3d Term, Week 8 🤩⚓️

8th – 14th of March 2021

There we were after a good weekend of rest in Eemshaven, we were ready for the steel coil party on Monday morning!

Probably because we were so close to the office, and perhaps for other reasons also, a lot of persons came to visit us. I say « us » but for sure it was more for the ships and to see what was going on, and how operations were going too. It is funny because you can recognize them easily. After all, their safety jackets and boots are very nice, shiny, and clean! Oh well, I cannot blame them, they do not need to wear them in the office behind the desk right? The funny thing is that of course they apply the safety rules by the letter and wear the helmet at all times… also inside. Personally, I find that sometimes wearing a helmet is more in my way than normal. I often forget that I have that extra space that I need to take into account and I find myself bumping my head way more often than usual. Haha. Also..; I am not so sure that a helmet would be of great aid if a 20-ton steel coil came to fall on my head…. But that is of course another debate.

There was a big crane that was hired for transferring the coils from one ship to another. We had also a few extra persons onboard.

Cargo transfer from one vessel to another
We are now almost equal freebords!

We had to make sure that a few of the bigger coils that were above 25t had to be on Portside because the crane in Szczecin did not have an arm long and strong enough to take those coils out from starboard. As long as we knew; it was not a problem. Because this was a particular case, two super-cargos from the office were onboard the ships to make sure there would be no damage and an inspector from Tata steel was also onboard making sure that the cargo would be again properly stowed from one ship to the other. They had all the plans and were mainly leading it all. I was making sure that the new captain was happy, that there was enough coffee and that the ballast was correctly taken out of the ship and stripped. I remember the new captain was slightly nervous to have the ship properly stripped and I found it strange that he asked me a few times to strip again « just in case ». Which I did of course – captain’s orders- but felt a bit hurt of course that he would not trust my deballasting and stripping of the tanks. But they were good empty so; I had nothing to be afraid of.

The deballasting goes perfectly well!👌🏻

It was fun to see that we arrived in ballast so we were more than 2 meters higher than our sistership and that slowly slowly we were at the same height and finally ended up being the one loaded and them in ballast 2 m higher than us! As I was regularly checking the drafts it was fun to see. Also, the nice thing is that we were at the very end of the harbour so the quayside was also accessible ahead of us with a small jetty. We could really check the bows of both vessels. I made a couple of nice pictures too of course! Also crazy selfies – but that is not a surprise for you, right? 😉

It took us over 2 days to transfer all the coils, and we were almost going to start day 3 of loading but we managed to do a little bit of overtime with the crane driver to have it completed at the end of the second day. I was glad about that because it enabled us to leave directly in the evening rather than losing again half a day. We have still 3-4 days till our destination port of call and well you know; Eemshaven is nice but there is not much to do without a car there.

The two sister ships alongside each other; Ruyter is loaded, Sprinter in Ballast.
A fully loaded cargo hold with steel coils.

While underway we heard that we would not be heading back to Hamina for the next voyage, but it would be Riga with some bulk cargo. We had to face the now the other part of the timber slings: storing them away hoping we would not have to take them out for a while…. Indeed it may seem stupid but a few trips ago we were hoping that we would have a few backs and forth trips with timber which meant that it was easy to just drop the lashing equipment in the hold while sailing in Ballast from Germany back to Finland. Up to now, it hadn’t really happened this way. But we had managed to leave the slings on deck in what we call the « swimming pool »: the area just in front of the accommodation. It is not ideal, but properly covered and fixed to the deck it was not such a problem. Just looked very messy. But you know, who cares if it is only for a couple of days.

This time we decided to store them back in the lashing store in the forecastle. Which meant tidying up and rolling all the slings properly, folding all the tarpaulins and bringing them back and counting all the timber slings, putting them by bundles of 25, and dropping them off via the hatch and the crane forward. It was almost as much work as making the deck cargo fast! Haha but you know what? This time, we had time to clean up the lashing store beforehand and I made sure that all the slings were together in one place and all the tarpaulins together in another place. That was a good job to be done together.

Putting away all the timber slings together with the AB’s

Half a day later we passed Kiel Channel during the day. It is my favourite when it is during the day because I find that there is always something to see. And I must admit that it was also good weather so it makes it even more enjoyable. After Kiel Channel, we still had 2 days sailing to Szczecin, our discharge port. Although they work fast there, we did not manage to complete it in one day and they do not work on weekends and nights there so we had a weekend in the harbour! Lucky enough for us we were allowed to go ashore!

I was looking forward to walking a bit but also to visiting this city. I spent a good part of my Sunday walking around the streets and going from one iconic place to another. I found that some parts of the city were really cute and well taken care of and the buildings were big and nice in other parts. All around the city, some panels indicate the direction and the time by foot to go to a « viewpoint » on the river to a landmark, or a museum, or a pretty fountain… It felt like they were trying to improve tourism there and make it attractive. I was really glad I had the time and that just the moments I was out, the sunshine was with me. It was my little architectural and tourist break. Very well appreciated as this was my first time there too.

When I was on tall ships, Szczecin was a big sponsor of the Tall Ships Races. One of the regattas even ended or started there; I do not recall really. But they were investing in a lot of polish youngsters to go at sea and experience some life onboard big sailing vessels, making friends and learning how to live together and be more understanding. They would also sponsor a lot of other youngsters all over Europe for this same sailing experience. Yes so I had heard about Szczecin quite a lot but it was my first time here and was nicely surprised.

A free Sunday afternoon in Szczecin

On Monday we would finish the discharging and prepare the hold for our next cargo in Riga. It was not a long sail there so it was going to be a good week. I was soon going home as I had just finished my 8th week onboard to probably after Riga!

We will see when that will be but For sure you will know soon enough in the next coming days!

And off I go for a nice walk in the city! Free days = Fun days!

For now, I hope you enjoy a great Sunday too!

Xxx Sophie

2nd Term – Week 8. 🚢 ⚓️ ⭐️

And this week is over. Another one gone. But I am glad it is over. This week had its highlights and its tough moments. Moments when I just wanted to be home. I thought to myself that over one year onboard I had never felt the will to not be on the ship, yet, there is always a first time right? It happened this week. Yes. Indeed. A challenging week for me. And I should probably write a deeper post about my thoughts on this… one day perhaps… 😉

Always happy when it is good weather! But sometimes the smile is there to remind me to continue smiling…

But I am better now and have taken a bit of a tougher skin on my shoulders.

My original post had actually quite some extra paragraphs added. But I decided to not publish them again because it would only make harm. I was probably relieving some valves out there but this website is not made for personal anger towards specific people. I think I like sharing everyday situations because they could happen to all, and it is not because there is social media and a website that everything is always easy happy, and pretty. As a woman on board, and one year only in the shipping industry, life can sometimes be tough to be respected and accepted with the rest of the experience I have. You see, every day is a work in progress to becoming a better and more understandable person 😉

Ruyter moored in Delfzijl, at Wagenborg stevedoring quay.
The ship in a mirror…

In Delfzijl we loaded in the sea harbour plasterboards. It is a nice cargo: it tolerates a few drops of rain and the stevedores hoist in our hold 2 electrical bobcats: we only need a couple of hatches open in the center of the ship and there it goes! Keeping the ship with a good trim makes it easier for them: they load fore and aft and do not need much instruction from outside. Besides you cannot enter the hold once they have started because they load all the way to the top, so entrances are blocked. The personnel goes in and out by being hoisted in a cage. It is funny.

Plasterboards stacked in the hold
The basket to bring shore crew in the hold by crane

Plasterboards are quite fragile if you have heavy weather it is apparently not a nice cargo to have. We made them seafast with airbags as we do with wood pulp.

It took us three days to load. It could have been faster but they work from 8-16… it is okay, I do not mind.

Almost the end of loading operation!

It gave me time to quickly go to town a couple of times and get fresh air. Till I still can. Indeed, it has been announced that France will enter her second full lockdown; so when I will fly home, I will not be able to go around like I thought I would… it is okay. But I like shops too haha 😆.

Saturday evening I saw a witch 🧙🏻‍♀️ fly by while we were at sea… the next morning our crew mess had a spooky look: skeleton, rats, bats, spider nets…. 👻 🎃

Me and my carrot cake…

If you like it or not, the Franse Heks (me) always likes a good reason for a special decoration!

All set for Halloween!

We are heading to Inkoo, 🇫🇮, almost near Kotka where we were just coming from 🙂 kieler channel again and 4 days sailing. It will be nice.

In the Kiel Channel

I am soon at the end of my term, in a couple of days I go home, so this is most probably the last story for this second term… I hope you still enjoy reading my stories. Please let me know in comments below what you think!Time flies!

See you next term! Xxx Sophie 😘 ♥️

1st Term ~ Week 8. ⚓🚢

1st Term ~ Week 8. ⚓🚢

Oh, gee. 8 weeks already. Which means I am very soon going home! It is like. Wow, already 8 weeks. It feels like only one month, to be honest. Especially now that I have had two pretty relaxed days in Sluiskil (Netherlands) because of rainy days and a weekend. I could catch up a lot 💤 and it was very nice not to have to set an alarm on this Sunday morning and to be able to go for a walk outside the harbour … yes yes you heard me right! Second time this week! 🙌🏻

Happy officer having her first walk ashore in months!
King’s Lynn is a very old town! I like it!

So this week started in King’s Lynn 🇬🇧 to load wheat 🌾 in bulk. It went pretty slowly which took us two days. The nice things were that it was very sunny ☀️ and that they had very relaxed hours stopping before dinner! The crew enjoyed an afternoon off in the 12th-century old town and I enjoyed a very long walk after dinner (everything was closed in town) because we were still loading during the day. The first time we could go ashore! And for some crew that was 4 months ago the last time it happened! It reminded me of the old days back in Delfzijl when we would go almost every evening! Very enjoyable and not sore the next day either from all the walking 😂.
The wheat was loaded from a truck that would empty the cargo on the belt, and we were as full as we could be. For sure the guys knew what they were doing and it seemed that they had always been doing this as the cargo was perfectly flat till the coaming.

Loading of Wheat by trucks in King’s Lynn (UK)
MV Ruyter alongside in King’s Lynn (UK)
Loading wheat… Slowly!
Making it tip of top flat till the coming! Perfect 👌🏻

Then we left for Gent 🇧🇪 . A fast sail, less than 24 hours and two pilots onboard till the locks then on the channel. There we discharged with a sort of vacuum screw. Crazy! It looked like a toy and it went very fast! Pretty interesting…

The vacuuming screwdriver 😉

W. our trainee, took a bucket of wheat for me and thought I could experience baking bread this time… 🍞 well… how to say… 🙃

This it what our cargo looked like…

Our next cargo was fertilizer (urea) for which the hold had to be in perfect condition: extremely clean and watertight. Till 4 am after the discharge of wheat the whole crew worked hard to clean and move all the bulkheads back to their parking position. The surveyor came around 9 am the next day so good that it was done ✅…. but we had to wait the whole day long to shift to Sluiskil where we would load…. waiting is not always the fun part. But I have enough small ”in-between jobs” to keep myself occupied so it is not too bad. Waiting, shifting 120m, waiting again. Oh well. Sailor’s life. And I am totally fine with it.

Loading fertilizer in Gent

In Gent we had a crew change. The one I was fearing for sometime already. Captain H. drove home after quite some time onboard. I am happy for him, but it feels pretty empty now. It’s probably because “the” dog isn’t there anymore, and … it is quieter haha… – the dog doesn’t like me… she doesn’t like women, she is a jealous dog 😆- whatever I do. But yeah. Its like if a piece of my puzzle is missing and it doesn’t feel so right. Two months go by fast….

The new captain is very kind and has lots of stories. It is funny to hear them. I hope he will leave the vessel with only funny nice positive stories about us here 😂 but I am pretty sure it will be alright.

Still smiling! Ready fore shifting on the foredeck.

It is already two days since we are here and they don’t work on Sundays so we had a quiet Sunday. I went for a walk. Alone this time. No captain H or dog to talk to😕, but it was still nice. I had to replace the talking by Mark Manson’s voice from a podcast though… one day at a time. I hope I will not mess up. But someone once told me to not fear. That is the worst thing to do. So I am just moving one step at a time. And I am still there.

An old farm in Gent…

Our lupine forest is slowly getting smaller as we have offered a few and saving some for crew soon going home. The flowers are still there. I am the only one left to talk to them, so… I water them too now. I hope they will survive. Also once home. It should be fine!

This was a nice week although I already feel the nostalgia rising. We will be fine, me myself and I.

Big hugs to mainland. Sopietje 😘 ✌🏻 ❤️ ⚓️ 🚢
@ King’s Lynn Docks