13 July 2015
By Bryan T. Smyth
bryan@TheCork.ie
With over 10,000 people turning out for SeaFest event in Cork Harbour
this weekend, Ireland’s first national maritime festival is being
heralded as a great success. Co-ordinated by the Marine Institute,
SeaFest brought together a number of state agencies and organisations
to showcase to the public the wonders and fruits of the sea. Ocean
literacy, marine recreation, seafood and the science of the sea were
key themes at the SeaFest which took place at Ringaskiddy and
Haulbowline and in the Port of Cork.
An Taoiseach Enda Kenny was also a guest at the SeaFest, when he
officially opened the new UCC Beaufort Building which is Ireland’s
state of the art wave energy research facility.
Minister for Agriculture, Food, the Marine and Defence Simon Coveney
T.D. announced that SeaFest will be hosted in Galway in 2016, and he
paid tribute to the Marine Institute as co-ordinators of the maritime
festival.
The partners involved in SeaFest included the Marine Institute, the
National Maritime College of Ireland, the Irish Defence Forces at the
Naval Base in Haulbowline, Port of Cork, University College Cork, Cork
Institute of Technology, Cork Chamber, Cork County Council, Cork City
Council, MaREI, Bord Bia and Bord Iascaigh Mhara.
“SeaFest has been an enormous success in that it showcased the many
fantastic benefits that the sea brings us. In Cork Harbour this
weekend, we experienced exceptional seafood, boating and sailing, open
water swimming, marine simulators, Irish Defence Forces displays and
tours, sea life exhibits, educational screenings and talks and all
sorts of marine related activities that brought the work of all our
agencies together to highlight the benefits of the public,”said Dr.
Peter Heffernan, CEO of the Marine Institute.
Cookery demonstrations with Martin Shanahan and Rory O’Connell on how
to cook and eat prawns, lobsters, mussels and oysters among other
seafood, organised by the seafood development agency, Bord Iascaigh
Mhara (BIM) and Bord Bia, the Irish Food Board, were hugely popular at
the event.
The National Maritime College of Ireland shared their facilities,
including marine simulators, usually used to train professionals for a
career at sea. Visitors also got to explore to the newly opened €15.2
million UCC Beaufort building, named after the Irish hydrographer and
globally adopted Beaufort Wind Scale creator, Rear Admiral Sir Francis
Beaufort. The wave tanks in the Beaufort Building are capable of
producing actual waves of up to 1.2 metres high, which are equivalent
to the 30m+ waves experienced in extreme conditions off the west coast
of Ireland and in the Atlantic, and will be used extensively by LIR,
the National Ocean Test Facility located in the Beaufort Building.
The Harnessing our Ocean Wealth conference which formed a key part of
SeaFest attract international and national delegates as well as
experts in marine research, ocean energy and the ‘blue economy’.