Sedna Desgagnes

Sedna Desgagnes is a bulk carrier built, in China for the Canadian shippling line Desgagnes. The television series High Arctic Haulers followed the vessel as she made the annual deliveries of supplies to a series of communities in Canada's Arctic Archipelago, during the short shipping season.[1][2]

When completed, in 2009, the vessel was named the Beluga Festivity.[3]

The Sedna Desgagnes ran aground in the St. Lawrence Seaway, near Prescott, Ontario, on October 14, 2012.[3][4]

References

  1. "The sealift is a critical part of survival in remote Arctic communities". CBC News. 2019-11-20. Retrieved 2020-01-07. The Sedna is one of several cargo ships that race against time to reach isolated Arctic communities who rely on them for everything from diapers to construction machinery.
  2. Greg David (2010-01-03). "Preview: Cut-off Canadian communities rely on High Arctic Haulers". TV-eh. Retrieved 2020-01-07. Filmed in Nunavut, High Arctic Haulers kicks off in the ice-choked Ungava Bay, where the Sedna Desgagnés is trapped. Surrounded by icebergs and growlers, Captain Michel Duplain and his first mate, Simon Charest, attempt to shake free of the ice.
  3. "Sedna Desgagnés: IMO 9402093". Boatnerd. Retrieved 2020-01-07.
  4. "Cargo ship runs aground in St. Lawrence Seaway". CTV News. Prescott, Ontario. 2012-10-14. Retrieved 2020-01-07. The Transportation Safety Board says a vessel named the M.V. Sedna Desgagne was stranded just after 8 a.m. Sunday while passing near a bridge in the southeastern Ontario town.
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