Needles Ferry

Cable ferry in British Columbia, Canada From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Needles Ferrymap

The Needles Ferry is a cable ferry across Lower Arrow Lake in the West Kootenay region of southeastern British Columbia. Linking Needles and Fauquier, the ferry, part of BC Highway 6, is by road about 135 kilometres (84 mi) southeast of Vernon and 57 kilometres (35 mi) southwest of Nakusp.

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Needles Ferry
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Needles Ferry
LocaleNeedlesFauquier
WaterwayLower Arrow Lake
Transit typePassenger and vehicle ferry
Carries Highway 6
OwnerBC Ministry of Transportation
and Infrastructure
OperatorWaterBridge Ferries Inc.
System length0.9 km (0.6 mi)
No. of lines1
No. of vessels1
No. of terminals2
Websitewww2.gov.bc.ca/gov/content/transportation/passenger-travel/water-travel/inland-ferries/needles-cable-ferry
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Needles Ferry
Needles Ferry
Location in British Columbia

Timeline

1913: Farmers built the first vehicle ferry using Ford Model T parts.[1][self-published source] Apart from a reference to a rudimentary raft in 1922,[2] no evidence exists of a service most years.[3]
1924: Government ferry launched, which comprised a log raft pushed by a launch.[4] This free service, had a one-car capacity.[5]
1928: Larger boat introduced.[5]
1931: Wooden hulled cable ferry installed,[4] having three-car capacity.[5] Crossings were hourly.[4]
1941: Upgraded to eight-car capacity.[5]
1952: Upgraded to 16-car capacity.[5]
1955: Service increased from 12 to 24 hours per day.[5]
1967: Replacement bridge confirmed, but never eventuated.[6]
1968: Both terminals rebuilt on submerging by the reservoir for the Keenleyside Dam.[7]
1969: Diesel-powered Needles with 28-car capacity introduced.[4]
1990: Needles relocated to Upper Arrow Lake Ferry route. Replaced by a 40-vehicle, 150-passenger cable ferry. At 1,500 metres (5,000 ft) was longest haul cable in North America.[4]
2002: Service reduced to 17 hours per day.[8]
2004: Western Pacific Marine became the service contractor.[9]
c.2013: WaterBridge Ferries became the service provider.
2019: Ferry crew observed a submerged pickup truck just off the Needles ferry landing.[10]

Patronage

Summarize
Perspective
More information Patronage (1924–1947)a (Double these numbers for single trips), Type ...
Patronage (1924–1947)a (Double these numbers for single trips)
TypeYearPageRound
Trips
Motor
Vehicles
Horse-
drawn
rigs
PassengersFreight
(tons)
LivestockTotal
Vehicles
Power boat1924–25Q381,008      256    30      2,186682        36       286
1925–26Q381,8522,557    56      4,037      42      1002,613
1926–27P462,2641,604    44      6,004      46        961,648
1927–28U527,1381,530    40      5,162      39        411,570
1928–29S612,1552,442    38      5,972      89        862,480
1929–30T742,1552,366    79      5,899      68        872,445
Power cable1930–31G504,1024,79023111,354340      1725,021
1931–32M404,1175,24438511,836582      1595,629
1932–33Q364,0494,43836913,203503      1354,807
1933–34O324,6754,74051014,827784      2595,250
1934–35T375,4276,18170018,449719      6056,881
1935–36I445,6376,88266118,834820      2397,543
1936–37X525,9927,73382519,804998      3558,558
1937–38X556,8239,04691122,3051,292      2289,957
1938–39Z566,5809,18875820,6051,830      2629,946
1939–40P567,2209,34654121,3241,938      3109,887
1940–41O477,10910,23735918,4031,181      36010,596
1941–42T526,62810,89422920,0102,116      59011,123
1942–43O525,7648,31831614,3673,525      4418,634
1943–44Q524,9847,35922512,6791,730      4267,584
1944–45O514,9857,2847414,6991,814      2177,358
1945–46Q585,4268,62026414,0371,707      3308,884
1946–47P477,26211,9718827,0797,416      34512,059
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More information Patronage (1947–1960)b (Double these numbers for single trips), Type ...
Patronage (1947–1960)b (Double these numbers for single trips)
TypeYearPageRound
Trips
Passenger
Autos
Passengers
(Drivers
excluded)
TrucksTrailers
& Semis
BusesMotor-
cycles
Horse-
drawn
rigs
Freight
(tons)
LivestockMisc.
Veh.
Total
Vehicles
Power
cable
1947–48N567,435      6,759      30,3004,4661,4261,625201462,750      16314,442
1948–49O609,95310,558      49,8036,427     3941,787291646,361      17019,359
1949–50Q7412,92815,311      60,1519,970     4331,73719716,798      14027,541
1950–51N7714,43716,854      60,04511,635     2081,45018746,179      17430,239
1951–52P8312,86812,758      52,32210,200     3721,53510454,614        9924,920
1952–53O8512,73813,662      50,0049,071     8522,06730635,317      13625,745
1953–54M9316,00919,216      60,77611,911     5441,99763184,560        8433,749
1954–55K9515,50617,828      55,00311,733     5582,03526254,891      11032,205
1955–56N8814,60116,783      48,37310,947     3791,6611126        67429,811
1956–57J10015,32618,103      52,66813,254     601919      431        6032,912
1957–58G5315,42820,400      56,90713,420     5287201012        71635,096
1958–59G3614,22618,863      53,04910,515     51587012      10430,775
1959–60F4115,22620,939      53,07711,450     56171810      8        8233,686
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Prior to 1960

^a . Extracted from the respective Ministry of Public Works annual reports.

^b . Extracted from the respective Ministry of Public Works or Ministry of Highways annual reports.

Operation

The ferry operates under private contract with the British Columbia Ministry of Transportation and is free of tolls, as are all inland ferries in British Columbia.[11]

Departures are every thirty minutes, from the first at 5 am until the last at 10 pm, with a crossing time of about five minutes. The ferry has capacity for 40 vehicles and 135 passengers.[12]

See also

Footnotes

References

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