Hovertravel - carries passengers between Southsea and Ryde aboard a hovercraft.
There are regular proposals for further routes, and during Cowes Week additional services have been known to operate,
notably a fast catamaran service between West Cowes and Lymington.
The island is the home of the smallest train operating company in the United Kingdom's National Rail network, the Island Line. This runs some 8½ miles from Ryde Pier Head to Shanklin, down the eastern side of the island via Brading and Sandown. These are electric trains, using former London Underground rolling stock.
The island also has a steam-operated heritage railway, the Isle of Wight Steam Railway. The steam railway connects with the Island Line at Smallbrook Junction. This was part of the former Ryde to Newport line .
Before the days of Dr Beeching in the 50s / 60s the island boasted a comprehensive railway network based on a triangle of lines connecting Ryde , Newport and Sandown . Branch lines led from Sandown to Bembridge and from Newport north to Cowes and west to Yarmouth and Freshwater . Two other lines ran to Ventnor 1) an extension of the afore mentioned Island Line from Shanklin and 2) a branch of the Newport-Sandown line via Godshill and Wroxall , terminating at different levels above the town .
Today much of the old rail network has been converted to cycle ways including the Newport-Cowes and Newport-Sandown sections . Other sections can still be traced on the ground including the two tunnels where the Ventnor lines were taken through the downs .
A sign used to greet visitors to the Island disembarking from the car ferry at Fishbourne, stating 'Island roads are different, please drive carefully'. It is a joke amongst local residents that the reason Island roads are different is due to a lack of maintenance by the council. Nevertheless the lighter traffic, quieter roads and slower speeds are noticeable to the visitor and are one of the reasons the Island has remained attractive to tourists from the busier mainland. The island has 489 miles of roadway.
There are no bridges or tunnels to the mainland, whether by road, rail or foot, and there remains strong local opposition to any plans for building them. [4]
There are two small airfields for General Aviation: Isle of Wight Airport [5] at Sandown and Bembridge Airport [6]. These are busy with day-trippers in summer, travelling by light aircraft.
All of the Island telephone exchanges are broadband enabled and in addition, some urban areas such as Cowes and Newport are covered by cable lines. Some areas, such as Arreton, have no broadband in certain places.
The Isle of Wight County Press [7] is the major local newspaper, published weekly each Friday or the last working day before a public holiday falls on that day. There is also a local radio station, Isle of Wight Radio [8], broadcasting on 107 and 102 FM (also available over the internet), and a regional television station which broadcasts from the Island, Solent TV [9].