) Bay Ferries operated ferry service across the Gulf of Maine from
Yarmouth, Nova Scotia, to
Bar Harbor, Maine, and from Yarmouth, Nova Scotia, to
Portland, Maine, using a high speed catamaran ferry service using the marketing name
The Cat. This ferry route was initiated in 1955 by the Government of Canada at the insistence of tourism operators and fish exporters in southwestern
Nova Scotia. Throughout the 19th century and early 20th century, steamship service from Yarmouth to
New York City,
Boston and Portland, Maine, had been provided by various operators, lastly the
Dominion Atlantic Railway, subsequently
Canadian Pacific. The resurrected service in 1955 saw new ferry terminals constructed in Yarmouth and Bar Harbor and used the newly commissioned ferry
MV Bluenose, named after Nova Scotia's famous racing schooner
Bluenose. The service was operated by
Canadian National and in 1977 was included in the CN reorganization which created
CN Marine. In 1982 a newer vessel MV
Stena Jutlandica was purchased and renamed MV
Bluenose (replacing the previous vessel). In 1986 CN Marine became
Marine Atlantic which continued to operate the service, although it was scaled back to a seasonal May–October operation by the mid-1990s. Since the Gulf of Maine service operated to the United States, the vessel was not owned by the Government of Canada and was solely the responsibility of CN and later Marine Atlantic. Following government-mandated service cutbacks to Marine Atlantic in the mid-1990s, Bay Ferries was formed as a subsidiary of Northumberland Ferries Limited and successfully bid for the right to operate the Yarmouth-Bar Harbor route. Upon taking control of the operation in 1997, Bay Ferries continued to operate the MV
Bluenose that year, after which it was sold. Bay Ferries entered into a purchase agreement in late 1997 with
Incat in
Hobart, Australia, for the
Incat 046, a wave-piercing catamaran ferry operating on the
Melbourne-
Devonport service by
Spirit of Tasmania) under the brand name "Devil Cat." Upon acquisition of the vessel in 1998, Bay Ferries began using the term "The Cat" for its Yarmouth-Bar Harbor service in logos on the vessel and in Bay Ferries marketing material. "The Cat" was initially merely the marketing name for the ferry service operated by Bay Ferries, and not the name of the vessel used at the time, which remained HSC
Incat 046. The introduction of HSC
Incat 046 to the Gulf of Maine met with great publicity and interest among Canadian and American media as this was the first, and currently the fastest (41 knots), large-capacity high-speed ferry in North America, cutting the trip time between the two ports from six hours on a conventional vessel to less than three hours. The high speed ferry operated between the ports in 2 hours and 30 minutes, compared with a crossing time of over 6 hours using a conventional ferry vessel. The service was seasonal and did not operate during the late fall, winter and early spring when severe ocean storms could inhibit crossings, although the conventional vessels were year-round services for many years. The Government of Canada maintains ownership of the ferry terminals in Yarmouth (through
Transport Canada) and Bar Harbor (through
Marine Atlantic) but has leased the management and operating rights to Bay Ferries. In 2002,
Incat 046 was sold, and Bay Ferries purchased a newly-built ship from Incat (hull 059) to replace it, which they this time actually named
The Cat. In spring 2005, rival Gulf of Maine ferry operator
Scotia Prince Cruises announced that it was cancelling its Portland, Maine-Yarmouth service offered by a conventional vessel,
Scotia Prince, as a result of toxic mould problems at its ferry terminal in Portland, the old Portland Marine Terminal. The city of Portland was in the process of constructing a replacement ferry terminal, but it assumed that financial difficulties would prevent Scotia Prince Cruises from returning to the Yarmouth service and entered into discussions with Bay Ferries about expanding its Gulf of Maine service to include Portland, in addition to Bar Harbor. An announcement was made in late summer that Bay Ferries would include "The Cat"-branded service to both ports from Yarmouth beginning in 2006 using
The Cat. Beginning with the 2006 and continuing into the 2007 operating seasons, the
Government of Nova Scotia provided an annual $1.5 million subsidy to Bay Ferries due to declining passenger revenue and increased fuel expenditures. The subsidy was increased by the provincial government for the 2008 operating season to $6.0 million to account for rising costs and further declines in revenue. It is unknown how much of a subsidy was provided for the 2009 operating season but it is believed to surpass the 2008 amount. The company has received subsidies totaling $18.9 million since the fall of 2007. On December 18, 2009 Bay Ferries announced that it was ending its Gulf of Maine service from Yarmouth to Bar Harbor and Portland after the Government of Nova Scotia ended the subsidies, resulting in approximately 120 jobs being lost. Bay Ferries had been seeking approximately $6.0 million for the 2010 operating season but the provincial government declined, citing financial difficulty. For a number of years following 2011, there was no ferry service between Maine and Nova Scotia. During the 2014 and 2015 seasons, a separate company,
Nova Star Cruises, operated a
cruiseferry between Portland and Yarmouth, though the company closed at the end of the 2015 season and the vessel was sold. In March 2016, only a few months after the closure of Nova Star Cruises, Bay Ferries Limited announced that it had reached an agreement with the U.S. Maritime Administration and the U.S. Navy for a multi-year
charter of a new high-speed catamaran,
HST-2. The vessel will be operated for a passenger/vehicle ferry service between Portland, Maine and Yarmouth, Nova Scotia. The vessel continues to be named HST-2, but the service and vessel are branded as
The CAT to align with the previous branding. The vessel underwent a refit at a shipyard in
South Carolina and the service started on June 15, 2016. In late 2018, Bay Ferries announced plans to change the ferry’s port in Maine from Portland to Bar Harbor. Service along this new route was originally expected to begin in summer 2019, but was delayed due to construction work at the Bar Harbor marina.
The CAT resumed Bar Harbor service for the 2022 season. ==Trinidad and Tobago==