Can I follow where the ferry between Vaasa and Uumaja (Vasa and Umeå) is?











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The ferry from Vaasa to Uumaja has turned back due to bad weather. Is there a way of following where it is, expected arrival time and other such information?










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    The ferry from Vaasa to Uumaja has turned back due to bad weather. Is there a way of following where it is, expected arrival time and other such information?










    share|improve this question







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    Tommi Brander is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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      up vote
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      down vote

      favorite
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      up vote
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      down vote

      favorite
      2






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      The ferry from Vaasa to Uumaja has turned back due to bad weather. Is there a way of following where it is, expected arrival time and other such information?










      share|improve this question







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      The ferry from Vaasa to Uumaja has turned back due to bad weather. Is there a way of following where it is, expected arrival time and other such information?







      ferries sweden finland ships






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      asked Nov 29 at 11:39









      Tommi Brander

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          1 Answer
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          You can follow many vessels worldwide through vessel finder websites, such as vesselfinder.com or marinetraffic.com. The websites are free for basic use, not unlike airline tracking websites. This will allow you to see where the vessel is right now.



          Specifically, you can follow the WASA EXPRESS. It is apparently due in Holmsund next at 2018-11-29 12:30 LT (UTC +1), having left Vaasa at 2018-11-29 09:03 LT (UTC +2). I don't know how quickly marinetraffic will pick up in case plans change, but when it has physically turned around you should be able to tell from the live tracking soon enough.



          Edit: According to a comment by vidarlo, Destination is sent as part of AIS messages, so Marinetraffic (and other sites) will pick up as soon as the bridge changes destination on their AIS instruments.






          share|improve this answer























          • The due date is in the past and it can indeed be seen that the ship has turned around. Thanks.
            – Tommi Brander
            Nov 29 at 12:43






          • 3




            Destination is sent as part of AIS messages, so Marinetraffic (and other sites) will pick up as soon as the bridge changes destination on their AIS instruments.
            – vidarlo
            Nov 29 at 16:49











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          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes








          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes








          up vote
          21
          down vote



          accepted










          You can follow many vessels worldwide through vessel finder websites, such as vesselfinder.com or marinetraffic.com. The websites are free for basic use, not unlike airline tracking websites. This will allow you to see where the vessel is right now.



          Specifically, you can follow the WASA EXPRESS. It is apparently due in Holmsund next at 2018-11-29 12:30 LT (UTC +1), having left Vaasa at 2018-11-29 09:03 LT (UTC +2). I don't know how quickly marinetraffic will pick up in case plans change, but when it has physically turned around you should be able to tell from the live tracking soon enough.



          Edit: According to a comment by vidarlo, Destination is sent as part of AIS messages, so Marinetraffic (and other sites) will pick up as soon as the bridge changes destination on their AIS instruments.






          share|improve this answer























          • The due date is in the past and it can indeed be seen that the ship has turned around. Thanks.
            – Tommi Brander
            Nov 29 at 12:43






          • 3




            Destination is sent as part of AIS messages, so Marinetraffic (and other sites) will pick up as soon as the bridge changes destination on their AIS instruments.
            – vidarlo
            Nov 29 at 16:49















          up vote
          21
          down vote



          accepted










          You can follow many vessels worldwide through vessel finder websites, such as vesselfinder.com or marinetraffic.com. The websites are free for basic use, not unlike airline tracking websites. This will allow you to see where the vessel is right now.



          Specifically, you can follow the WASA EXPRESS. It is apparently due in Holmsund next at 2018-11-29 12:30 LT (UTC +1), having left Vaasa at 2018-11-29 09:03 LT (UTC +2). I don't know how quickly marinetraffic will pick up in case plans change, but when it has physically turned around you should be able to tell from the live tracking soon enough.



          Edit: According to a comment by vidarlo, Destination is sent as part of AIS messages, so Marinetraffic (and other sites) will pick up as soon as the bridge changes destination on their AIS instruments.






          share|improve this answer























          • The due date is in the past and it can indeed be seen that the ship has turned around. Thanks.
            – Tommi Brander
            Nov 29 at 12:43






          • 3




            Destination is sent as part of AIS messages, so Marinetraffic (and other sites) will pick up as soon as the bridge changes destination on their AIS instruments.
            – vidarlo
            Nov 29 at 16:49













          up vote
          21
          down vote



          accepted







          up vote
          21
          down vote



          accepted






          You can follow many vessels worldwide through vessel finder websites, such as vesselfinder.com or marinetraffic.com. The websites are free for basic use, not unlike airline tracking websites. This will allow you to see where the vessel is right now.



          Specifically, you can follow the WASA EXPRESS. It is apparently due in Holmsund next at 2018-11-29 12:30 LT (UTC +1), having left Vaasa at 2018-11-29 09:03 LT (UTC +2). I don't know how quickly marinetraffic will pick up in case plans change, but when it has physically turned around you should be able to tell from the live tracking soon enough.



          Edit: According to a comment by vidarlo, Destination is sent as part of AIS messages, so Marinetraffic (and other sites) will pick up as soon as the bridge changes destination on their AIS instruments.






          share|improve this answer














          You can follow many vessels worldwide through vessel finder websites, such as vesselfinder.com or marinetraffic.com. The websites are free for basic use, not unlike airline tracking websites. This will allow you to see where the vessel is right now.



          Specifically, you can follow the WASA EXPRESS. It is apparently due in Holmsund next at 2018-11-29 12:30 LT (UTC +1), having left Vaasa at 2018-11-29 09:03 LT (UTC +2). I don't know how quickly marinetraffic will pick up in case plans change, but when it has physically turned around you should be able to tell from the live tracking soon enough.



          Edit: According to a comment by vidarlo, Destination is sent as part of AIS messages, so Marinetraffic (and other sites) will pick up as soon as the bridge changes destination on their AIS instruments.







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Nov 29 at 17:10

























          answered Nov 29 at 11:57









          gerrit

          26.4k986209




          26.4k986209












          • The due date is in the past and it can indeed be seen that the ship has turned around. Thanks.
            – Tommi Brander
            Nov 29 at 12:43






          • 3




            Destination is sent as part of AIS messages, so Marinetraffic (and other sites) will pick up as soon as the bridge changes destination on their AIS instruments.
            – vidarlo
            Nov 29 at 16:49


















          • The due date is in the past and it can indeed be seen that the ship has turned around. Thanks.
            – Tommi Brander
            Nov 29 at 12:43






          • 3




            Destination is sent as part of AIS messages, so Marinetraffic (and other sites) will pick up as soon as the bridge changes destination on their AIS instruments.
            – vidarlo
            Nov 29 at 16:49
















          The due date is in the past and it can indeed be seen that the ship has turned around. Thanks.
          – Tommi Brander
          Nov 29 at 12:43




          The due date is in the past and it can indeed be seen that the ship has turned around. Thanks.
          – Tommi Brander
          Nov 29 at 12:43




          3




          3




          Destination is sent as part of AIS messages, so Marinetraffic (and other sites) will pick up as soon as the bridge changes destination on their AIS instruments.
          – vidarlo
          Nov 29 at 16:49




          Destination is sent as part of AIS messages, so Marinetraffic (and other sites) will pick up as soon as the bridge changes destination on their AIS instruments.
          – vidarlo
          Nov 29 at 16:49










          Tommi Brander is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.










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