quote:
Seaplanes bring new lifelines to Greek islands
CORFU, Greece (AFP)
Monday, August 8, 2005The seaplane, once known as the flying boat, is making a comeback in the Greek islands in a pioneering experiment to help isolated seaboard communities.
The islands, many of which are busy with tourists in the summer, depend on transportation links, mainly by ship or by hydrofoil, but these are tied to fixed infrastructures and may be interrupted by bad weather. And services have been disrupted recently by mechanical breakdowns.
Enter the seaplane: presented as a highly flexible and economically viable means of taking small numbers of people to out-of-the-way places, capable of flying in almost any weather provided a sheltered stretch of water is available when waves are high.
Seaplanes were used for regular commercial flights in these skies, or waters, in the 1930s and during World War II the occupying Germans operated them out of the main harbour in Corfu in World War II on reconnaissance and carried bombs for anti-submarine attacks.
Now, seaplanes are using the same stretch of water but this time they are in sparkling white and dark blue, and they carry holidaymakers: a trip of 133 kilometres (83 miles) costs 60 euros (74 dollars).
Greece, because of its long coastline, abundance of small islands and limited airfield infrastructure, seems ideal for seaplane operations.
A Greek-Canadian company called AirSea Lines began flights from Corfu to the mainland northwestern town of Ioannina three weeks ago. It had begun testing the concept with a six-minute flight between Corfu and the island of Paxoi 11 months ago.
The airline says its strategy is based on satisfying local demand that well-established airlines such as Olympic Airlines and Aegean Airlines cannot meet.
"We're not aiming to compete against Olympic or Aegean," says company general manager Tassos Govas. "Our advantage is that we can access islands that lack airports, where local residents have problems with their transport and goods supply, and (a shortage of) health facilities."
Also known as float planes after the padded supports attached to their fuselage, seaplanes were used extensively in the formative years of commercial aviation between the wars.
Corfu itself served as a stopover point for British Imperial Airways flights from Southampton to Alexandria, and for French Lignes d'Orient flights from Marseille to Beirut.
Propeller-driven aircraft were phased out after 1945 when faster jet aviation became the industry standard.
But in Greece, the necessary infrastructure for airport-to-airport flights could never be fully developed in the island quiltwork that dots the Greek coastline.
Most of these islands rely today on regular ferry connections to the mainland, but the link becomes tenuous in winter when coastal shipping operators have to contend with bad weather and falling passenger numbers.
"A ship with a capacity of 500 that carries 30 passengers in winter is a loss-making one," says Govas. "We, however, can help the situation with 19-person loads, which is our full capacity."
He also says: "If an island is left without supplies and the ship cannot go, we can make that flight. We can roughly carry 1.5-2 tonnes."
Aegean Minister Aristotelis Pavlidis says that seaplane services to the eastern Greek archipelago will "likely" follow in the coming months.
His ministry had planned to authorise flights to 10 additional island destinations this summer, he says, before unforeseen complications in the designation of plane landing sites cropped up.
"We need to be very careful, we cannot place them in harbours or where people swim," Pavlidis told AFP. "We want to solve problems, not create fresh ones."
Under the terms of a new Greek law, seaplanes cannot operate in areas where wave height exceeds two metres (6.6 feet).
But AirSea Lines pilot Daniel Englund, who flies the Corfu-Ioannina link, insists that his Canadian-built De Havilland Otter "can handle gale force winds, anything (short of) a hurricane".
The pilot, born in Sweden, told AFP: "The wind is never a problem, it's actually better when it's windy. The more wind you have, the faster you can get airborne."
Flying at an altitude of up to 6,000 feet (1,830 metres), the Otter provides an undeniably fast, though loud and frequently bumpy ride. Earplugs are provided to block out engine noise during the flight.
Englund says he has received favourable comments from passengers.
"Most tourists go to Paxoi, and say they don't want to fly another way," he says. "They are amazed, because it's so fast and easy to get there. Lots of people from Europe are not used to seaplanes, so it's a nice experience."
Launched with extensive support from leading Canadian seaplane operator Harbour Air, AirSea Lines eventually plans to expand its services to Italy and Spain once the Greek market is firmly in hand.
The western port of Patras, Greece's main point of passenger traffic to Italy, is its next target.
"We have a licence to (access) any EU destination, and we will commercially develop this when the time comes," says Govas.
The Citizen