6th term, week 6 ⚓️✌🏻

7th till 13th of March 2022

Here we arrived in Brake in the morning. This is perfect because it gives us time to prepare for discharging: we need to take all the timber lashing for the deck cargo and the tarpaulins off. This takes quite some time – but luckily less than when we make them tight! haha!

Ruyter underway on the Weser river to Brake with timber cargo on deck
Ruyter underway on the Weser river to Brake with timber cargo on deck

We took the afternoon to roll all the lashings and the tarpaulins that were no more in use. We would then store them the next day in the lashing store as we had time to do it during the discharging. Only a part of our cargo would go to Brake and the other part to Bremen. Obviously, the deck cargo and the top part of the cargo that was in the hold were for the first harbour and the rest for the second harbour. Just saying. It can be logical for some but not for others. When we load, first the second harbour comes in first then the second. We also need to make sure that we can keep a nice trim once we are partially discharged. Often that can be slightly corrected with a part of the ballast already in….

Ruyter alongside in Brake, lashings still need to be taken off
Ruyter alongside in Brake, lashings still need to be taken off

Anyways. Tuesday Morning I woke up early to be on deck as they started discharging in the morning. I did not have to open hatches yet as there was still cargo on top of it. Also, We would first have to take the bottom tarpaulins off before being able to reach the speed locks. After an hour or a little more, I woke the deck crew up to help me with the tarpaulins. We needed to fold them nicely and neatly and store them again. It is not difficult to do but it is faster with a few people of course. And if there is a bit of wind then the sail just blows away very easily. Also, we do not want the crane to wait on us for discharging, so we have to always be a little bit ahead of time and clean up, to be ready to open as soon as possible for the discharge to go as smoothly as possible. Remember? It is always all about money and time and time and money… I work for the ship, so I have to make sure that I do everything in my power to not have the ship lose money…. Let’s say I am here to make the ship win money by transporting cargo in name of the company right?

The discharge of the deck cargo has started early in the morning
The discharge of the deck cargo has started early in the morning
the crane is taking two timber packages at the time
the crane is taking two timber packages at the time

Well, then this is what I also try to do then! Haha. So here we are myself and the ABs and the trainee, folding the tarpaulins on deck and waiting in the beautiful sun. It was not so cold and there was no pressure, just good moments and a lot of laughing. I like days like that. I like to be working outside. I like laughter and a good atmosphere. We were happy. Probably still enjoying as much as we could before the hard work would come when putting back the chains and the slings. In the lashing store haha.

The Weser river is marvelous with the sun rising. Amazing colours!
The Weser river is marvelous with the sun rising. Amazing colours!

It was a 2 hours sail to Bremen and we wanted to make sure that we would sail before the end of the afternoon to not have so much night work for nothing.

Here the crane is discharging three packages at the time; we are already in the hold
Here the crane is discharging three packages at the time; we are already in the hold

The morning gang from Brake was quite a fast crew. They discharged most of the packages before they left for their crew change. If not all of them. We were ready with our hatches closed when the other crew arrived. The problem was that all our slings were still ashore and we needed them to give them back to us with their crane.

Also. They probably did not really like each other between morning and afternoon crew because they had left all the timber ashore directly on the floor with our slings around them still; and not in an organised manner at all! It was a pure mess and the forklifts could not access some of the packs of timber without moving others around it was difficult because they were directly on the ground without space for them to insert the fork and lift them…

Besides that, 8 people were watching two forklifts work…. And those were not the best: as we were all waiting on the hatches looking at them, they were moving around packages that were already without slings while we were waiting and waiting….

Our engine was even on already!

After one hour, Trust me, I told the captain I would go out and scream at them a little hoping would accelerate the pace. Luckily it did. I do not always like screaming, but sometimes you do need to. Otherwise, nothing happens. And unfortunately, as a woman, I need to scream a little harder otherwise the men ashore just look at me and laugh. So there I was…. from the top of the hatches telling the shore team to speed up; telling them it was one hour already that we were waiting and that our engine was on and that we were waiting on them and that nothing was happening. They were all a bit confused. In reality, it did not happen exactly like that… a couple of them started staring at me and laughing -probably thinking I was crazy- so I threw in a few rude words that touched their ego…. And then it started moving a bit faster too.

I was laughing because of captain H.: he was telling me by VHF to tell them that even his grandmother of 98 was faster than them!

Oh well, that was a good laugh. 20 minutes later we were finally casting off our lines and sailing in direction of Bremen further on the river.

The next morning we discharged the rest of the timber and that lasted the full day.

The last tier on the tanktop needs to be discharged then we will start under hatch 1
The last tier on the tanktop needs to be discharged then we will start under hatch 1

While the ABs were collecting all the slings as they came and directly putting them in the lashing store, we would after that have to put the chains in and the « timber job » would be closed till…..next time.

The nice thing is that we managed to repaint the lashing store on that voyage and make it nice again. All the slings were stored in the lashing store and non in the bow thruster room. I must say I was very happy about it. We made smaller packages of slings: by 10, they were way lighter and easier to handle of course than by packs of 25….. and we could also squeeze them more easily in small corners which was perfect. I was quite proud of the result. The lashing store is slowly getting organised, finally! And we even have an extra shelf there as an extension of the deck store in the aft; this way we can keep only the things we use regularly at hand reach and once in a while get things out from the forecastle or the lashing store.

The next trip was loading would pulp in Brake again…. 

In the late evening we sailed back to Brake and the next morning we loaded wood pulp. I was just hoping we would not get the same afternoon shore crew back…. You know…. Those on which I said rude things to get them to work faster …. And surprise yes! It was the same team! Like « oepsies ». Well, the good thing is that there was not the whole team again; just the crane driver. And you know what? I was not ashamed… we were a bit in our right to scream at them to go faster because they were wasting our time and that was not correct….

Anyways. Loading wood pulp took a little longer than planned as their crane broke down for a couple of hours…. We were sailing back to the icy area: Kotka! I sometimes find it funny to see how cargo goes from one place to another: close to Kotka there is a wood pulp factory; why on earth do we bring wood pulp back there? Of course, there are different qualities and different trees to make cellulose. Usually, the one we load in Belgium or The Netherlands comes from Brazil and is made of Eucalyptus.

We have been lucky with beautiful sunsets and sunrises this week!
Ruyter underway again, in the sun!

In the evening we completed loading and sailed up to the Kiel Channel again… And yes, Kiel Channel on a Sunday; of course. Lucky not at night, but it is usually either one or the other! Haha.

We have been lucky with beautiful sunsets and sunrises this week!

And there was our week gone!

The highlight was my manoeuvring! Yes, you heard it! In Bremen, I manoeuvred the vessel to put her alongside! I was so happy and proud it made my day! You will hear more from me about that every time I manoeuvre! I just love that!

Anyways…. I wish you a great Sunday and see you on the other side of the Kiel Canal tomorrow!

XXXX Sophie

3d Term, Week 7 🤩⚓️

1st- 7th of March 2021

It is already the beginning of my 7th week onboard! Time flies! This means I have already done 3 quarters of my term…. And I have only 2 weeks left… more or less depending on the harbours and where we will be: if it is easy or not to have a crew change according to the amount of time we stay in the harbour and the available flights and connections. I usually know a small week ahead of when the crew change will happen. But I still have quite some time to go. Captain H. He will be leaving soon. He is leaving in the next harbour and captain R. Is already onboard with us. Is it like we have two captains now? No. Only on of course but as he is new onboard and we are supposed to be sailing the following trips up and down with timber and it is still ice sailing conditions, Captain H. thought it was wise to have him on board a couple of days earlier to do a proper handover and make sure his vessel would be taken care of. Indeed As I said earlier in previous posts, Ice sailing is quite particular. You have to make sure you do not run full ahead into ice banks or you will damage the propeller. You also need to make sure you do not ballast for example all the way to the top so that the water overflows on deck and remains in the pipes. In this case, you will for sure damage your pipings and tanks because the water will freeze and expand. In freezing situations, you always make sure that you ballast a few minutes less so that there is room for expansion. On deck, you want to make sure that you do not get too much spray because, with our speed and the wind, it will turn directly into ice on deck. And this creates an extra unwanted weight onboard that cannot be removed so fast. This can be quite dangerous if it is not taken care of. If you listen to captains you have experience in this matter, they will always say that it is better to shelter, change course or delay the trip a few days if spray on deck becomes too dangerous. Of course, I totally agree with them!

Sailing with deck cargo: the timber is lashed on deck with strong slings

So yes Captain R. Came onboard slightly earlier for ice conditions and timber cargo experience. I must say, it is not because you are a captain for years that you have all the experience in all different cargo types and sailing in all the areas. Some ships never sail in ice and rarely have timber for example. I think it is wise to make sure that your reliever feels at ease when you have 2 red flags hanging above your ship: ice and timber. But of course, you lust think that too: better safe than sorry.

Captain H. Was going to leave in the next harbour in Brake. I never really like it when a crew goes home. I mean, of course, I am happy for them, but I enjoy their presence and I know for sure that with the dog gone, it would be quieter too. On the other hand, I do enjoy meeting new people… even if I find myself usually a bit nervous. I always think I have to prove that I am worth it, that I am good at what I do and that I take care of things, that I work hard…. And I must admit that it does stress me a bit. I know all captains are different and when I do not know them yet then I have to adjust, ask, test and see how they want it. And it feels to me that although I am home – in my second home- I have to change to please the new captain. Usually, they say « oh do not bother for me, just as you usually do… » but then come up with a full list of things that they want to be done differently. Haha. I mean it is never as bad as I make it sound but I have the feeling I am always nervous with new captains. Like if I didn’t like change; or like if my safe environment suddenly is not safe anymore and I have to recreate a new one all over again.

Early morning alongside in Brake, ready to start discharging deck cargo.

Anyways. This was the last trip for Captain H. And the first for captain R.

After w a few days sailing through the Baltic Sea then the Kiel Channel, w arrived in Brake and started the usual discharging process. hooks and chains off, slings off, tarpaulins off and timber away. The crew made it ready upon arrival in the night so that I could start in the morning with the discharging of the deck cargo. I am the one in charge of the cargo operations so I wake up early in the morning for that while the rest of the crew continues sleeping. Rest is well deserved because taking off all the chains and wood and tarpaulins is not a small job to do in the middle of the night!

In Brake, discharging the timber till late in the night

The mornings in Brake are always very peaceful and quiet. It is not a busy river and the fresh air is just there. On top of that, there is the smell of timber! It is a very nice cargo to have onboard. When you open the hatches, it comes up to your nose and it seems you are back in the Finish countryside on a holiday in a cabin far from the world, just coming home from a long walk outside and preparing yourself to sit with a cup of tea close to the fireplace and make your self cosy…. Oh well, I guess you can imagine the loveliness of the smell….

The last packs of timber before a good sweeping and mopping to dry the hold for our next cargo.

The next voyage finally came in the email and surprise! It was not Hamina! Of course not… We are « promised » a few trips of timber up and down and we finally manage to get into the right systems and tips and tricks and out. The office decides else wise. Oh well. I wonder if we will go back after again or if that was it for the ice sailing of the year. I have the feeling that was it and I should have enjoyed it a bit more…. Haha. Next year… maybe.

This time we were not going very far. Just from one river to the other: Eemshaven. We would get the cargo of another sister ship that got a technical problem. Oh! Actually, that is also interesting! And I do enjoy meeting the other sisterships around! I find it always fun to compare them and either be proud of our ship or take notes on how they do things… Not that I am not very proud of the ships I work on, on the opposite! But most of the time, people tend to forget how far some ships have been coming from and that a whole makeover takes time.

So there we were, after saying goodbye to captain H, we headed to The Netherlands and arrived just before the weekend started…. Which meant a full weekend in the harbour. Perfect to go for a walk and rest. Well, a walk is pretty much the only thing you can do in Eemshaven if you do not have a car… because where we were there was literally nothing except windmills haha!

We came alongside our sister ship and as they were loaded and we were in ballast, it was funny to be the same but at one high above. When their discharge would be complete, it will be the exact opposite. They were coming from another dutch harbour and their cargo was steel coils. These coils had to do to Szczecin in Poland. We would make sure that this would happen off course. A few coils had to come out because they were expected earlier so trucks were arranged to pick them up on Monday so that they would be on time for the client in Poland. The rest would go in our hold.

We were ready for Monday where all the craziness would start.

Ruyter alongside her sister-ship Sprinter in Eemshaven.

Our sister ship was very nicely maintained. There was probably no rust anywhere… and their decks seemed really perfectly painted. Our decks in the aft were still red from the old colour and because they would be descaled and painted from scratch later in the summer, they did not look as perfect. They had even carpets to walk on outside to make sure we would not bring dirt on the ship from outside! Or maybe it was also not to slip on deck…. Fresh paint and water can be very slippery.

Our neighbours were very kind. They invited us for coffee and we did the same of course. Their bridge was not as nice as ours and slightly differently arranged. In our PS wing, we have our little kitchen area; they had a space; their kitchen area was midships. They also had a fixed chair for steering and their office corner was on the Sb wing with two screens. I thought our bridge was cosier. But hey! Unless you are the very first owner and choose the style of your bridge, you get what you get right?

Enjoy a nice weekend and Sunday in the harbour and see you Monday for the next adventures with the steel coils!

Xxx

Sophie 

3d term, Week 4 🤩 ⚓️

8th-14th of February 2021

We started the week ready to load timber. As I said. First-time timber so I was a bit curious and anxious. But to be honest, the idea is quite « easy »: it is to have the cargo hold as full as possible, as packed as possible with the least “empty space” in the hold, then the more cubics you will be able to take on deck. 

Now… for the less easy part. All packages do not have the same size. That is the difficult part because of course, they do not all come ” by size” they come out of the shed in what I would think is a total disorganized way. 

And did I mention also that the stability of the ship with timber has to be very very well anticipated and calculated to avoid the disaster of capsizing?… you should never underestimate the weight of the cargo you store on deck: it can get wet and the wood absorbs the extra humidity and therefore weighs more! You also have to be aware of the snow and ice. yeah. Told you … the «idea» is simple and easy but the reality demands quite some « on top of it » matter…

There is a bit of preparation to do before loading timber. Besides opening the hatches, we have to take all the hundreds of slings out of the forecastle where they are stored; but also all the tarpaulines, the heavy hooks and chains…. We have everything ready for the crane to take them ashore in the morning for the shore team to use. We take everything out with the hatch crane and the winch we have on the foremast.

All slings ready on the hatches, to be piucked up my the crane for the shore team.

The crane driver, together with a stevedore on the ship work together for getting the most of it. My job is to make sure they follow the loading plan accordingly so that I can empty my ballast tanks following a plan, but also to make sure they do their job correctly in avoiding big gaps and unwanted lost space, or extra unwanted layers of snow on top of the cargo because it takes space then melts. Once I see that they do it correctly I go and do some other maintenance jobs or administration, always keeping in mind that the cargo operation goes prior to any other job I might want to do. It is highly important to keep the ship safe and keep an eye on the trim so that I can close the hatches at any time and that I simply know what is happening at all times. The idea is that they are loading, of course, so I cannot ask them to discharge and load again. If I see something wrong, I should say it immediately otherwise it is too late. Eventually, I can ask them to “fix” things and tell them I am not so happy and that they have to do better.

Loading timber with 2 cranes.

The nice thing about timber cargo is that it is not dirty cargo. It is not dusty, not sticky. On the opposite, it really smells fresh like the woods! Also, because it is timber, it does not matter if it is raining or snowing. The packages are sort of protected by plastic wrapping you only have to watch out that they take off all the snow on the top of the packs before they put another tier. Snow takes place and it will eventually melt. So it creates a loss of space. 

In Finland, there is one hour difference between the ship. So it is a very early wake-up. When it is cold and frozen, everything seems somehow slower: it takes me more time to open hatches and my finger does not follow as fast… Or probably the hydraulic oil of the hatch crane is just not totally warmed up either! Anyhow it is early. At 4am, I usually head towards my bunk and not on deck! But I have my routine once the hatches are open I either speak with the foreman or I quickly make myself a nice cup of coffee in the bridge. Usually, I have coffee just after because even if I am on time in the morning, I want to make sure there is no problem with the opening of the hatches. Sometimes the shore team is not there yet and is not ready, but at least I am.

The loading went very smoothly: with two cranes it is indeed quite fast. Once the cargo hold is full, that is when the tricky part starts. We close the hatches, speed locks and wedges, and while the deck crew prepares all the side tarpaulins, we take the drafts to make sure to calculate how much cargo we can take on deck. We will for sure have some ballast with timber, for stability. This is where most accidents happen with ships carrying timber cargo. The IMO has a whole recommendation book about it! Ships need to be certified to carry it.

The aft crane and the shore team in Hamina

Another thing with cargo timber… Is the lashing as I mentionned in the beginning of this story. Oh-my-god! There are the tarpaulins (glad that we have the light version:), the slings (single and double) the chains the hooks the side slings, the shackles, the timber for on top of the tarpaulins, the chain blocks to tighten the chains… Well… All his equipment is very heavy. And this is not a 2-hour job. The whole crew is on deck working. Even the Captain! (Well Captain H. is anyways always on deck!) but the cook too! It is a hard job, but fun, because we make it fun, of course. In the end, we are really tired, hungry too, but happy to go to bed. I am really glad that despite the cold, we did not have wind or snow or ice falling from the sky. This would have made this job extremely difficult and terrible. We got it finally done and I must say my poor muscles were already aching from having to store everything back three days later. We were told we would be doing a few runs between Finland and Brake (Germany) with timber… I better get used to it fast right? Good that it is not a weather-sensitive cargo: it can be loaded during rain. Indeed, it is stored outside on the quays in Finland so… no changes when we load. But luckily we were not disturbed by any rain that week. It was indeed quite nice weather: no wind, no snow, no ice droplets…. Cold – very cold! – but clear. I wouldn’t imagine being outside in a snowstorm during loading and lashing! When you have to take off your gloves to make tiny knots with the tarpaulins protecting the cargo…. Brr…

The deck lashing requires tarpaulins to protect a minimum from water so that the timber stays as dry as possible ( as I said earlier, it avoids extra unwanted water/ ice weight on deck), then we have a few timbers positioned on top of the tarpaulins, this prevents the wind from blowing in them. Then we have a lot of very big and long slings on each portside and starboard side that is fixed from the side of the coamings ( so directly to the ship’s structure) and brought on top of the cargo. These two slings are joined by two chains fixed and tightened by a locking hook. Trust me all these equipment are heavy (as much as heavy duty!) and you have to bring them around the deck back and forth and manipulate them. It takes hours to put everything in position and to fix and tighten everything. By the end of the lashing, your muscles are literally burning, and you cannot wait to go directly to bed. Well, at least that is what I thought. To fix the hooks and chains you need a small chain block; that tool is also heavy. In the first step of the procedure, you tighten it as much as possible by hand then with the chain which goes way faster. You always need two persons to do that as it requires some strength to hold the hooks in a good position and direction. Besides the thousands of steps and sweat in your back, you are also going up and down climbing on the cargo. Trust me, when I say it was a great workout, it really was. But imagine doing that in the winter with a few layers of warm clothing and winter overall…. You sometimes feel as Bibendum working his way through the ship…. Again, I am glad we had good weather and that we only had to fight the cold…. Suddenly the -17°C did not feel as cold anymore!

Short coffee brake before proceeding with the lashing on deck!

This was for most of the crew a first in timber deck cargo, for others, it had been years, so the lashing took quite some time, but we ended up finding our way through and getting better at it. I can imagine that if you do this every second week, it goes faster and faster because you end up finding tips and tricks to make your life easier. I was surprised and happy that we worked really well as a crew then to « just get it done » and do the work. I like teamwork. It reminds me of my times on the tall ships: if you didn’t pull on a line as a team, you would never get that sail high enough or sheeted in enough…. It’s all timing and working together to keep up the efficiency.

Ok, so there we were ready to leave Hamina – finally – and sadly (I started to enjoy the cold and the icy view here!) for Brake in Germany. I first got a bit tired of all the work it would request us but thought it was fine, that we just had to go for it. It is funny how your mind gets a bit troubled, or one-sided when colleagues of your say stuff as «  oh so much lashing work for only 3 days sailing », ” it is so much work is not worth it”, “it is not nice”, blah blah blah… well; once you have that in mind, it is hard to get it out. I just thought « ok this is a first let’s give it a try and we will see » right? Although my sore muscles were telling me I didn’t like it at all, I tried very hard to fight my « devil brains » haha.

Departure late afternoon from Hamina

Ok, we are underway. Baltic Sea, Kiel Channel, North Sea and direction brake. It seemed colder there than in Finland actually… But it was only -5°C! Leaving Hamina was quite nice: at 17:00 it was already dark outside of the course and it was still icy. I really enjoyed the view. It seems that I am getting used to the ice and the freezing temperatures up here! We sailed to the Kiel Channel and most of the ice melted on deck as we were getting closer to the 0°C. The stability of the ship was very low which means that we were rolling like babies in our bunks. The total opposite of steel coils! The Kiel Channel was nice: peaceful. I had the second part and the second lock in Brunsbüttel: still cold but sunny weather: perfect to start ( or end in my case ) my day!

I would head to bed to be ready for mooring in Brake. The next morning early was beautiful! The river was amazing when the sun started rising because there was a lot of fog: probably the difference between the air and water temperatures! I really enjoy these small peaceful moments! The nice thing is that we arrived on a weekend and they were not discharging on Sundays! So there it was: my happiness of a Sunday in the harbour where we were allowed to go ashore too! A Sunday with a long walk, just to smoothen out the muscles, get the legs walking for over 100 meters in a row: perfect.

Foggy but beautiful sunrise in Brake
Early morning discharging in Brake

Brake was quite an interesting little city. Captain H, duschi the dog and I went for the grand tour through the city, then on the riversides. Lovely weather, nice architecture, nice company, good talks. I even got « upgraded » by the dog! Indeed she usually really hates me, except when I give her some pieces of my orange or when there are rough seas. But then this happened: I had to enter a hotel to ask if I could use their bathroom ( after over 2 hours walking… yes yes) and apparently Duschi was staring at the door and whining waiting for me! And when I came out she seemed all happy and captain H. said she had been waiting for me as if I was « part of her group » now…. Well not so fast Sophie. Remember it is still Duschi, the dog that hates other women because she is always so jealous that then talk to her property-master-owner-king-captain or whatever you name it. But it felt nice to be finally accepted by the dog – for that day! 

We returned to the ship and had a good evening: the discharging would proceed early the next day and I would have to wake up very early again to open hatches…. So better get some more sleep and rest again!

Always ready on the foredeck!

See you next week! Will we be going as planned to Hamina again? Suspense suspense… I shall not say more!

Take care, my friends!

Xxx Sophie