Stranded Tourists Rescued from Ice-Bound Island

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_http://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/0,1518,675796,00.html

Spiegel said:
Hiddensee Helicopter Mission
Stranded Tourists Rescued from Ice-Bound Island

Military helicopters have transported dozens of tourists stranded on the Baltic Sea island of Hiddensee to safety. The rescue mission also brought supplies to the 1,000 islanders. Meanwhile storm front "Miriam" has been causing snowy chaos across Germany.

An ice-bound island in the Baltic Sea, isolated after Germany was hit by freezing weather, has been the focus of an extraordinary rescue mission.

Over 100 tourists had been left stranded on Hiddensee and islanders had been without supplies ever since the sea surrounding the idyllic island turned to ice late last week.

On Wednesday, however, the German military came to the rescue. A naval helicopter landed and took off several times during the day to ferry around 70 of the holidaymakers back to safety.

"The aircraft have been in the air since 8 a.m.," Bundeswehr spokesman Werner Cavalleri told SPIEGEL ONLINE on Wednesday. Each flight was capable of transporting 10 tourists plus their luggage from the island. Cavalleri said the mission was not dangerous. "These are rescue helicopters. They are robust. The decisive factor is visibility."

Another military helicopter brought in tons of supplies, including groceries and medicines, to the islanders on Wednesday. The last deliveries to Hiddensee had been last Thursday and by Monday bread, fruit, butter and eggs had all started to run out. On Tuesday a small private helicopter kicked off the rescue mission, arriving to take some of the tourists off the island, but the operation had to be halted due to heavy snow.

Just over 1,000 people live on the island, a popular holiday destination, which has no traffic apart from bicycles, ponies and emergency vehicles. On Wednesday Hiddensee's Mayor Manfred Gau said that almost all the tourists had now left the island. He said things were otherwise normal, with children still going to school and roads being cleared of snow.

Hiddensee is off the coast of Rügen, Germany's biggest island, which is connected to the mainland by a bridge. The sea between the two islands is now an ice sheet around 30 centimeters (12 inches) thick. An icebreaker failed to make it through to Hiddensee on Monday, forcing the authorities to use helicopters to supply the island and pick up the trapped vacationers.

According to the weather service Meteomedia, the ice sheet between Hiddensee and Rügen is not expected to melt until the end of February.

'Miriam' Causes Chaos

Meanwhile the heavy snow front known as "Miriam" that hit many parts of Germany on Tuesday has caused traffic chaos, accidents and disruption. The heavy snowfall broke the existing record of 48 centimeters, with the town of Teterow in the state of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania seeing snowfall measuring 51 centimeters. In Bavaria and the western German region of Sauerland, several buildings saw their roofs cave in due to the weight of the snow. Many more buildings have been evacuated.

There have been a number of fatalities in traffic accidents due to the treacherous road conditions and kilometers of traffic jams as the country grapples with the effects of the storm. Many schools right across the country remained closed on Wednesday due to the poor conditions.

Hundreds of drivers were forced to spend the night in their cars and trucks on the A45 and A4 highways due to heavy snowfall. The Red Cross and other emergency services came to the aid of those stuck in the snow with hot drinks and blankets.

While the north and north-east of the country bore the brunt of the snow storms on Tuesday night, the storm front is moving southwards and is expected to cause heavy snowfall in the mountainous areas of Baden-Württemberg and Bavaria.

smd -- with wire reports
 
hmmmm.... i wonder if that new ice shelf really will melt by February
 
More problems with ice and freezing weather in the Baltic, where due to thick ice forming a number of ferries and transpot ships got stuck. Apparently this sort of this hasn't happened since the 1980s:

thelocal.se said:
Ships freed from Baltic Sea ice

Published: 5 Mar 10 13:18 CET
Online: http://www.thelocal.se/25364/20100305/


Dozens of ships have been freed from thick ice in the Baltic Sea on Friday after ice breakers worked diligently to end the ordeal of of thousands of passengers and crew stranded in freezing conditions off the Swedish coast.

* Thousands stuck in Baltic Sea freeze (5 Mar 10)
* Thick Baltic ice causes ferry havoc (4 Mar 10)
* Three Baltic ferries stuck in the ice (3 Mar 10)

"There are no more ships stuck in the ice," Ann Ericsson of the Swedish Maritime Administration's ice breaker unit, told AFP.

A number of vessels, including several large passenger ferries shuttling as many as 1,000 passengers each between Sweden, Finland and Estonia, become stuck Thursday just outside the Stockholm archipelago, where freezing winds had pushed thick ice towards the coast.

"We have not slept much," Lena, a passenger on the Amorella ferry that broke free from the ice early Friday, told Sveriges Radio (SR).

"We've been interested in watching all the ice breakers and helicopters work."

Two small ice breakers on Thursday failed to free the Amorella and several other smaller ferries, which had been forced to wait for the larger Ymer ice breaker to sail down from the Bay of Bothnia in the north.

There it had been working to free as many as 50 cargo ships and commercial vessels, some of which had been stuck for days, and in one case since last Saturday, according to the maritime administration.

Twelve ships were still docked near the central port city of Sundsvall for that ice breaker to return to escort them out, according to Ericsson.

"They're waiting for help, but none of them are stuck," she said, adding that the winds had died down and conditions at sea had become easier.

The Amorella ferry, which has the capacity to carry up to 1,313 passengers and crew, had collided with a Finnfellow ferry trapped nearby while trying to free itself from the ice.

Its owner Viking Line however insisted no damage was done to the ship and that there had at no time been any danger to the passengers.

Passengers on the Amorella were requested to move to the front of the boat to avoid any collision impact, according to Mats Nyström, one of the passengers.

The two ships "were simply drifting towards each other," he told SR from the stranded ferry.

Finnfellow passenger Tapio Sippo meanwhile told Finnish tabloid Ilta-Sanomat that "there was a big crash."

"The staff panicked more than us tough truck drivers," he added.

The Swedish Maritime Administration issued a warning to ships not to take the route where most of the ferries became stuck.

"They got caught outside the archipelago, where there is moving ice. It's hard to navigate," Johny Lindvall, also of the Swedish Maritime Administration's ice breaker unit, told AFP Thursday, adding that he had not seen so many ships stuck at once since the mid-1980s.

Sweden has suffered an unusually harsh winter this year, with temperatures across the country almost continuously well below freezing since December.

The large ferries are equipped to break their way through the thin layers of ice that often cover parts of the Baltic they traffic, but Swedish maritime authorities criticised their decision to ignore its warning and attempt to take the treacherous route near the Stockholm archipelago.

"The problem is that these big ferries think they can handle the ice. They have extremely powerful engines, but in this case the ice was simply too difficult for them," Ulf Gullne, also of the administration's ice breaker unit, told SR.
 
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