Showing posts with label flotsam. Show all posts
Showing posts with label flotsam. Show all posts

Friday, 22 January 2021

More Flotsam

    I noticed this headline - "Maersk Ship Loses 750 Containers Overboard in Pacific Ocean" in the Wall Street Journal (Jan 21.), where it was reported that it was "the latest in a series of weather-related accidents at sea affecting millions of dollars in cargo." Looking for additional details, I found them in The Maritime Executive on Jan. 22: " Maersk Boxship Loses 750 Containers Overboard in North Pacific,"

Heavy weather in the North Pacific is being blamed for the loss of containers aboard one of Maersk’s containerships. This is the third container loss incident recently reported in the Pacific.Maersk is saying that approximately 750 containers were lost overboard from the Maersk Essen, a 148,723 dwt vessel with a capacity of 13,100 TEU. The loss occurred on January 16, but the line did not supply details on the vessel’s location. There have been several other incidents in recent month also on the North Pacific. On November 30, the ultra-large containership ONE Apus lost approximately 1,800 containers overboard and damaged scores more during reports of severe weather approximately 1,600 nautical miles northwest of Hawaii.

What's a TEU?

Two forty-foot containers stacked on top of two twenty-foot containers. These four containers represent 6 TEU.

   It is basically a container that is usually 20' long and 8' high, but sometimes they are 40' long. 'TEU" = TWENTY-FOOT EQUIVALENT UNIT. The ship, ONE Apus, lost 1800 of them and you can see a video of the ship, with the remaining containers in disarray, in this YouTube video from the South China Morning Post

What Could Go Wrong?

   If a ship could lose 1800 containers, which was only a portion of its load, how many can the largest ship carry? At this time, the largest container ship is the MSC Gülsün which can carry up to 23,756 twenty-foot equivalent units (TEU) a time. To translate that number into one we consumers can understand, it can carry 8.35 million microwave ovens or 2.94 million washing machines.



Sources: 
There is a Wikipedia entry for TEU - Twenty-foot Equivalent Unit
If you are now intrigued see this article at iContainers.com - "What is TEU? Learn About Its History and Meaning. 
I did not do the math to find out how many microwave ovens could be carried, it was in this article:
"Boat‑lovers Can’t Contain Enthusiasm as MSC Gülsün arrives in UK," Tom Ball, The Times, Sept. 7, 2019. (The ship is 1, 312 feet long.)

For more about the garbage floating and, perhaps soon to be piling up in the Pacific, see my earlier post: Flotsam and JetsamOr this one involving cattle

For another post about the Pacific, see this one about a paraplegic woman who attempted to row across it: Angela Madsen (RIP)

   

Tuesday, 15 September 2020

Cattle Crossing

 More Flotsam

   The news is generally bad here and one can't avoid it even in the antipodes. I am referring to the recent story about a large ship sailing from New Zealand to China which capsized in the East China Sea off the coast of Japan. I mention it only because of the magnitude of the disaster and because I happened to have read about a similar one that happened over 100 years ago. If you are an animal lover or vegetarian, you might want to wait for my next post. 

The Recent Maritime Disaster
   A container ship experienced an engine failure during a typhoon and sank. It was an Exxon Valdez-type disaster, but almost 6,000 live cattle were lost, rather than millions of gallons of crude oil. Of course, one assumes there was also a fair amount of manure on board. I have generally assumed that when we eat meat from far away, it was shipped as steaks and chops, not as live cows or lambs. Apparently, however, the shipment of live cattle is quite common so that they can be fattened upon arrival and butchered appropriately in observance of religious rules.

The Older One
   The ship involved in this incident left the port of Baltimore bound for England in the early 1900s. One of those employed on the ship was W.H.Davies, the author of The Autobiography of a Super-Tramp, where the following description is found. I will spare you the details involved when loading seven hundred and fifty cattle and begin with a brief sample of what it was like once on board and what happened to the 2000 other 'passengers':

What soon breaks the spirit of these wild animals is the continual motion of the vessel. There is always plenty of trouble at first, when they slip forward and backward, but in a few days they get their sea-legs, and sway their bodies easily to the ship's motion. The wild terror leaves their eyes, and, when they can no more smell their native land, they cease bellowing, and settle calmly down. This restlessness breaks out afresh when nearing shore on the other side, and again they bellow loud and often, long before the mariner on the look-out has sighted land.

We also had on this trip two thousand head of sheep, quartered on the hurricane deck. When we were six days out there came a heavy storm, and the starboard side was made clean, as far as pens and sheep were concerned, one wave bearing them all away. This happened at night, and on the following morning the sheep men were elated at having less work to do during the remainder of the voyage. 

   It is difficult to avoid bad news even when one leaves behind current events and retreats to the past.

The Bonus Material
   Although I have not searched through this blog, I am sure the content may not be as 'diverse' as it should now be. For that reason, I will mention some additional material found in The Autobiography... which will be of interest to some of my readers who identify with the LGBTQ segment of the population. If I had any readers at all, I assume this would be a sizeable segment. 
   The description I provided above is found in Chapter X: "The Cattleman's Office". What follows is from the following chapter, "A Strange Cattleman" which begins this way:

Some days before this, a man came to the office, whose peculiar behaviour often drew my attention to him. He asked to be allowed to work his passage to England, and the skipper promised him the first opportunity, and a sum of ten shillings on landing there. This was the reason why some of us had to wait so long, because, having made trips before, more or less, we required payment for our experience. The man referred to above, had a white clean complexion, and his face seemed never to have had use for a razor. Although small of body, and not seeming capable of much manual labour, his vitality of spirits seemed overflowing every minute of the day. He swaggered more than any man present, and was continually smoking cigarettes—which he deftly rolled with his own delicate fingers. In the intervals between smoking he chewed, squirting the juice in defiance of all laws of cleanliness. It was not unusual for him to sing a song, and his voice was of surprising sweetness; not of great power, but the softest voice I have ever heard from a man, although his aim seemed to make it appear rough and loud, as though ashamed of its sweetness. It often occurred to me that this man was playing a part, and that all this cigarette smoking, chewing tobacco and swaggering, was a mere sham; an affectation for a purpose. I could not, after much watching, comprehend. He was free of speech, was always ridiculing others, and swore like a trooper, yet no man seemed inclined to take advantage of him.

   If you are interested and want to learn more about the "Strange Cattleman" you can read The Autobiography of a Super-Tramp, for free on Project Gutenberg. 

Sources: 
   The recent disaster happened in early September, 2020 and many articles can be found. See, for example: "Cattle ship Capsize: Role of Live Export Trade Under Intense Scrutiny," Natalie Akoorie, New Zealand Herald,  Sept. 5, 2020:
A Government review into the live export trade will not be released before the election despite calls for it after the capsizing of a ship carrying thousands of cows and two New Zealanders, during a typhoon.
Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said she would not pre-empt the outcome of that review or be drawn on whether the trade should be banned.
It comes three days after the Gulf Livestock 1, a container ship carrying 5867 New Zealand cows and 43 crew, is believed to have sank in the East China Sea near Japan after its engine failed during a typhoon.

   I learned, unfortunately, that there have been other recent examples. See:
"4,400 Dead Cows Are Decomposing in a Sunken Ship in a Brazilian River," Thiago Medaglia, Mother Jones, Oct. 28, 2015:
Shipping live cattle is a relatively common practice in Brazil—last year, according to the country’s Ministry of Agriculture, it exported 646,700 live cattle with a total value of $675 million. 

Friday, 16 March 2018

Flotsam and Jetsam

FLOTSAM and JETSAM

First the Flotsam

     It is no consolation at all that those now cruising during the March Break may be ploughing through seas filled with garbage. If some chose to go to a beach instead, they may still be walking and wading through debris. I think that what I have suggested is true because I have remained in the snowy north reading rather than travelling. Here are some recent examples of trashiness that I will present with sadness rather than schadenfreude.

     One can escape the crowds and flocks of tourists by going to exotic and less popular places, but the garbage may still be there.

Roatan

     Roatan is an island in the far Western Caribbean and one might assume it is far enough away from the more popular ports to be safe from debris. Such is not the case.
“What was once an idyllic coastline along the shores of Roatan now is choked with tides of plastic waste. The Locals noticed that suddenly their coastline was inundated with plastic trash, from bags and bottles to plastic cutlery and packaging material.
It is thought that the plastic originated from the mouth of Guatemala's Montagua River, which recently carried a wave of trash from Guatemala out to sea.”
“Idyllic Caribbean Island Covered In A Tide Of Plastic Trash Along Coastline,” Trevor Nace, Forbes, Oct. 27, 2017.




Bali 

     That word makes you think of the South Pacific and you are likely hearing the song Bali Hai rustling through the palms. Keep those old images in mind because the current ones are not so good.
“A British diver has captured shocking images of himself swimming through a sea of plastic rubbish off the coast of the Indonesian tourist resort of Bali.
Rubbish has been inundating Bali for several months now, washing over mainly from the neighbouring island of Java during the annual rainy, or “trash” season.
Several weeks ago thousands across Bali took part in a mass clean up, in attempt to rid the island’s beaches, rivers and jungles of waste, and raise awareness about the harmful impacts of trash.”
‘Plastic, Plastic, Plastic: British Diver Films Sea of Rubbish off Bali,” Kate Lamb, The Guardian, March 6. 2018.



Henderson Island

     Even if you travel to one of the remotest islands in the world where there are no people you will find garbage. I will spare you the picture.
“Henderson Island lies in the South Pacific, halfway between New Zealand and Chile. No one lives there. It is about as far away from anywhere and anyone on Earth.”
“How an Uninhabited Island Got the World’s Highest Density of Trash
Isolation protects the island from human intrusion—but not 18 tons of plastic.” Laura Parker, May 17, 2017, National Geographic.

Beirut

     If you are one of those who used the break to go to Europe or some country in the Middle East, you probably assumed  that dunking  in the Mediterranean would be a bit dodgy and probably were not going to attempt to swim the the Hellespont. Even a stroll along the strand can be problematic these days. I also assume that most of the cedars are gone.
“A winter storm in Lebanon has resurfaced a longstanding national problem, in the form of a swirling sea of garbage. Piles of trash began washing up Monday on the beaches of Zouk Mosbeh, a town 10 miles north of Beirut, leaving the shore littered with refuse. An earlier storm surge had dragged trash from a landfill out to sea, later depositing it along the coastline and up to 100 feet inland.
“A Sea of Trash on Lebanon’s Beaches,” Nada Homsijan, New York Times, Jan. 23, 2018.



Now the Jetsam

     Apart from all the detritus spilling into the rivers and oceans and accidentally falling from huge container ships one has to consider all the debris deliberately set adrift. You probably read the recent story that went viral and spread quickly, much like the subject it considered - a bottle that was one of several hundred placed in the water over a hundred years ago.
“World's Oldest Message in a Bottle Found by Beachwalker in Australia: Gin Bottle Was Thrown Overboard from a German Ship Before Ending up on a Beach in Western Australia 132 Years Later,” Naaman Zhou, The Guardian, March 6, 2018
“Inside, she found a roll of paper printed in German and dated to 12 June 1886, which was authenticated by the Western Australian Museum.The bottle had been thrown overboard from the German sailing ship Paula in 1886 as it crossed the Indian Ocean, 950km from the Australian coast, according to Ross Anderson, the museum’s assistant curator of maritime archaeology.
     At the time, German ships were conducting a 69-year experiment that involved throwing thousands of bottles into the sea to track ocean currents.
His finding was confirmed by experts at the German Naval Observatory. The previous record for oldest message in a bottle was 108 years.
Of the thousands jettisoned, 662 other messages from the same German experiment have been found and returned before the latest discovery. The most recent was found in 1934.”

Have a Guinness on Me


     Even on the eve of Saint Patrick’s Day I will continue to offer the bonus stuff you expect. While you may have read the recent “Message in the Bottle” story, you may not be aware that around 200,000 bottles of good old Guinness were placed in the water back in the 1950s and they continue to roll in with the tides. I have to begin my celebrations early so I will leave you with the story rather than attempt to tell it. See:
The Guinness Bottle Drop. If you were walking on the beach in Nova Scotia you may have found one - Bottle from 1959 Guinness Promotion Washes Ashore in N.S.