When I first heard the idea of a turn table ferry, I assumed it was an early design before anyone figured out how to do ferries properly. A modern cross river ferry is built with the cabin at the side, so cars can drive on and drive off without having to awkwardly reverse. So I figured a turn table ferry like this one is going to be a prototype solution before anyone figured out how to put the cabin at the side.
Instead of having the cars reverse off, you turn the whole car deck around. And yes, that does happen here, but the real reason for the turn table is more clever than that. And there's only one of them left anywhere in the world, here in Western Scotland, over the sea to sky.
There's been a ferry here since 1700s, people say a vehicle ferry, certainly, since the 1930s. This particular ferry has been here since the 1980s and it was operated by a man called Brody McLeod. And the tolls were removed from the sky, but he felt probably that the ferry's time was up because you could get across the bridge for nothing. So who would pay to go on the ferry? So the local community banded together and thought we can't have this. Not having the ferry is a social experiment, we don't want to be involved in. So a little group of folk got together and saved the ferry and brought it into community ownership, which it still is today.
That is quite a strong current. The current can be up to nine knots in the street, but that's exceptional. Current and wind together can make things interesting. The ferry is very seldom pointing in the direction and it's actually going because of the wind and because of the tide. We often have to set the boat going in a different direction to allow us to get to where we want to go. The water here is tidal and the current is fast.
Simple ferry designs are great if you've got steady water that's always at the same height. You boat arrives, puts down a ramp to the shore and the cars can drive on and off. But if the water's tidal, well, that ramp could need to go three or four meters up or down, depending on the time of day. So the only way it works is if you build infrastructure on the river banks, floating pontoons and large ramps that give the cars enough room to drive up and down. That's far too big and expensive for someone like this.
So the obvious solution is a slipway, a boat ramp, a long, gentle approach to the water. In a lot of places that does work. Sail up to the water's edge, drop a ramp and everyone stays dry, no matter the water's height. But that means you need a long, long slipway and importantly, your boat needs to be lined up straight. Here, in this narrow channel, the current can be so strong that isn't possible. Even if you could line up straight reliably, you can only tie the boat off at the front. So the back's probably going to swing out of it.
So what you want to do is what a passenger ferry does. Pull up alongside the slipway and let people get off sideways. Great for people, not so useful for cars. And that's where the turntable comes in. The turntable is a remarkable piece of Victorian engineering. It was based on the old railway turntable system. Cars could come on to the boat from any jetty at any state of the tide to then be turned round and be able to drive off. Usually it's two, but one person can turn it. A lot of oil and grease is expended and keeping it as smooth as we can.
The way that the boat is designed, it draws virtually no draft at all forward and it's only four and a half feet at the stern. So it can come alongside in very shallow water. That was the part of the design that makes them so versatile. Very, very, very rare indeed that we can't work. It would have to be an exceptionally low tide.
Before the invention of the Roll-On Roll-Off Ferry, these were the original Roll-Off Roll-Off Ferrys. Now there's been a bridge across the sky, north of here since 1995. So these days this is mostly used just by locals and there's a tourist attraction in the summer. But if you are in this area, well, I'd recommend taking a diversion and driving across this way because there's only one place in the world where you can drive off a turntable like this. Thank you very much. Bye.