Firework spectacular to mark QE2 silver date
By Keith Hamilton
Taken from
Southern Daily Echo
A DAZZLING firework display will light up
Southampton's night sky signalling the departure of the
legendary Cunard liner, Queen Elizabeth 2 on her Silver Jubilee
round-the-world voyage next week.
Every year for the past quarter of a century QE2, pictured,
has traditionally set sail from Southampton to all corners of
the globe before returning back to her home port.
In the last 25 years, in just these voyages alone, QE2 will
have travelled well in excess of 600,000 miles, further than the
return trip from earth to the moon and back.
QE2's world cruise has become an established part of the
shipping industry and many of the same passengers return time
and time again to the liner for the voyage as she leaves the
chill of a British winter behind in her wake and heads for the
sun.
According to the Cunard brochure passengers could pay
anything from £18,519 for a berth in an inside cabin right up to
£132,999 each for the liner's ultra luxury suites for the 108
night voyage that will visit 40 ports in 23 different countries.
This year QE2 will be joined by her huge sister ship, Queen
Mary 2 which will be undertaking her maiden world cruise during
which the two Cunard Queens will meet up on February 20 in
Sydney, Australia.
The first firework is due to soar into the air over
Southampton's Eastern Docks at about 4.45pm next Tuesday,
January 2 just a few minutes before QE2 moves away from her
berth and sets a westward course out across the Atlantic to New
York. On Monday, January 15 QE2 will transit the Panama Canal
into the Pacific where she will visit Hawaii, French Polynesia,
Tongo, Fiji and New Zealand before arriving in Australia. After Sydney amongst the calls QE2 will make includes Japan,
Hong Kong, Vietnam, Singapore, the Seychelles, South Africa and
then north up the west of Africa to Madeira which will be her
last stop before arriving in Southampton on Saturday, April 21. QM2
will begin her 75 night voyage from Florida down the east
coast of South America to round Cape Horn on Tuesday, January 23
and then out across the Pacific to New Zealand, Australia and
the Far East before India, the Middle East and Europe to arrive
in Southampton on Monday, March 26. 2:09pm Thursday 28th December 2006 |