BC Ferries vessel drops anchor midway through sailing
Two BC Ferries sailings between Vancouver Island and the Lower Mainland have been cancelled after a mechanical issue caused one of the company's largest vessels to stall Friday afternoon.
The Spirit of British Columbia vessel left Swartz Bay bound for Tsawwassen at 1 p.m.
During the passage, the vessel experienced an issue with its starboard anchor, which spokesperson Deborah Marshall called "an inadvertent release" in a statement to CTV News.
"There is no danger to the vessel or the passengers on board," Marshall said. "The crew are working on retrieving the anchor. The ship will get underway as soon as possible."
At 4 p.m., the spokesperson confirmed the vessel's crew had successfully retrieved the anchor and resumed its trip to Tsawwassen with an estimated arrival time of 4:20 p.m.
"As a result of the delays, the 3 p.m. sailing from Tsawwassen and the 5 p.m. sailing from Swartz Bay are cancelled today," Marshall said. "We apologize to our customers for the inconvenience."
A passenger on the ship told CTV News that she heard a loud noise when the anchor dropped from the vessel without warning.
Dirk Meissner was sitting near the front of the ferry when the anchor started to move. He said the vessel had just made it out of Active Pass when the anchor released.
"It has these huge chain links and it starts to go, to drop into the ocean, and we're all, like, sitting here going, 'Oh, that seems weird,'" he said. "The whole front of the boat was kind of shaking."
Meissner estimated it took 45 seconds to a minute for the anchor to fully extend, and said the vessel was stopped for more than an hour while crew members slowly hauled it back up.
Marshall said BC Ferries has not yet determined the cause of the incident, but is investigating.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
'Evidence of a genocide' found during search of Alta. residential school: First Nation investigators
An organization investigating unmarked graves near a residential school in eastern Alberta says it has uncovered 'physical and documented evidence of a genocide.'

Economists concerned about Bank of Canada’s expected interest rate hike, but suspect it will be the last
The Bank of Canada is expected to announce yet another interest hike on Wednesday, and economists are hoping that it will be the last one for a while, with some warning it could be a step closer to recession as Canada tries to balance the need to fight inflation with the growing pressure on the housing market.
What another Bank of Canada rate hike could mean
The Bank of Canada is scheduled to make an interest rate announcement Wednesday that's widely expected to push its key policy rate up to 4.5 per cent -- the highest it's been since 2007. Economists are predicting the central bank, which has made a rapid succession of large hikes since it began raising from near-zero in March, is nearing an end to the increases.
Four young teens charged in connection with TTC 'swarming' attack as video surfaces of incident
Four 13-year-old boys have been charged in connection with a "swarming" attack on board a TTC bus in Scarborough.
Researchers from Montreal and India detect radio signal from galaxy 8.8 billion light years away
Researchers from Montreal and India have detected a radio signal from a galaxy that's nearly nine billion light years away
Four-year-old boy joins Mensa after teaching himself to read as a toddler
A four-year-old boy from southern England who taught himself to read as a toddler is now the U.K.'s youngest Mensa member.
Five Canadian cities among most overrated in the world: report
Five Canadian cities are among the most overrated cities for tourists to visit in the world, according to a new report.
U.S. and Canada not interested in sending armed force to Haiti
The United States and Canada showed no interest Tuesday in deploying security personnel despite renewed appeals from the United Nations and Haiti for help to end worsening violence in the Western hemisphere's poorest nation.
Brothers killed by avalanche while heli-skiing in southeastern B.C.
The two men killed by an avalanche while heli-skiing near Revelstoke, B.C., on Monday have been identified as brothers and business leaders from Pennsylvania.