MV Malibu Princess

MV Malibu Princess
History
Name: MV Malibu Princess (O.N. 326618)
Owner: Young Life
Operator: Malibu Yacht Charters
Port of registry: Canada Canada
Route: Jervis Inlet, British Columbia
Builder: Allied Shipbuilders LTD., False Creek, Vancouver BC
Cost: $335,000
Launched: March 26, 1966
Christened: March 26, 1966
Completed: April 1966
In service: Yes
Identification:
Status: Active
Notes: Specifications from Transport Canada,vessel registration query - Malibu Princess
General characteristics
Type: Passenger-Excursion
Tonnage: 505 tons
Length: 126 ft (38 m)
Beam: 32.6 ft (9.9 m)
Draft: 7.6 ft (2.3 m)
Depth: 2.74 m (9.0 ft)
Decks: 3
Installed power: Two Deutz Diesels Engines with total of 850 hp (0.63 MW)
Propulsion: Twin Screw
Speed: 12 knots at full load
Capacity: 325
Crew: 7

MV Malibu Princess is a passenger vessel privately owned by Young Life and which operates the Malibu Club in Canada located at Malibu, British Columbia, adjacent to the narrow entrance of Princess Louisa Inlet. The ship is used specifically to transport people and freight to Malibu.

History

During those early years, Young Life was reliant on charter freight boats to transport their young passengers from Vancouver to Malibu. By 1965, Young Life was faced with a challenge when their stable chartered freight hauler would no longer be in business.[1]

A suitable vessel would need to be designed and built per Young Life's needs and a letter of intent was issued. Once approved, Philip F. Spaulding and Associates of Seattle was selected to design the vessel and the False Creek shipyard selected was Allied Shipbuilders Ltd. who would build the ship. The name of the ship would be called the Malibu Princess after a large yacht Young Life sold to help finance it which would be renamed the Weatherly.

The overall cost of the ship was $335,000 with $135,000 coming from the Canadian Maritime Commission Ship Subsidy and from the proceeds from the sale of the soon-to-be Weatherly. The remaining funds were through a loan that Mr. C.D. Weyerhaeuser was able to secure. Eventually, the boat was paid off through fund raising and major donations.[2]

When she was launched, the Malibu Princess was based out of, the North Vancouver waterfront, around the site of the current SeaBus Terminal, at the foot of Chesterfield Ave., then from 1972, she used a pier, just West from the old Pier B-C, which is now the location of Canada Place and the thriving cruise ship facility of Vancouver. The Princess would make its 16+ hour round trip from Vancouver to Malibu, taking campers and supplies to The Bu then returning with finished campers, this trip was done once a week. But in 1997, the Princess was moved to her new berth at Egmont which helped cut down the travel time by more than 60%, thereby reducing the overall wear & tear on the ship plus reduced significantly the fuel costs. Campers heading to The Bu are now brought to Egmont on charter bus, along the scenic Sunshine Coast highway, via B.C. Ferries Horseshoe Bay to Langdale Terminal. [3]

References

  1. Hitz, Charles W.(2003). Through the Rapids - The History of Princess Louisa Inlet, p.160-161. Sitka 2 Publishing Archived 2008-11-22 at the Wayback Machine.., Kirkland, WA. ISBN 0-9720255-0-2.
  2. Hitz, Charles W.(2003). Through the Rapids - The History of Princess Louisa Inlet, p.160-161. Sitka 2 Publishing Archived 2008-11-22 at the Wayback Machine.., Kirkland, WA. ISBN 0-9720255-0-2.
  3. Hitz, Charles W.(2003). Through the Rapids - The History of Princess Louisa Inlet, p.160-161. Sitka 2 Publishing Archived 2008-11-22 at the Wayback Machine.., Kirkland, WA. ISBN 0-9720255-0-2.


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