydrodynamics.
|