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My Last Night on the Ship

When you are the source of a superlative comparison, it’s fair to say you know what you are doing, and it’s always amazing to watch people who are the best in the world at anything do what they do. What is the comparison I am speaking of?

One Drinks like a Sailor

Image result for drunken sailor

Now that I have had the pleasure of plying Shekou with the crew of the Libra, a hip little corner of the Chinese megalopolis of Shenzen, the manufacturing hub of the modern Chinese Economic and Pollution Miracle, perched atop Hong Kong like Tijuana to San Diego, I will never take that comparison lightly again. Not only have I seen up close and personal what it’s like to see a Sailor drink, I also know what it’s like to haul one up a 5 story gangplank in such a state, and in some funny way, it was a pleasure.

My father was in the Navy during World War Two. He never saw combat, despite volunteering at 17 years old for the Navy only 2 months after Pearl Harbor, since he tested well for intelligence (still a wonder to all who knew him) and they sent him to learn engineering for the length of the war, but he did see sea duty around the pacific mopping up after the war as he described it, including years in the reserves doing his two weeks. He never had he distrustful edge of a cagey veteran, but he knew how to drink like a sailor. My curiosity about my father’s experience gave me an obsession with the Henry Fonda movie Mr. Roberts, a film about a supply ship stuck sequestrated from the war delivering to backwaters with a martinet captain played by James Cagney who keeps his crew from being able to recreate on shore for a whole year, and when they finally do they cut loose so wildly it becomes a night of legend and drama, for therein was a character played by Jack Lemmon named Ensign Pulver, and I knew he was the closest I was going to get to knowing what my dad was really like as a pipsqueak 109 pound 5’9″ ensign in 1945.

 


We all have curiosity about our fathers, and dreams of experiencing their glories, and that night in Shekou, just outside Chiwan Harbor where Deng Xaipeng opened China to the west after the travesties of the Cultural Revolution, I think I got a taste of his, and it tasted hilarious.

I had bought a copy of Mr. Roberts before my departure, and watched in enroute. About a week after I watched it, I started to feel like I was living it, as run arounds by Chinese port and customs officials kept me from going ashore in Xiamen, and only with great effort at Fuqin, and only under guard at Nahodka in the Russian Far East. I was enjoying boat life but it was hard to not be curious about these towns we visited, which in the case of Xiamin was a 10 million person monstrosity I had never heard of with a nearby whorehouse that the Filipino’s raved about, not that that was my plan, but it was starting to wear on me. The ship was plenty big, but it felt like incompetence, corruption, and xenophobia were keeping me in a big floating steel prison that night, and I wanted off. The crew caught wind of it, and told me something interesting. The captain himself said not to worry about it, the Chinese up here were just mad with ambition.. save shore time for southern China where they know commerce, have a taste of freedom, and know how to be polite. Our next stop was Chiwan Harbor, the site of the first trade with the west after the Culural Revolution, on the Pearl River delta where trade had china had been pried open 100 years before by the Portugese and English, and just a stone’s throw from Hong Kong. It will be worth the wait he said.. these people were like mad Ant’s.. curious perhaps, but not fun.

So I bided my time as we plowed south through hundreds of fishing vessels, warmer and warmer weather and a growing sense of impending arrival. The Crew’s mood was lightening… we were approaching the Pearl River Delta, the famed entrance to Canton, and the approach to Chiwan, it’s latter-day companion in history. Whereas Canton handled Opium and goods coming into China, Chiwan was it’s revenge, post Maoist china selling addictive cheap goods to the world.

I woke up early to watch us glide into the port and settle into a modern container port yet with a wind of history about it. We had spotted Hong Kong to our right coming in, our subsequent stop, and you could feel a slightly free-er spirit in the air. The second the gangplank was down, a pair of merchants hustled up to sell us wares, far from the wary hostility of Xiamen and the indifference of Fuqin. They were in business for any and all things. a selection of cheap tactical looking flashlights and gadgets were thought to be in demand by the crew, but I focused in on pirated movies, and one in particular: Captain Phillips ( literally, a pirated movie!). I thought it would be fun to watch that on a ship of exactly the same purpose, albeit about 4 times the size of the Maersk Alabama which sustained the real attack depicted in the movie. I negotiated the price down as far as I could see being fair, and hustled up to my room to kill time as the cranes swung into operation.. it was hilarious to me to watch the cranes working in the beginning scenes of the movie as the cranes outside cast shadows on the glass of my laptop screen from my window facing forward and real ones doing the work of unloading our cargo from North America and northern China. It seemed an almost perfect place to watch the film.

Eventually it was evening, Captain Phillips was saved ( USA!!) and I could feel the energy draining from the operations outside and a sense of growing mirth inside.. it was time for us to go ashore as a crew, one I now felt some membership of.. I wasn’t “The American Passenger” anymore, I had become Mr. Thomas, someone who got the jokes, knew the drills and could be counted on to not screw up the fun.

I scrambled downstairs with just Yuan and my passport, looking for the Germans. We met and they were proudly done with their work, ready to finally go ashore. I was invited along, and the entrepreneurs at the top of the Gangplank quickly arranged a ride. He drove us to the gate, where we disembarked to walk through, passports in hand, past the wary but not threatening gaze of the guards, and back into the minibus for parts unknown.. there were karst mountains and a semblance of country, but quickly the trees faded to residential towers, dozens of them, and the western outskirts of Shenzen.. finally I was in China other than alone, my third now visit to the mad but fascinating place.

With the Chinese there is always a plan, and the plan of our hosts in the cab was obviously to make more from us than a cab fare.. always more more more! but it was genial.. we were brought to a nondescript building and persuaded to “go upstairs”.. it wasn’t a whorehouse or anything excessively tawdry, but a private sailors bar, with as much character as a 1980’s interior can have.. two funny wired up bartenders with a healthy dose of irreverence for a place like China beckoned us to drink.. there was grafitti all over the walls in black ink, names of sailors from who knows how many places in what felt almost like someones living room gone wrong.. bottles and offers were flying, but the Germans wanted to stretch their legs.. it wasn’t even close to dark.. Drinking has a time but this wasn’t quite yet.. while salty dogs, they were all used to departing from and returning to the north sea ports of their own nation with rare exception.. this was the first project like this they would execute, and they were quite happy to explore instead of imbibe for a time.. Food became the mission, but we were rangy, just wanted to walk, so we careened around, towers and electric mopeds and brand new subway stations and a combination of grime and glitz that is modern china.. we made it to a portion of Hong Kong Harbor where we could almost see across to the New Territories.. Towers lined the shore and regular buildings filled in behind..

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traffic rules were suggestions to the delight of the Deutsche.. China China China!! First we saw a Senor Frogs.. I was horrified and delighted all at once.. Senor Frogs is the glaring symbol of gringoization, and tourist blight in Mexico.. here it was so out of context it was nothing but funny..We came across a school with 200 kids in a cement playground exercising in Unison to horrible speaker music, chanting what seemed like patriotic slogans..an apparently upscale school at that.. despite all architectural traces of the past being gone, it was still China China China! we finally stopped for a lunch in a place with sea creatures swimming in goldfish tanks outside..food down more walking.. above the scurrying crowd appeared familiar faces.. A pack of the Romanians!

We merged without too many words.. we were a crew, 4 nations represented but a crew, literally, and we had had plenty of time to familiarize.. we had so much to look at.. they must have taken the same white van, been deposited in the same place, and made the same decision to wander the unknown streets and right into us, in a busy and major intersection.. we wandered together for a bit, but the call went up, it was now time to Drink.. I found myself wandering back to that place, that bar where the informal Shuttle could meet us, as night was falling, and as tranquil as things seemed, well, as tranquil as China can seem in a busy urban area, it was time to seek sanctuary and attend to our second priority.. WE mounted the steps back to the Gratified secret domain of the Worldly Maritime Wanderers, the lair of sailor’s privilege, and who should we bump into but the Filipinos.. the last portion of our cohort.. curiosity for Asia was not as strong as lust for drink.. how strong could it be.. they too were Asian.. this was almost home, and money was to be spent wisely, on something quick and fun, and that was whiskey.. as I came up the stairs, shots were flying down, cheers being made, and we were greeted in the same way, as expected guests, not to be a distraction to the task but a partner in it. I sat and too it in.. the boys were at it.. the Filipinos who weren’t bible quoters had revealed themselves around the table.. those who didn’t want this were likely back at the boat monitoring for thieving longshoremen and alarming gauge readings.. the real adventurers were here.. I kept waiting for things to go to another level, for women to arrive or some line to be crossed, but China is a compliant place.. you go to the line, but it wasn’t crossed.. we were flirted with, but there was no chattel here, no drugs, nothing to sully the crews and blackball the place, only alcohol and good times.. shots, screaming and laughter.. relief to be on land.. for a few, this was departure after friendships as long as a Filipino’s contract, 8 months.. a few were going home.. it was a time of celebration and separation.. We were drinking like Sailors.. it was grand.

At some point it was related to me that I had to make it back to the ship..I had to go through customs, since I didn’t possess a Seaman’s book..Hong Kong was a mile away and a world away to the millions here.. again, San Diego to this Chinese Tijuana.. I was told it wasn’t urgent, but the time was now.. The Magician was deemed in bad shape and I was to accompany him home.. it wasn’t too late, maybe 10pm, but the customs house wasn’t there for my convenience, I was here at it’s discretion, and that China, the China of Beijing, with it’s more explicit rules, was waiting in the wings with it’s hook to reassert it’self..

The Magician and I boarded the Minibus.. I don’t think I quite realized how drunk he was.. we debussed to pass through, back in and glide to a 20 foot walk back to the gangplank, me and him.. I’m now carrying him in the traditional drunk buddy way, one arm over my shoulder and feet almost dragging, up the step and onto the platform at the bottom.. he’s like a fussy River Otter.. not nasty, just out of control with libation and joy.. he wrestles loose from me, I laugh and release him, and he does something that to me will always be the symbol of that night.. the well controlled company man by day, as were all the Filipinos, he in a second had his wiener out, and proceeded to piss all over the side of our monstrous boat.. he was screaming with his hands pumping up in the air.. drooling a bit onto his pressed collared shirt, and piss flying back and forth emanating from the fly of his Jeans.. He screamed something in a combination of English and either Tagalog or his Tribal Language that essentially said “take that you piece of shit boat! yeahhhhhhhhh!!!

The “Piece of Shit Boat” part was clear.. I laughed, almost bent over.. not even afraid of him despite his ranginess..He had been a friend since the first magic tricks were displayed for me at the Boat Bar B Q our second day out… his English was almost non existent, but his eyes had told me he possessed a soul that did ponder the deepest questions of existentialism.. whether he did I  doubt  will even know. the boat, despite possessing the same feminine soul all boats seem to have, responded mutely to his assault on it’s monolithic sides.. it seemed to frown and ignore him, Chinese style..I offered to help him up the gangplank but he was all energy now.. I held onto both sides for the 5 story walk up just in case I had to catch him with a body check, and while pausing and swaying, he made it up on his own almost in bounds of energy, spurts of reckless lunges towards his resented home..

When I reached the top the guys diverted me off to the office at the base of the superstructure.. all that mirth would drain as I joined a Captain and Crew Chief here for training for a late night trip to customs. a sad place of industrial carpets by a ferry terminal to Hong Kong for a light night stamping.. but I was content.. it had happened.. the toasts had been made, and the boat Christened! For now and forevermore.. I will feel like a sailor too..

 

 

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What the Germans were up to.. Cold Ironing, the World’s Largest Shore Power System!

If you have ever been on a boat in a marina, you know what shore power is… you run a plug over the side from the dock, and it’s a special plug you have to fork a ton of money over for at some place like West Marine, no simple land plug will do, for your safety no doubt, and then you can run your toaster and car stereo without having to run your engine or generator… simple stuff right.. well, not if your boat is 364 meters long and uses the power of a medium sized american town.. but truth be told, it almost was that simple.. just a lot bigger.

So I mentioned in my posts how there were these 6 Germans on the boat, but I never mentioned why.. they were contractors I might have said.. that word has so much mystery in the days after Sept. 11, and it’s kind of fun to mess with..it’s so ambiguous that it has become kind of sinister…’Contractor’ now makes people think of Haliburton, Kellog Brown and Root, and Blackwater… War Profiteering and quasi legal waterboarding type stuff… but these guys, these 6 Germans, 3 of whom spoke english and the rest who still had a sense of humor, were in some ways Eco-Contractors. They were a group of Marine Electricians who needed 23 days to do a job, and they used the whole time, wrapped up with like a day to go and some long hours, to install a shore power system. They were all from Hamburg now, but a few were from the old east, a coastal city they told me about called Rostock. Of the 6, 3 spoke English, and they ranged in age from 25 or so to 50, the oldest being the main electrician with like 20 years experience at sea before he settled on this as a profession, and he was the one with the childhood in Rostock I believe (it might have been Kiel, but I think he said Rostock..we spoke of many things, and a ship is about the last place on earth where you have to describe things like the geography of northern Germany instead of just pulling it up on google maps to settle a point) before the wall fell. Dropping down in age where the thoughtful guy with the best english and the taste for British music, Christoph, then Niels, the guy who looked like a World War II Storm Trooper villian, like Vin Diesel only bigger, but who had a heart of gold and loved to fish and joke around. Then there was a cocky guy who reminded me of the cast of The Full Monty.. if it wasn’t for his German, I would have picked him for a mine worker out of north England with a sense of humor and a taste for the ladies.. the rumor was that he was so endowed that he had to wear his regular loose track suits or we would all have been offended. Another mid 30’s guy whose glasses gave him a scholarly look who was neither the biggest trouble maker nor a coward by any means. He had sharp eyes but a kind relaxed demeanor. Then there was Tiny Tim I have joked about before, the little guy who wasn’t so little, it was just that 4 out of the six of them were massive dudes, like Alaskan North Slope Oil Workers or Tongan Rugby Players.. that he looked like the kid of the bunch, and seemed to be struggling with a bit of homesickness and maybe seasickness, although he even had like 2 years experience on the north sea so I might have made a bigger deal about this than it was. They had all worked on ships on the north sea, and the bigger you are in relation to your surface area, the easier it is to keep warm, so it makes sense that these guys were big. On our trip through Kowloon at the end of the journey, before they hit the airport and I hit a hotel, we goofed off for a day seeing the sites, the combination of the 6 of them and me was so surprising to the Locals, who already see a lot of Foreigners, that some women actually asked to have their picture taken with us. We looked like a Viking death metal band dressed up for an uncles 4th wedding. We must have eaten more dim sum than the next 10 tables as well, although when I ordered the chicken feet, the classic westerners gag, it’s fair to say soem food got left on the table.

Anyhow, the story I am trying to tell is not of me and them but of what they were up to. Well, imagine California, and it’s never ending stuggle to clean up the environment.. as much as all the rules in California make my skin crawl, the one place I have to hand it to them is that they are on the cutting edge of Environmental technology and regulation… it’s a damn pretty place, California. I sometimes think that the best place perhaps ever to have lived on earth might have been Santa Barbera in the times of the mission. The word California came from a book that was about an Eden found, and despite the countless people crawling all over it today, the place is beautiful and worth restoring. The fact that Tesla and so many solar manufacturers etc are coming from this state is kind of a testimony to what the place is all about.

So some smart guy in Cali figured out that part of the pollution problem in their two biggest metro areas, LA and The Bay Area, came from the massive ports in the correspondent Long Beach and Oakland harbors.. While they have been clamping down on cars and power plants, these huge ships come sailing in with no environmental controls from the high seas, and while they sit in port they keep at minimum a huge diesel generator or two humming away to power the ship. On the Libra, I think we had 8, each the size of a box truck, and there were at least two running all the time. I have forgotten how many kilowatts they produced, but it was in the hundreds if not thousands. The average american home is usually consuming about 1kw.. so one of these could power maybe 1000 homes.. they were for everything from the lights and instruments and refrigerators to running the pumps for ballast and the huge reefers, the refrigerated containers that were set anywhere from 50 degrees to deep freeze temps of like 30 below. We seemed to have about 30 of them on board on our trip west.. of a possible 10k or so containers, it wasn’t a lot, but they drank power. I think a few of the generators might have been necessary to get the big engine started when we decided to leave port again after the 24 or so hours it usually took to load and unload..

So what the eager minds in Sacramento realized was that if they made these ships turn these generators off, they wouldn’t be pouring the byproducts of relatively inefficiently produced energy into the air and sea, next to their biggest and already most polluted cities. Western Europe, the California of Europe as one might see it, also decided that they wanted the same options. Now I can speculate that it didn’t hurt that they also got to sell this power at a higher rate then the ships produce it at, and that it would crate a few jobs in cali and bring some revenue in.. I would never speculate such craven motives for the bean counters in cali, where self entitlement and imperialness are all part of the deal that goes with fun in the sun, but sticking to the premise that their natural gas plants and occasional windmill and dam can produce this energy more cleanly than the ships diesel generators can, this is a win for the environment.

But how do you make it work? well, on the shore side, I still don’t know.. they had to dig through these container yards and run wires that wouldn’t interfere with the cranes and trucks that roll back and forth loading and unloading containers just feet from the edge of the piers, and then up to the ship. On the boat side, I learned all about it because I even got to work on it for a day in an act as much as out of camaraderie as boredom as we cruised the east china sea, and many a day I would walk by and at least watch the work for 5 minutes or so.

So what they had done is install these two things that looked like steel refrigerators on the two back corners of the boat. There had to be one on each side so they could dock whichever way the port wanted without the danger of 6mw of wire running across the decks. They literally looked like fridge freezer deals, tucked into a steel passageway right over the stern of the ship, where the bosuns throw lines and cleat them underneath the last row of containers. A few times I walked by them as they were working on them and threw them open and pretended to hand out beers and snacks from them. The upper freezer portion would be where the line came in from shore, and the bottom section had a huge switch that would take the wattage and connect it to wires that would run it to some rooms near the engine control room that were the electrical nerve center of the ship. Imagine if your home fuze box was the size of a 6 car garage with huge boxes running in rows that looked like data banks from the 1970’s, or some old computer system from the 50’s. That was where the wires would end up, in another pair of ‘fridges’. So just put the fridge with the switches in and run some wires right.. easy…

Well, don’t forget the boat is 3.5 football fields long.. now, the engine room isn’t that far forward, about a third up, so one football field, but these wires are 3 inches thick with insulation.. I think the guys told me it could handle 6 megawatts.. one per wire.. that’s 1000 homes with the Cuisinart and the TV running. We had to run three or six from each side (forgetting now..it’s been a year!) into a similar fridge sized thing, this one more like a sub zero, in the electrical room. When I first heard about it I don’t think I realized how much metal cutting and welding it would require, and I also never imagined the noise.. the first 30 yards or so had to run down from the boxes into these huge empty rope storage rooms at the back of the ship and below. They were cavernous, like high school gyms… one even had a basketball hoop up if I remember, and they had cool staircases and compartments and structiural members running through them, super james bond stuff, the floors mostly empty except for some equipment that could wind ropes I think. but the downside to these neat spaces is that they were right over the screws, and they were constantly like 100+ db..,clanking metal noises and intense, like a bad horror movie soundtrack, deafening, and cold…  the guys had to run the wires, one at a time, down through these spaces on racks they had to make out of metal stock about a foot wide to fasten them down, then snake it to these passageways that ran along the inside of the hull of the ship, and up the 100 yards down these 300 yard long passageways that ran windowless like tunnels the length of the ship, with maybe 5 doors the whole way. It looked like a huge Rube Goldberg conveyor belt going in… I would come by the guys maybe every other day out stretching my legs and sparks would be flying everywhere and the deafening throb of the prop would have us all wearing hearing protection so I would have to wait for them to look up and notice me, and I might make a funny hand signal or just watch for a second, or crawl past trying to make sure my clothes didn’t catch on fire.. Some guys would just silently say hi, engrossed in their work, and I could tell others were going batty in uncomfortable positions jammed between metal deck pieces or on scaffolds and would give me more insane looks than I figured days at sea were making me muster, with often times similarly offensive hand signals to take the stress off. They were bundled up in huge blue overalls and helmets and boots and they would all come back to the superstructure and fight the chill for a while before they even made it to dinner.

cold-ironing-cma-cgm-2  the big container they show on either side of this photo marked Change turned out to not be necessary.

The day I finally figured I could be of some service they were unspooling those great lengths of wire, hundreds of yards worth, black sheathed 1 plus inch weighty lengths of copper, 3 inches total, and like any extension cord, they had to be kind of uncoiled and unwound on the back deck, so I jumped in and just started wrangling these things with them like people showing off a captured 30 ft anaconda… they would slowly feed them from the deck down, hauled by ropes I think, through the contraptions and shelves they had made to the long run down the passageway and into the engine room area. It was like trying to get that draw string back into your favorite old sweat pants on a grand scale.. the spools were huge wooden things maybe 5 ft high that they had a special contraption to stand up and run out. It was a warm day and we were in the East China Sea, and there were Chinese fishing boats bobbing by all the time, and traffic, and it was sunny and almost warm, and the water was muddy and sometimes blue, a departure from the loneliness and dark waters of the north pacific. We would see other ships roll by, and sometimes Nils would take a picture, and they were excited the job was progressing and the sun was shining, and they were out of their thick insulated outfits and down to even t shirts and work gloves.

You see what made this job special was that it was the first time it had been done, at least by them. I was witnessing engineering in action. They had been hired by CMA CGM to do all the boats that had to go through the regulated ports, which like I said were the west coast of the US ports, maybe Vancouver as well, and the ports of Western Europe. They told me there had been one experiment with it so far, and when the ship took up the power, there was a blackout in the nearby town..they thought this was as funny as I did.. kind of a classic case of the meeting of good intentions and age old problems, but time and experience would no doubt iron out these bugs.

A few months ago I was looking up some facts about the Libra and I came across an article on this very thing, and it turns out I wasn’t mistaken that I had come on board at an interesting time and place in the history of shipping and the environment..I had witnessed a small piece of nautical history. Compared to the noise they make and it’s affect on marine mammals, and the completely unfiltered bunker oil exhaust they put out, this is a minor victory in the battle with global warming and the restoration of marine mammals to pre industrial harpoon numbers, but it made for a somewhat more unique trip than my novice seaman experience had led me to realize until now. And thanks to that, I had the relief of having the Germans around.

There are like 20 papers and articles one can find on google about the specific work I witnessed, which is called Cold Ironing, or Alternative Marine Power:

http://www.cma-cgm-blog.com/cold-ironing-world-premiere-cma-cgm-libra-ship-cma-cgm-group-protect-environment/

http://shipandbunker.com/news/am/863345-cma-cgm-adopts-modular-cold-ironing-solution

http://www.shipinsight.com/cma-cgm-reduce-co2-emissions-50/

A few weeks later they must have had it all hooked up. They told me it would require another guy to hook it into the ships systems I think. They must have gone back to Cali and back again to China before retuning and throwing the switch. I traded emails with Niels and Christoph and they mentioned they were back at it again after a few weeks home, onto another ship doing the same work. Nils sent me some fishing photos and asked me for an address to send more photos from the journey on disk. I think I might have spaced that but will give him a hollar now. That is one hell of a big fish!

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The First Officer

It was Halloween Day 2013 when I reported to my ship. We were due to set sail the next day. I was supposed to get on board at 2pm the shore agent told me. If you have never been in Oakland Harbor, it’s a fairly confusing place. The idea that I am going to show up at some locked gate and the people will know enough to just let me in and onto a ship, it’s kind of daunting. I told my cab to wait, especially since I had no cell phone, for the assumed rejection, which would take me back to my hotel begging for internet access. Ever had a cab in Oakland?.. it’s a trip, something out of Sanford and Sons, old LTD’s with the doors falling off, and those kinds of browns and greys that no-one seems to paint cars anymore, but that would be a story in it’s self. When I finally got on board, it became apparent that the person who seemed to be “the one who dealt with the passenger” was the first officer, whom we’ll call Mikey. but I had to get to him. All I knew was that I was meeting this ship called Libra. I had two backpacks and some bags of food and gifts. I hoped to hell they knew better than I did what I was supposed to do. In this post Sept 11 America, the security was a bit daunting, a bit Orwellian. I pushed a button outside of a metal turnstile with like 10 times as man bars as I have ever seen before. The whole place looked like the electronics bunker on a firebase in Afghanistan. It was my assigned gate. the Parking Lot was surrounded by what looked like stolen road construction temporary dividers, and there were beat up cars parked willy nilly like a junk yard. Longshoremen drifted in and out, helmets on and a kind of stoned detachment on their faces. I braced myself for incompetence, but they seemed to know who I was, expect me as a matter of fact.  It felt like a miracle. No one searched me, they just buzzed me through, and I dropped a 20 on the cabby, the meter having spun up 3 more bucks while I waited. I was told to get into a van.. you see, no one walks through here. it’s a container port.. I would eventually have perspective on these places from 150 feet up on the bridge, stopping at 4 more in my next month, but for now it was an obstacle course out of a video game, but an easy going brother from Oak-town driving the van gave me some crap for not seeing women for 3 weeks in an easy banter that I knew I would miss leaving America, and dropped me off next to one of those moving cranes, literally the line of cranes you can see from the east side of the San Francisco Bay Bridge that inspired George Lucas to design the At At’s (ouch.. turns out that is a myth http://www.slashfilm.com/did-oaklands-cranes-inspire-the-at-at-walkers-the-answer-finally-revealed/ ). There seemed to be movement everywhere.. and the Ship was, well, Huuuge.. it towered over me.. the guy gave me one tip when he dropped me off.. don’t go into land. don’t cross that white line. That night I would break that rule to pace the length of the ship I was about to ride, twice, before I had the guts to get on it for the last time, but he told me in such a chill way I heeded, gazed around me a bit, and looked waaay up the gangplank (maybe 5 stories up) and saw two white balaclavad faces staring down at me, somewhat impassively, but intimidatingly enough if you have ever seen third world soldiers. They both looked Asian, and they both looked like the meant me no harm, but could be all business. They just watched me. I waved, they watched me. I grabbed my lightest backpack, wondering if I could make it up without pausing for air and hit the steps. They were rounded so they would work at any angle. I dug in and hit the top, out of breath, maybe a minute later, with thankfully no stops. The faces, attached to blue work overalls, with white helmets, still stared at me impassively, like something out of Alice in Wonderland. I realized they weren’t armed but I could still feel that kind of binary authority that makes white guys talk fast in third world countries to try to make friends with a kind of decisively small set of options in what seems like a situation with the shoe on the other foot. “I am the passenger” I said.. they stared at me some more, and then the older one, who looked like a southeast asian Sergeant Major, still wearing a white balaclava mind you, turned to the other younger slighter one, and said something in a language I soon learned was  Filipean Tagalug. He disappeared into a door. the older one had me sign a book, and he then disappeared down the gangplank for my things, thinking it best I not carry a big pack up it, while I scrambled after him for what was left. There was never any of the deference you might find checking into a hotel. They were crew. This was their boat. He grabbed my  pack as a safety measure, and I followed him back up with my groceries  I felt like I was dealing with Ghurkas.

They walked me in through a bulkhead door and a regular door to a hallway. Outside the boat was slamming and moving as containers were dropped on board by the huge cranes, but finally the reassurance I was expecting. I entered a big office and meeting room, and there was a giant of a man in a blue uniform with sweater, some stripes on his shoulder. Later on he would usually be in day to day clothes as with most of the officers when they were in the super structure, but we were in port, and he was dealing with bureaucrats all day, and that meant uniform. This was Mikey, the first officer, officially the number two guy, although he shared that level with the Engineering officer, and he spoke english with an accent but without a major fault. He was maybe 6’5″, and a bit chubby, although he more than once assured me that it wasn’t all fat, and it was possible to believe him. He wasn’t only huge, he had been a muscle head, but now had a bit of the chub of a man in his late 30’s who worked and had a family and couldn’t keep up with the rigors of vanity when he had what he wanted.. well almost. he wanted to be a captain, but short of that: wife Check kids Check good job by Romanian Standards check a bit of authority… ditto.. check. I was a bit too bewildered to take too much in.. I was on this colossal machine, almost too bit to be believed, and this guy was being as cool to me as he knew how to be, with a bit of ego, but  could tell he was smart enough to have an ego, and he was explaining some things to me while trying to be authoritative while gauging me for potential friendship as he figured out I was actually a year older than him while he acted like second in commands always do.. busy, harried, annoyed, but strangely helpful.

There are jokes in the army about Majors. it’s the rank with no authority.. a year ago you were a captain and you had 200 hungry fighting men working for you, and if you can wait 6 or so years, you will be a lieutenant colonel, and then you might have 800 hungry fighting men below you, but majors are always kind of sanguine, always kind of annoyed, and they are always number 2. This guy is the XO, basically a Major. There is another study about monkeys that said that the monkeys that take to rape are always the ones that are never given authority in the pack.. they are always defeated but never killed by the alpha monkey, and they get frustrated and eventually, well, take matters into their own hands… Mikey made it clear to me in our first conversation that he was already qualified to be a captain, there were just no boats ready yet.. it was the kind of aside the majors say.. the kind of statement that says “I know you think I am the guy who just brings the captain coffee but I seriously am a big deal around here.” which only makes you want to ask them to bring you coffee, but you don’t, because in some funny way they are asking you for sympathy, and letting you know that they see you as kind of a big deal (“if you can afford to get on this ship, you must be someone.. it ain’t expensive but it ain’t a Priceline trip to Paris with a Lets Go book under your arm”) and so are they since they run this monstrosity and are a bit worldly, so it’s mutual.

I am giving Mikey shit, but a secret I held onto the whole trip was that I liked the guy.. he was alright by me.. he tried hard but had to hold onto his dignity, which when he was 25 he would have muscled you into respecting, but now that he was older and actually kind of getting to where he might really become a big deal, although the kind of big deal who knows he should be a big deal, he knew he had to wait for it when he was used to just getting it and he knew it was maturity, but Mikey wanted to just pound it into you, but most guys like that are meat heads, and Mikey, after some 16 or 20 years at sea with his thoughts, was no fool. The reason I kept it a secret, other than because I try to play the cagey east coast american prick, is that I could tell that Mikey was my unofficial minder, and he didn’t want me kissing his ass any more than I wanted to condone anyone having any power over me whatsoever in the middle of the damn pacific ocean. I had lived through 8 years of George Bush’s America, and the last thing I wanted was anyone telling me what to do for my own good anymore. He got that just by looking at me, seemed to respect it instantly, and to be the kind of guy who also hated rules, but there were rules, a very short list.

“Mr. Thomas, there are very few rules. You will never go away from the super structure without closed toed shoes and a helmet, and you will always call in and out to the bridge when you do so they know where you are going. If you are just wandering, no problem, tell them that, but try to tell them something.. when you get back, call them again and tell them you are back. There is officially no drinking on board, and you aren’t supposed to bring more than two bottles. When you want to see the Engine Room, I will bring you down there the first time since it is a bit confusing. we can do that any time” That appeared to be it. Not bad.. “There will be a safely briefing later.” That ended up being kind of fun, with me picked to slide into the crazy Gumby looking cold water survival suit in front of 6 germans.. He took me to my room, which proved massive. He was friendly, even managed a smile, welcomed me aboard, and told me one thing: go and come as you please, the gate will expect you, and they will call you a van whenever you want it.. be back before we pull the gang plank up at 8am.. I kind of blinked.. that was it.. I am almost free of CONUS, and it’s Halloween and I can go hang with a buddy in Berkeley and buy a bunch more random crap to stay busy before I leave. I just have to get back here by 8am.. I already feel like a sailor, like I am in some forbidden mysterious new world, and I am already getting shore leave.

The events of that night I might have already detailed in this blog, and if I haven’t, maybe I will, but it was a fun night, with some surprises, and a beautiful blonde California girl gave me a ride back to the ship which was a heck of a way to go, dropping me at yet another security gate where despite it being 2am and Laotians drag racing 100 yards away, they knew who I was, and got me back onto the ship. I passed out to wake up the next day with my fate sealed. The Gang Plank was up and we were slowly pushing off of shore. I ran up to the bridge to watch the show as they had specified, and it was a neat one. The boat was so big that the pilot had brought along two assistants with a gps system just to get us out of the channel by the port. There were also two coast guard guys to watch them, since no one really knew how this boat could make the turn in a turning basin they had just specifically widened for us, between the port and the Old Alameda Naval Air Station, famous for Mythbusters experiments I had explored once by car buy now found myself towering over from a perspective I had never even imagined. supposedly we had 10m of fudge on each side. 20 meters might seem like a lot but remember, we were 362 meters long.  As I looked down, Tug boats looked like toys, and we seemed huge compared to even Treasure Island and Downtown San Fran. I kept an eye out for a buddy that I thought might come out in his sailboat to wave me off, but he ended up sleeping late and having to go directly to work, so no dice, but as we inched under the SF Bay Bridge, I had my second Mikey encounter.

It was a beautiful day, cloudless and maybe a bit hazy, but perfect as a big city day can be. I had discovered the flybridge.. yup.. I can go anywhere.. this is awesome.. as long as I don’t get in the way. As we approached the bridge, I had been told it would be close.. that if we had miscalculated the tide, we might run into the side of the deck of the high span between SF and Treasure Island, a stretch I had recently ridden on the back of a friend’s scooter, just a few years earlier on my motorcycle, a similarly terrifying experience since it’s just grate and 180 ft down to the cold waters below. Why everyone decided to end it on the Golden Gate I am not sure.. it seemed like this would do the job, but the traffic moved faster.. it was just a bit less, sacred..

Anyhow, so as we approached the bridge, the big bridge, I was on the fly bridge, the one on the boat that sticks out on either side of the indoor bridge, so you can look directly down to the water.. it’s the widest part of the boat by like 2 ft on each side, and exposed to the elements like a big balcony, and I could tell Mikey was keeping an eye on me the way a father watches a 10 year old.. it’s not a close watch, but it’s a put those damn scissors down I caught that kind of watch. The whole crew was busy but the captain had the pilot telling him what to do so Mikey had just me to watch.. and he acted busy and had binoculars in his hand, but I could kind of feel it.. like a brother who mom told to watch another brother. I felt like Corey and Corey in Goonies, and he was Josh Brolin, seeing what I would do. As we got closer to the Bay Bridge,however, there was this excitement, and I knew they had brought the three masts down just to make sure we cleared it and I got this rush, like holy crap, you could almost touch the bridge from underneath. There is one more staircase to the roof of the bridge, and it goes to something called “The Monkey Park”. I would learn that name in a second.. for now, I saw a way to go higher, just 10 ft higher, and that seemed to make the thrill of gliding right under that bridge I had just scootered over clutching my buddy while we both shivered after he rode to oakland for while being filmed from a car I was in with a typewriter strapped to his 200cc just 4 days earlier all the more fascinating. I bolted for the stairs, but Mikey caught me.. “Mr. Thomas.. no.. no going up there.. that’s the monkey park.. the radars.. they can.. shorten your life considerably”.. I didn’t say anything.. backed off.. watched the Bay Bridge go by.. wow.. literally 30 ft over my head if that, but in the back of my head.. yup.. he’s my minder…

He was obviously right..radio waves wasn’t the only issue with the monkey park.. if we weren’t under way with enough speed, the emissions from the stack, which ended at the same height, could give you carbon monoxide poisoning in seconds.. There was enough cylinders cranking below me to squeeze the volume of a city bus into burning crude bunker oil with almost every revolution of the propellor. People had died just doing maintenance near them I would later find out. Sometimes a down gust would catch me coming up the outside staircases and I would have to pause to just exhale the heavy oil stench.. it wasn’t like diesel, sulfuric.. it was like a moldy asphalt smell.. like a burning road. But Even though Mikey was right, I still kind of gave him my best white boy in the prison yard stare. Like alright dude.. what’s it gunna be.. you gunna bug me the whole trip? I tried to look just a bit threatening, and a bit wounded.. but he is 6’5″ like I said.. he turned away like it hadn’t happened, but he wasn’t insulting either..

I kind of hoped he and I would shoot the shit and become buddies.. we were the same age, both of us had seen a lot for our age, and his English was really good, and he had a philosophical side. It happened a few times.. he ruled that first office, the huge one, on the main deck.. always checking bilges and refrigeration systems on the ships big interactive dashboard system, sending email messages to headquarters in Marseilles.. If others were around, I got advice, authority, bragging, kind of the big brother treatment.. “Ah Mr. Thomas, you have no idea how important all this is, my job, this ship, this bilge. i can save thousands of dollars and even days just by setting it right, but no one appreciates me..” but if we were alone, the chiller Mikey came out. He loved movies, and that meant american movies, and he finally just divulged to me that he kind of loved american culture. When I am home, I hardly identify as an American anymore.. not after the Bush years. It just seems in bad taste unprompted, a bit too Toby Keith instead of Kris Kristofferson. The way Europeans look askance at patriotism, I have begun to, but when I travel, I can get into United 93 let’s go mode.. you know it… with or against us.. if you have ever had a foreign official treat you like shit just because you are an American, you become immensely patriotic. it’s happened to me more than once.. oh, huh.. sorry american, yours was the last passport I processed.. it has nothing to do with my government using your country as a straw man while they rob their people blind.. have a nice day. When Americans travel, they divide people into American Haters, Neutral, and American Likers. Mikey admitted to me that he was obsessed with a TV show called I think The Black Donneleys and that he was working through one of the middle seasons as we sailed. He loved the show and what it displayed about American culture and just the honesty of it. He was kind of telling me he knows america well because he watched this show, that he get’s us. He thought it took place in boston. My brain jumped onto this reflexive issue I have. Now I am 50% Irish American from two cities, Chicago and New York, where my ancestors arrived 115 years ago on both sides. Both my Mother and Father were exactly half Irish. I have marched in the St Paddy’s day parade with my dad’s home county, my grandfather allegedly kept a keg in the basement through prohibition, and my father always had at least a keg’s equivalent in cases in the bottom of our pantry ( I used to crawl on top of them to steal cookies), my great uncle was a Chicago cop and got offered a scholarship to play for Knute Rockene at Notre Dame in the 20’s but had to take a pass because he had like 9 brothers and sisters to support, I have spent 3 weeks as a reporter in Belfast, been inside the headquarters of Sinn Fein on Andersontown Road which like 10 people on earth can claim, have met Teddy Kennedy, seen Chappaquiddick and Hyannis, have even had a meeting with Billy Bulger (yup, a full on sit down meeting), I am named after two apostles, knew a member of the Westies by the time I was 15, and my pubic hair is red, and even though I don’t sound like Matt Damon in Goodwill hunting when I interact with normal Americans that don’t think freckles are a sign of racial superiority, I hate that I am always asked to prove my Irishness amongst other Irish Americans: “Well officially there were 7 alcoholics in my family, but if you count our setter, there are 8!”. If I started drinking right now, I would never stop without handcuffs.. there’s your answer. and I might kick your ass in the process.  I assumed the show was about Boston Irish (it turns out it’s about New Yorkers, Hell’s Kitchen, like Sleepers and State of Grace), which always get’s under my skin because A. I’m a Yankees fan and when you are a Yankees fan, Boston Irish are provincial misfits.. like rednecks without black people to bully (unless you call resisting school busing under Brown V Board of Ed and the Civil Rights act bullying). and B. I am sick of Boston Irish getting all the attention as the true Irish.. OK, so the music is good.. I’m a sailor and I lost my leg… but seriously, there are just as many white catholic hooligans in Cleveland, they just don’t pretend that robbing liqueur stores qualifies them for the PIRA.

All this flashed through my head in an instant, like man, the damn irish thing.

But here I find myself in the good situation I guess of wondering whether I have to defend my Irish Cred to this Romanian Sailor in the mid Pacific who for some strange reason can speak with intelligent authority about American Subcultures, but I get to cross his intentions off the list.. he may be my ball buster, but he’s an America Lover ( if we had had internet, I might have been able to Google the show and realize it was about New York and I wouldn’t have even been butt hurt, but other than sending emails, they said actual internet surfing on the high seas was 6 months away, and I was glad to be on before it)… I speculate now that he was a teenager when they kicked out and killed Cauceuscu and the wall fell. I can understand if he has some blue jeans appreciation, but this was like discovering he was a bigger Boss fan than me. But if Hajjis decided to storm the boat to roast some American Corrupter, I knew who the Seargant Al Powell was to my Detective John McLean.. it was my home boy Mikey. Like I said, the ‘let’s roll’ instincts, they kick in.. I nodded, and let my Irish furor settle, my Anti Boston hooliganism.. maybe I suppressed it, and now you have to read it, but he was being kind, trying to let me know that “He get’s where I am coming from.” and it made sense to take it at face value.

So I knew I had an ally in Mikey, but I also kept my distance.. I knew at some point, he would drop the boom on me for something.. It happened in our first stop in China, Fuqin. By the time we had crossed the Big Puddle I had gotten used to boat life. I had become adept and climbing ladders, moving about the ship, and exploring it’s nether reaches. Mikey even taught me about the bilge and the rest of the doodads on the computer, in addition to my countless bridge tutorials and boson’s walk arounds etc. so I was almost starting to feel like I could said the dang thing. There had been one day where the seas were so ferocious (30 ft waves and spray shooting over 100 feet up) that they banned me from deck which I again acted butt hurt about like a teenage girl, taking it out on the new weight system, but I had had no other tangles.. When we went to Fuqin, I was the only one to go ashore. I brought back two cases of beer for the crew and some Chinese candies, after an awkwardly funny day in town which I detailed in an earlier post (Fuqin’ A). I felt like a real victor having gone ashore, like Marco damn Polo since it was such an obscure part of china, and when I came back on and tucked the beer away in the crew lounge, I went back on deck to search for the Germans on the aft deck to gloat (I think this is when it happened.. it could have been in the misery called Xiamen, but I think it was in Fuqin). They were working hard but were always up for a bit of my sarcasm which I would tailor to their north sea chagrined dry palate . I was feeling cocky, just feeling good, so I went back the way I was.. light jacket for the late fall chill of northern China, flip flops and, whoops, no Helmet. So not a big deal right.. after 2 or more weeks, I should be able to avoid all the things that might hit my head, even in the tight staircases that lead down to the aft deck, but what I am not mentioning is that  we were unloading and loading.. those huge cranes were going back and forth overhead.. now again perceptively scary, but not really since if things are falling off those cranes, you got bigger things to worry about, but then there were the Longshoremen. OK, so those containers piled 6 high.. they can actually be piled 15 high, you just don’t see the bottom 10 under the deck, but then there are these metal clamps that they use to hold all but the top few together. When the ship docks.. it isn’t just crane operators and truck drivers making it all happen. about 20 or 30 laborers come on board to clamp it all together, and whether they are from Oakland, Fuqin or Hong Kong, they are usually from the wrong side of the tracks, and I started to understand why when I came up the gangplank that the two Fillipeanos, who would later become friends, looked like Burmese soldiers with their safeties off. These guys are known to crawl all around the ship trying to steal stuff. In addition, if the bosun doesn’t supervise them, they toss the clamps onto the deck with a bounce from 30 feet up, and over time it makes the steel on deck start to rust and decay, so that once a year the guys have to sand and repaint the walkways where these 5 pound clamps and poles are always bouncing bouncing bouncing.

So I had walked right under all this activity, containers whizzing over my head, with no helmet and no closed toed shoes.. I had, however, remembered to call in I think. I go down, shoot the breeze, maybe help drag around a few 3 inch thick wires, and brag about Chinese food, the cool temple the town had forgotten about but I found, and seeing women for the first time since we left Russia. When I get back, someone summons me to the big office. I had forgotten the CCTV, pointing in both directions down the circumferential walkway from the superstructure, and there is me day tripping through all this chaos.  He happened to be watching.. like the father of a 10-year-old, and yup, busted.. He was stern albeit respectful.. maybe a little raised voice in that Eastern European way that isn’t really anger so much as concerned frustration.. in the context of his culture, it isn’t like being yelled at, it’s more like a loving smack on the back of the head… There were never any threats or punishments, but maybe in the back of his head, it never occurred to me until now,  there was some risk averse corporate dictate that said I was to be left ashore with a ham sandwich and a note explaining if I did something like that more than once.. given some of the things I did do, it seemed unimportant, but a bit flagrant, but Mikey did treat it in a way that never made me resent him any more than I might resent any authority with the regularity that I do, but it was one of those things that got in the way of me and him just being dude and dude.

I did get some color from him. His family in Constanta. the regular jokes about married life. His dream to own a restaurant on the beach, if he didn’t already have a stake in one. But we did keep it light in case the old minder/mentee thing came up again. I went about my rounds.. read a book, watch a movie, go for a walk, say hi to folks, learn something new about the ship, take a nap, eat, lift weights and repeat. One funny thing I could have don with Mikey would have been to fill up the pool.. I alone had discretion over the pool. it was the size of a postage stamp, on the same floor as the gym, kind of a utility floor towards the bottom filled with closets, food stores, and emergency stuff. They told me a few times that I could fill it at any time, but it would be seawater, and they do it when they are in the tropics, but up here.. Eh as a Romanian might do as his shrugs his shoulders and puts on a mock frown, it’s cold. I thought about filling it and just floating in a gumby suit as a kind of weird meditation and survival training. Me in my postage stamp pool, 10×10 insulated from the world half way across the pacific. floating in a neoprene suit.. that’s a dissimulation chamber if I ever could dream of one. I finally got mike to admit they might be able to run it through some pipes near the engine and warm it,but it never got past that.. it was my major prerogative as a passenger for a bit of fun, but when we got to China, with stops every other day, life became kind of exciting again, watching the fishing boats, sometimes 50 at a time, bob by.

At our next port, Xiamen, I got butt hurt.. the Ship agents got jerked around by the Government, maybe looking for  bit of Baksheesh, and I stood there ready to go ashore for what turned into hours. The crew told me about two hours in that this part of China has no sense of humor, that I should wait until southern China where there is commerce and they like westerners, not try to get off here. I was a bit insistent, it became a thing of pride for me, that American sense of rights that had long about been bred out of surviving Romanians, and they finally called me to tell me I could disembark at something close to 11pm.. I went downstairs out of curiosity, but I was livid..  There was this town of 10 million, and I had never even heard of it before. A buddy of mine years ago had once made the comment to me that there are 100 towns in china with a population of more than a million that you have never even heard of before, and here was one of them, and we had paraded past it as we docked, and the captain had talked about how most of the bridges in town had appeared in literally the last few years, all these works.. the town was just exploding. I wanted to see it, but now it was 11pm, and we sailed at 8am.. we had arrived hours earlier.. where they kidding? that kind of indifference seemed so intolerable to me.. so superior and unreasonable. When I got downstairs, the young ship agent put a piece of paper in front of me. It was one I had seen before, and I had been told I didn’t have to fill it out again in our last port, that I was techincally in china and didn’t have to do any more but come and go as I pelased until I checked out before going to Hong Kong. I told him this. He said the customs agents insisted. I told averted my gaze and just walked out, stormed towards the elevator, just having had enough.. he chased me back to the elevator, and said”You are american, I want to go to America!” Almost pleading to me.. I am sure I was the first American he might have ever met..”My country is horrible.. they do this to us, run us around and abuse us..My brother goes to Harvard.. I want to go to!” I stopped.. the elevator had arrived.. I am deciding what to do.. this didn’t seem the time for a Crimson moment.. Ah Harvard.. tut tut.. my chum Dagwood is in the class of ought 6! I didn’t know what to say to him.. I wanted to look at him and say “grow some balls. if you hate it, change it!” but I am not sure I said anything.. I went up and went to bed, and when I woke up, we were halfway out of Xiamen harbor..with relief.

I kind of blamed Mikey for this a bit, for not going to bat for me.. The guys told me earlier that day that if you want to go on one of these ehips, don’t go on to see the land.. do a cruise ship.. do this to see the sea.. they said this was more common than I realize, and it always pissed off the western passengers. I had just watched Mr. Roberts in my room, and as comical as it was, Mikey became the Captain played so famously by James Cagney. it’s absurd because Mikey as first officer likely had 300 things to do that day as we ported, least of which was to convince the chinese not to ignore my request to come ashore, and he likely had gone to bat for me, but this port seemed to have a reputation for this kind of stupidity. The whole movie hinges around Cagney’s character denying his ship shore leave for a whole year, so that when they do finally get ashore, they go so nuts that it causes riots in that kind of good natured 40’s broadway way. That would come a few nights later in Chiwan, a night worth waiting for, but my pent up frustration led to me doing a silent protest of sorts. I showed up at Mikey’s room the next day and handed him my watched Copy of Mr. Roberts from the Barnes and Nobles on Santa Monica’s third street promenade (two blocks from where they took down Whitey Bulger, I might add). I told him it was a good movie, gave it to him, and kind of walked off. I wonder if he ever even got to it, or if for me he had becomes Cagney, if only comically, but he took it and I got some funny satisfaction, some weir phyrric victory in my now quite alone american head.

After our crazy night in Chiwan, to be detailed later, we all woke up to watch the slow journey down the pearl river just a few miles to Hong Kong harbor. There was a festive mood. Even if you don’t know about the history of the Pearl River, the opium wars, and the opening of China not once but twice, the second time just where we had been by Deng after the death of Mao, it was still triumphant to come into Hong Kong which we had passed just two days before. We passed under more bridges and past the airport, and the men were excited, knowing that Hong Kong was an inviting place. Mikey was on the fly bridge, same as me, taking it all in, and he was smiling and laughing with the rest of us. The germans were finally taking time off, their project done, and were up on the bridge taking photos, and we had an extra captain and Crew Chief who had joined us from france to do some training with the bridge crew on Harbor Operations. There was this buzz on board, up on the bridge, like we were in friendly waters and we felt like we were all on a walk in the park together. It was the first time I could tell that Mikey’s hawk eyes weren’t watching me. I was no longer new. That day the Germans and I went in and explored Kowloon after some Customs formalities we had to attend to independently on Hong Kong Island. by the time I got back to the boat, the night  I was supposed to disembark, it was close to 9pm. Mikey saw me struggling to pack and let me off the hook: “Mr. Thomas, you don’t have to leave.. you can keep the room another night.. we don’t care, we are happy to still have you, as long as you make it off the ship by the time we push off at 8, it’s no worries..even if you don’t” The ship was going to Shenzen, then back to Long Beach. Shenzen was another half day deal, so if I overslept, I could have just about taken a subway back to Hong Kong. I could tell he meant it, but at that time I gain acceptance, that’s always the time I end up leaving. I was dreaming of the bath I wanted to take at the Intercontinental, while I watched the ships go by in the Harbor. Even though what he was saying made total sense, I wanted to get in and take that bath, be on land, be anonymous again and cruise the places where I had met Anna Koren, fallen in love with the old wooden Harbor Ferries, and seen the tallest man in the world. Little did I know how much 23 million mainland Chinese visitors a day had changed the Hotel Scene in Hong Kong since my last visit in 2009, and that I would end up at the Chunking Mansions that night (if you know anything about Honk Kong, you know what a drop this is!) with every good hotel booked solid or twice the price it had been when I was last in Hong Kong. But at that moment is made sense to slip off before the morning rush, with no traffic between me and my assumed bed.. with no stress. I could picture  a nice goodbye on a sunny deck, as they went one way and I went the other, but goodbyes are awkward. I passed through the mess halls, dropping exotic foods I had saved since SF and Fuqin in the crew fridge and saying good bye to all in passing. I think when I got to the door I tried to give Mikey a bit of a hug, or maybe it was just a handshake.. he was huge, no doubt about it, but kind of a sly teenage character in reality, and walked my way down the gangplank and to a cab at the gate, the formalities of the other ports, even in America, dropped in the everything goes world of Hong Kong commerce.

He is likely a captain by now, and I bet a good one. he’s plenty smart, and his physical stature makes him the kind of guy who will naturally get acceptance despite his youth. Being in charge has likely let him relax a bit with his role and enjoy the scenery and I hope he keeps his appreciation of the good old US and A..I bet he still watches his movies and sagas, and keeps up, like so many Yuppies in America and I guess worldwide, with the series he watches. Underneath I could tell the guy might have been just as shaped by the humor or Friends or How I Met Your Mother as any other middle class American guy, and he would have been a football player had he grown up in the states, and retained that big guy who is nice to little guys as long as you don’t cross me attitude, but as much as I should dread that globalization, dream of him being something exotic and unfathomable, it was kind of nice, even if we never smoked cigars and really settled in, knowing that Mikey was on board, and might have my back if it came to it, like some mick cousin from Hells Kitchen. I hope he get’s that restaurant, and if I even stop into Constanta, I vow to go in search of it, maybe look him up. Sounds like a good life to me.. On the sea, then by the sea.. Good on ya Mikey.

 

 

 

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The Captain and his Best Tale

Recently a friend made a comment to me that both flattered and cut: Why don’t you finish that blog about that boat trip!

Damn.. he’s a good dude, a great pilot, and I was half surprised he had read it, let alone wanted me to finish it. I am quick to defend, being an East Coaster to say the least: “I finished the trip! I moved on!” but the truth is, I have just been too damn busy to tell the last few stories I wanted to.. even to me, this blog wasn’t really finished… so it has been like 6 months since I did anything with this, and almost a year since I sailed, and I have been ‘a lot’ of places, like 4 more countries on 2 continents, but I am back in my native land, and it is a quiet land, and all I can hear is the hum of the fridge, and I know it’s good for me, to let my ass catch up with my brain, but given my addiction to these kinds of adventures, I guess I gotto finish writing. I have at least four posts I have already written in my head from my slow boat adventure last November. and the first two have to do with the two most important people on the boat, the captain and the first officer.

I had a fantasy of what this was going to be like. I was going to meet the french captain, with a white beard and a witty banter.. he was going to think I was hilarious, ( “you are sooo insightful, for an american… ah Monsior, you are correct again, and I read the same book about the Second Zulu War… Ah correct again our incredible passenger, I have also been to Buenaventura on the Pacific Coast of Colombia, fascinatingly horrible place, and do I have a story that only you and I will completely get or you, while the rest listen with open mouths, impressed” )

Titanic-Captain-Ed_1467075a

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GryQrpCsUdk

and we were going to educate the rest of the crew with our witty banter and philosophies over the french food and white tablecloth service I was expecting.

When I first boarded the boat, I was told that as long I stayed out of the way, I could go anywhere. When we departed Oakland, I was invited to the Bridge, and I got to observe in detail all that went on.. remember how huge this boat was.. it took like 10 people there alone to turn it around and get it out of the harbor. We even had some coast guard guests come to observe, so there were 12 people running around the bridge, with the pilot and the watch. There was this short but authoritative man, and he came to me and shook my hand, and said he was the Captain. He was calm, kind of crisp, had eyes that were not wary, but looked or things of importance and didn’t dally or things that were secondary. He wasn’t quite a man on a mission, but he was a busy man at that moment. Instead of the witty banter, I observed him for days on end, at meals, on the bridge, and we spoke when time allowed. He never avoided me, but he never lavished me with flattering time, but he did take me seriously.

Well, I did get the tablecloth, and I think I ruined it every night dropping food in 6 directions, usually a brothy vegetable soup, while I ate alone and tried to adjust to life at sea. and with only one exception in 23 days, if I sat at that table, I sat alone. it was, well, maybe good for me at first, but it got old. The crew ate in four segregated groups in two rooms, with some more informal segregation amongst the Filipinos, and it was a week before I broke that segregation, but I learned for that first week just by listening and watching 3 meals a day, while I endlessly turned my tablecloth into a Pollack Painting complete with flakes of the super flakey bread, that my almost personal Filippino steward was always too polite to notice. Yup, basically me and the captain had a waiter. The other guys could order from him too but they rarely did.. their meals were brought in big bowls they passed around family style, but me and the captain got the full treatment a bit more.

Now the Captain was always at the next table, a long table with all the officers, usually about 8 of them at each meal, and then there were the cadets, 2 or 3, huddled at their own table but listening to everything that went on at the other table.. they had an advantage over me.. they spoke Romanian. Yup, they were all Romanian as I said before. I have one good Romanian friend, but he is over the place, has been since literally ’87 when he defected by walking into the US Embassy in Cairo 3 days after he was sent there to build a dam by his government, and he has tried to teach me a few words, but not enough to follow these machine gun conversations. I would sit there with this little divider between us, but not blocking anything, just a little half wall, trying to figure out what the heck they were saying. They would congregate upstairs in the officers bar before meals, the only room on the ship I never visited, and I would hear them playing Fifa Soccer on a video game machine. I would be hungry and go to town on the grub. I would hear howls and screams sometimes as they unwound and someone won or lost, or Romanian music videos, usually a female singer that sounded beautiful, and I would imagine her doing cheesy things trying to look glamorous in hotel lobbies and on the beach of Constanta, trying to be a Romanian Madonna or Britney Spears,

90’s Romanian mix: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kcV8RgLfzX0&list=PL92EEF3A83B03AD15

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6cKknBmfmK8&list=PLq1eMf0hI2HiZp2id_jtoaQcNH3Gdwivx

and at some point the captain would get hungry, and they would all descend the circular staircase right by my seat at once, and 8 to 14 at a time. One by one they would great me with the word “apatite” or “good apatite”, kind of a bon apetit, while I ate.. I would say hi to them one by one, and they would troop to the other two tables. I sometimes wondered if this was a direct translation from Romanian, or how it was said in Romanian, or how they felt we said it in America, but I never corrected it, since it was like being on a greeting line at a wedding.. they just kept coming, every time, and then the Romanian would fire up..

it was greek to me, well, Romanian, and the captain would kind of calmly rule the conversations. I didn’t pick up much, but as these things go, everything would sound controversial, just by nature of the language. I once picked up that the Engineering Officer was perhaps a Christian, and they seemed to get in a row over this, but the captain would calmly moderate, sometimes taking the opportunity to teach lessons.

The cadets, only 4 feet away, same as me, were in on the conversation usually, silently listening and watching, learning, like being one table over from a Romanian Bull Halsey or Admiral Nelson, it was well know that it was part of their education to listen but not participate in the conversation at the next table. I knew that more than half the officers spoke fluent English, so I used to kind of pine to be invited to the conversation, but it never happened, so I stared at the wall and gorged myself to fight off that empty stomach feeling you get on boats, and since I had started to pump iron in the little gym, and likely spent more time on deck in the cold than anyone in the crew unless we were docking, I would polish off the plates like a bachelor eating over his kitchen sink. This was before I had the balls to eat with the Germans and Filipinos in the downscale crew mess, not really knowing I could, but knowing I had to kind of pass the smell test with the officers by sitting there for a week or so, pretending I didn’t hear anything while they chatted away, like a photographer never looking them in the eye except through the camera so that I maintained my role as a background observer.

My impression of the Captain was that he was fair and reasonable, and that he didn’t see himself as necessarily important in an egotistical way, but that he was in charge, and he would run the conversations, be the voice I heard most, but he knew someone in Marseille or some customs guy in every port was out to embarrass or trip him up, so he stayed busy like any other crew member, and they followed suit. He was short and wiry, although it was hard to tell because he was perpetually in some sort of uniform sweater, but he kept his hair shaved clean.. picture the DJ Moby with former Sen. Tom Dachle’s personality. He ate no meat and only olive oil, so the whole officers mess was obligated to a fairly healthy diet excepting the cheese and sausage plates that by Romanian tradition were ever present at their table. They would troop by with Salmon or some other fish for him, and after about two weeks they gaged that there was enough for me to have salmon fairly often as well to get me away from the banality of the lightly grilled chicken we used to seem to get every other day.

moby20090202_tom_250x375

One time towards the end of the trip, he kind of apologized to me that he was so busy.. he would be on bridge a few hours a day when we were in transit, but there wasn’t much to do.. we didn’t change heading for the first 12 days until we passed through the straits between Honshu and Hokkaido, but he would come up and do a few hours with whomever was on watch, out of the 4 or so rotating mates. If I came up on the bridge and he engaged me, I knew they were bored out of their minds and I would be game for it, and instead of my usual games of grabbing binoculars and looking for whales or asking about one of the dozens of different displays and machines on board, I would get into a conversation with him. We talked about hunting and cold and New York City.  He had a sense of humor, but it came after business, and he loved to hear stories about Alaska, since he had been past it, cutting through the Aleutians on the great circle route, but never stopped there. He had seen enough of the world to not be curious about say New Jersey or Kentucky, but he loved it when I talked about Eskimos. He even cross examined me once quite strongly about home innovations in green energy since I admitted to some recent experience with it. It was tough. I was speaking to him with 3 other men with engineering backgrounds with my back to the sea while he grilled me, and those of you who know me know  I can bluff many things for a few minutes, but I had a hard time knowing more than these guys did, but the questions persisted because I was talking about many ideas that were new in Romania. I remember almost faltering once or twice, and his gaze never left me, and the others crowded around his plush high chair to hear, but it was fair, and interesting, and I could kind of feel his calm power that day. Months later an engineer buddy taught me about the principles of refrigeration in a bar in Chicago, and I realized where I had screwed up. He admitted that he made a fair wage as captain or Romania, maybe 50,000 USD, maybe more, remembering that he only worked 8 months or so a year, and he admitted he wanted to make his home back in Transylvania as efficient as possible while he still had cash flow. I would never really ask him direct questions because even though he was genial, the situation on the bridge didn’t seem to allow for it.. they would sometimes be talking to me, some buzzer would go off, he would swivel around and the rest of the crew would attack whatever the offending alert was, and then he would spin around just as fast and pick up the conversation as soon as it was resolved. There was a sanctity to his chair when he was on the bridge, but at times I was even offered to sit in it when he was below deck. But below deck was where he usually was, doing paperwork. That was the jist of his apology. He told me he did 2 days of paperwork for every port of call (there would be 4 on the second half of my journey, in china and Hong Kong, and we refueled as well on an unsceduled stop in Russia, with all it’s attendant issues.). This was in addition to all his regular bookkeeping.. he might have been the captain to us, but to CMA-CGM he was one or perhaps 300 they had on their roles, and he had paperwork like any captain in any cop movie you can imagine. It was rare that I passed by his door, as it was out of the way of anyplace I would be going, but if I did, I inevitably saw him in there working away.

So here is a fun fact about him, before I go on to tell his best story that he told me on another day on the bridge, about being held captive in North Korea or some 6 weeks in the early 90’s. He is a Transylvanian. Most of the other Romanians were from Constanta, which is kind of a Romanian Atlantic City, or Miami Beach. They were big city, a bit more brusque but with good humor, but he was a quiet mountain guy, maybe the Romanian equivalent of a Coloradoan.. it gave him a bit of strength, in that kind of fascist from the hinterlands way. My immediate instinct was to bring up Dracula, but I knew we had time together, so I let it slip a few days, but eventually he did tell me that, yup, he lived maybe 2 hours from Dracula’s Castle. He didn’t dally in it.. he wasn’t insecure, I never picked up on any feelings of inadequacy he might have for the job, but he didn’t want to play into a huge spectacle about the only cliche his home territory has. He might have had a bit of a Dracula look, but not the Bella Lagosa accent.. man, these Transyvanians and their fake real accents… why does he have to be so inauthentically authentic!

I bought him a bottle of wine before I sailed, and brought it to him when we were a day out of Oakland.. directly but not officiously, before I think he understood it was a gift, he told me kind of “ouch, liqueur is not allowed on board, but it looks like a nice bottle, so we can make an exception, but only one glass and quickly”  I admitted I didn’t drink, and he was relieved, and when I told him it was for him, he hid it under the table if I remember correctly, and .it was never mentioned again. He played by the rules but he wasn’t a martinet or a dolt, more like a fish that kept looking for a way upstream. The crew seemed to take him at face value, and I never heard a complaint about him.

He had been a seaman for at least 25 years, and had gone to the same school I think they all had, the Maritime University of Constanta

http://www.cmu-edu.eu/

Don’t confuse it with the Naval Academy! they were different!

He worked 4 months on, then would go home for a few months, then back at it, and had a two room suite he called home for those duration on the last deck above me before the bridge.

The Engineering officer, the Christian guy who didn’t speak a word of english, and had the pallor of a guy who as below deck all day, was a  salt and pepper haired guy, shared the floor with him, and there was a little administrative office and a laundry room exclusively for him and the engineering officer, in addition to the big desk he had in his sitting room. Every once in a while the engineering officer and I would bump into each other, with him in his one piece blue overalls, and he would give me a genuine smile, but the preoccupation of his job and the language barrier kept it to that. The other top dog, the First Officer, will get his own post. He was my minder of sorts, and an interesting cat. He lived on the floor below me, maybe as a precaution, but with the same big suite that the Captain and Engineering Officer and I had, just three stories down from the bridge instead of one. My floor, for some reason, was largely empty except for two cadets and I think two germans.

Anyhow, so there was one story the captain told me that was as funny as it was interesting, and it showed how Romanians kind of roll with the punches well. It turns out, and this will sound worse than it was, that he was a prisoner of the Peoples Democratic Republic of Korea for about 2 months once.. yup… these lunatics:

So as the story went, this was right after the fall of the Iron Curtain, the early 90’s, I think he said ’92, and North Korea felt that Romania had an unpaid debt to this here middle Kingdom. Remember that the Iron Curtain had fallen everywhere in the world except for North Korea (and Albania, but it wouldn’t last long there). So whatever the nature of this debt, it was likely from some arms deal before the fall of the curtain, and the new Democratic Romanian Government didn’t think it had to honor the obligations of the Shenanigans of the now Fallen and buried Ceaucuscu Regime.

CeausescuKim1971

So when this unassuming Romanian Bulk Carrier showed up with a load of who knows what a year or so after the checks stopped coming in, with our Captain on board as likely a young deck officer, either a cadet or perhaps a third or second mate, the North Korean’s did their thing, Pueblo style, and informed the boat that they were not allowed to leave until the bean counters in Bucharest paid the bill.. simple as that. Some guards were posted, and the crew of maybe 20 was told to stay on the boat. The North Koreans I guess were polite but stern, and they complied. They ate down their stores of food, and waited.. you can imagine that the response from the new Romanian Government, while concerned, was not immediate. They were broke because of a former dictator, perhaps the worst dictator in the eastern bloc, was in part playing footsie with these nuts, so no one was particularly sympathetic. I think he said that the Romanian Government sent someone to visit, and he was concerned, but nothing happened, quickly or slowly. After some time, the Koreans realized there wasn’t much threat from these affable people from outside of North Korea somewhere, and they let them come onto the dock to play soccer. Sometimes the Koreans would join. They all started to bond. Then one random night, of all things, a bunch of cars arrive and take the whole crew into a night club, with their state minder and guards along. The Peace Loving people of North Korea didn’t want their ‘guests’ to feel like they were the victims of their bourgeois masters in the newly demonized Romania. According to the Captain, it was just nuts enough after all the boredom to be fun, but you could see the awkwardness of it all.

But then some minor trouble stared. You can imagine that as a ship, they were provisioned for a month or so, but no two, and food began to run out. They politely requested food from their hosts after a bit. The Koreans, umm.. demurred… then offered some I think pathetic vegetables and grains. The Crew Persisted, and finally a pig was offered. The crew thought it was a bit hilarious, and Romanians know their pigs. They examined it and realized the pig was a bit, well, malnourished, that it should be bigger by their gauge. So instead of rushing to eat it now, while they still had some other sources of protein, they decided to fatten it up with some of the excess grains and rotting veggies they did have. The Pig ate and ate, and they waited, but the thing was so malnourished, that over days and days, it did not grow.. if they brought it at 40 lbs, it stayed 40 lbs despite ample gorging on anything they put in front of it.. days went by they grew hungrier.. finally, it was decided, we need to eat it anyhow. They roasted it up, and it was delicious, but they realized they were getting a bit desperate now. They asked the Koreans for more food, and answers were not forthcoming. There was polite hemming and hawing.. the North Koreans had really learned to enjoy the Romanians, didn’t want to hold them responsible..

A little time went by, and  official showed up. Likely fighting back the pangs of hunger himself, he told the crew they were free to leave. It was too embarrassing for the Koreans to admit that they couldn’t feed these 20 guys, so in Korean Logic, the gambit had failed, they had stopped being good hosts, so they cut them loose.

I don’t know where the captain had his next meal, if there were foreign warships waiting for them when the left, or if they just pulled into the next port in Russia or China, South Korea or Japan, and called their company. We were sailing by North Korea when this all came up after fueling in Nahodka, near Vladivostok, and I expressed fascination with being off the East Coast of this fabled boogeyman from the perspective of my nation. This story was the captain’s response after this comment. “You don’t want to go there, nice people, but not much food.. and I know..” After the story, I believed he knew what he was talking about! it’s amazing the experiences you can discover when you put yourself in these unique places. Thanks to the captain for running a good ship and being a competent host.

When we arrived in Hong Kong, the Captains tour was over. I accidentally watched the new captain arrive, and he seemed a bit more regal and imperial, although thoughtful as well, from the one glimpse I got as he came up the gangplank as I was paling around with my now new group of friends on deck, kind of celebrating our arrival in Hong Kong, a city they all like after the oppressive nature of the Chinese cities and officials further north. A few hours later the captain I had known and I shared a car with our shore agent into Kowloon where he was going to get his camera fixed at an authorized dealer he had found someplace in the mess of alleys down there. We were all excited to see it, but he seemed focused on going home, maybe a bit withdrawn after 4 months of handling 362 meters of moving responsibility. He hopped out with his bags at a nearby hotel without too much fanfare and blended into the crowd of Chinese, back in the ‘real world’, with a flight home to Romania I think later that day. Thus is the life of a modern Sea Captain.

 

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Hot Topic 2: Piracy!

oooooh yeah.. this is exciting stuff… everyone loves a little chaos, they just don’t admit it…

Allright.. so piracy is basically any crime committed against a boat, like hijacking it, it and it’s crew, or hauling off it’s crew for ransom, just sneaking on and stealing things, or stealing what’s on it by force….and of course it has a fabled history… in the west and the new world, it was both an outlaw and opportunistic thing and an ‘extension of diplomacy; with state sponsored pirates like Drake. The Spanish Galleons would come from Manila to Acapulco, Mexico, and then gold and silver from the Andes and Mexican mountains and wherever else it could be found would be combined with asian trade and taken across the Caribbean and Atlantic in what were eventually huge flotillas filled with just about everything you could imagine valuable. This proved quite tempting to both independents and the Brits. I once spent a few weeks in the Panamanian town of Portobelo, and it was famous for being one of two or three carribean ports where gold and silver from Peru was loaded onto galleons for the once a year Armada back to spain, and I had always found the pirate obsession annoying after living in Florida, and felt the stories were overblow. It turns out they are anything but overblown. Pirates took Portobello at least once, and I could trace the battle to an old falling apart fort behind the town that now has a population of just a thousand or two. Nearby a group of salvages had found an old ship thought to have been one belonging to columbus on his third journey, and I could touch the guns, sitting in a saline solution to preserve them until they could be stabilized, and it all gave me a thrill.. I won’t be celebrating by getting drunk and wearing black leather like a lot of tool bags do, but it did give me an appreciating. Later in Cartagena, I learned of an amazing battle that happened on a spit of land now occupied by the Colombian Naval College, where 300 pirates overwhelmed the town, sacked it, and decided to stay a few months, although they never found the Cathedral gold, hidden by the Spanish bishop for months.. In MAdagascar, South East Asia and the Spice Islands of Indonesia, Philippines, and Malaysia, perhaps even further east, there was a similar culture and trade that wasn’t stamped out until the late 1800’s… it was just part of life to raid and take, from the Chinese, from each other, and then from Europeans as they arrived. Gong back through time, as long as there has been trade and boats, there has been piracy…the romans and greeks I think both dealt with it, and the Vikings could be considered pirates of sorts, although they sure didn’t stop at boats, and Indian Ocean trade routes had similar run ins with people in little enclaves…

In the modern era, there are a few hot spots… Indonesian Piracy popped up again some years ago around Singapore, and still happens in the far flung areas of Indonesia and the Philippines, but it garnered attention when guys would shimmy up bamboo ladders from pangas around the turn of this century from the islands of Bintan and Batam, within sight of Singapore, or nearby Sumatra, and rob boats headed to or from that famous trading port, or just through the legendary Straights of Malacca. Around the world there are robbery attempts in the Caribbean and elsewhere that are classified as piracy, and can have tragic consequences, but are not really piracy in the sense of being organized boat going operations in the classic sense, more like hoods borrowing a buddies fishing boat to rob a yacht… it’s piracy, but it’s not ‘Piracy’… the world is getting so settled, the areas of chaos less and less, so that it’s less of a problem.. the global reach of military forces makes retribution possible from anywhere, quicker than people imagine,s o ti has placed global shipping out of reach for all but the boldest and most desperate.. since the Mayaguez Incident, the US has had sophisticated skills built up to seize ships professionally if they are captured, and just about any navy ship, of which there are hundreds of American ones alone roaming the sea at any one time, in this era of Pax Americana, can do all but seize a ship.. definitely follow it, harrass the pirates, and bring in assaulters if not interdict the pirates to and from their destination with helicopters, launches, and occasionally the big ship it’s self…

So when I mention desperate enough, surely I am talking about the spate of Somali Piracy that ran from like 2009 to about 2012…in arond around the horn of Africa…everyone who saw the film Black Hawk down knows that Somali is a failed state, although there is an area called Somaliland, it’s Northwestern corner, that has kind of rejoined the world and lives civilly, but the rest of the country still goes through bouts of rebellion and fundamentalist governments.. they actually had peace and an oppressive muslim government for like 6 months, but the US smelled Al Qaeda, and had them overthrown with Ethiopian troops, and it was back to chaos.. out of this chaos sprang a group of real honest to goodness pirates, like Blackbeard,  or the Barbary pirates of the Mediterranean coast that the US Marines famously helped clean out int he early 1800s, in fact, three of them have made the list of Famour Pirates through history on Wikipedia:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_pirates

Image

So what did I learn about Piracy on the CMA CGM Libra? well, that it’s a pretty rare circumstance.. the Captain had a great story of being taken hostage, but by North Korea.. I will tell that one later.. it’s more funny than scary… This ship doesn’t go anywhere near pirate prone areas, but some of the sailors have been through those areas. One crew member told me about taking a passenger around the world through the Red Sea on a previous contract, and he said the guy, I think an American, was on deck the whole time with binoculars almost praying for an attack out of humor and boredom, but they saw nothing.. it became a joke on the ship, but I think one that the American was in on, like a good natured Snipe hunting expedition with the kids…

There was a fax machine that existed to print pirate info as it came, from some Piracy Agency in England I think, the IMB-PRC (International Maritime Bureau- Piracy Reporting Center), and a sheaf of reports I could read back through hanging in the lounge on the side of the bridge if I wanted… I dont think we got an update the whole time I was aboard, and the most recent one was just about an incident where someone basically mugged the crew of a fishing boat someplace in the southern Philippines… since I got off the boat, the muslim fundamentalists on Mindanao, the major south island of the Philippines, have been under attack from the government, who is routing them from their base areas in the jungle, and they committed a pretty violent act of piracy, but this was the closest pirate group to our route, and still a thousand miles if not more from Hong Kong.

Some guys told me about going through the Red Sea to the Suez Canal recently and getting mercenaries on board.. they would hang out until they were clear of reach of Somalia, then go home.. the guys said they were tough and looked professional, and that is about it…

I never got the impression that there were guns on board, and I think they would just do what philips did, lock the doors, zig zag, and call the navy… the second officer, who I did ask about it with a joke that I knew the chances were slimmer than slim, and he told me the Libra was too damn big, it would never be hijacked because it’s hard to get on even a small boat like the Alabama, carrying maybe 2000 teu, but hauling the amount we are, 11,400 makes getting onto deck through all but the pilot hole a huuuuuge climb.. I used to take breaks on the gangplank the ship is so tall…

But there was a pirate attack while I was on board.. when we got to China, our last stop before Hong Kong, chowan, right in the pearl river bay that separates Macau, Hong Kong, and old Canton, now Guandong, the pumping heart of chinese commerce, there were two guys we let onto the boat to set up a shop selling trinkets and to hang out right at the top of the gangplank before the double doors to go into the accommodation. They always have cheap crap like flashlights and other things they think the crew will want, and they call buddies to give us rides into town and such, and I think we enjoy having them around to kind of entertain us after weeks with each other, some local color, smoking good natured cantonese middle aged wheeler dealers, and they had a stack of movies, including, right on top, you guessed it, about 6 copies of Captain Phillips, allegedly in Blue Ray, but it turned out to be a screener (where they set up a video camera in the theater, and you see people getting up to go the the bathroom, and the sound is horrible), although no harm done for a buck… this act of Piracy was the new use of the word as Copyright infringement… if Metallica was there they would have thrown a fit, but I couldn’t help myself. I had been preparing for my trip as It hit theaters, even playing two blocks from my last hotel in jack london square, but a convenient time never came up to watch it, and I think I balked once at the 12 dollar price on third street in Santa Monica (no wonder people buy pirate copies, you theater owning pricks!) it couldn’t have been a hotter topic, and I hadn’t seen it yet. So I bought it, took it to my room and watched it with the shadows of the big container cranes working out my window dancing across my glossy screen.. it seemed like the perfect place to watch it, making me glad I hadn’t seen it in theaters..I was a bit moved by the end, it was kind of heavy, and it felt weird that the boat, although smaller, felt like an older more sun beaten version of the Libra.. down to the details of the little ship diagrams on each floor.. it was like watching a crime movie about an apartment building similar to yours… somehow juicier through personal knowledge.

Anyhow, not to trivialize piracy, the Maersk was just one example of this many hundred strong Somali Group that took dozens of boats, and there was a lot of action between the US, Dutch, and other navies against them for a couple years there. This reality show for the young american male targeted network Spike sure didn’t expect to be this busy:

but it is quiet again for the most part I hear… Once in asia I went on a youtube binge watching videos, and there was a good collection of actions between pmercinaries, navies and pirates, and not to mention the rescue of two hostages in northern Somalia on the night of the State of the Union address in 2012,

http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/us-forces-rescue-kidnapped-aid-workers-jessica-buchanan-and-poul-hagen-thisted-in-somalia/2012/01/25/gIQA7WopPQ_story.html

There is a seperate war going on with Muslim Fundamentalists in the South of Somalia that led to this SEAl Raid, the War on Terror and the Piracy becoming to the SEALS what the BArbary Pirates were to the Marines.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2446081/Navy-SEAL-Team-6-raids-Somali-terror-stronghold-Delta-Force-captures-U-S-Embassy-suspect.html

but I think the difference is that these pirate gangs work out of the ports and villages north of Mogadishu closer to the horn, and these guys are to the south.. so much going on!

I will leave you with this: in my glut of video watching after the trip, to understand this better with my trip having given me context for life on bord and international shipping, I came across this video:

http://www.thatvideosite.com/v/12770/dutch-commandos-storm-a-german-cargo-ship-taken-over-by-pirates

so that’s what it looks like on top of the containers during the day… I only got to see it at night when the second officer couldn’t see me! it’s funny to hear dutch people trying to act tough by the way…

it’s hard not to feel bad for all involved,  from these hungry somali guys taking naps in the western comfort of these nice air conditioned ships they get to capture,only to be rousted by these annoying soldiers, to the ship crews terrified by the arbitrary nature of these desperate men boarding their ships, occasionally murdering to even the investors who are forced to risk their boats and pay ransoms, but it does give people something to talk about… that’s the biggest thing I learned about piracy crossing the Pacific!

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High Quality Consumption Environment: Fuqin China.. Fuquin A’!

Fuquin isn’t on the tourist trail.. even the locals will tell you, there ain’t much to see.. now I will say that in my 6 hours wandering around Fuquin, I did find some things I enjoyed, I can’t lie, but it’s off the tourist trail for a reason.. 90% of the town is about 10 years old, and the surroundings are farm land, not much nature left except on a few hill tops, no beaches that I have been able to discern, just some estuary and islands, one amazing old temple that the locals disregard and use as a card room, but then this remarkable urban testimony to the new China. The last time I was in China, about 6 years ago, I got as far as I could from the Han Chinese as almost possible. I went as quickly as I could by train away from the ‘economic success stories’ on the coast, and buried myself in the indigenous cultures, mountains and river valleys of Yunnan and southern Sichuan, which was basically unchanged since the cultural revolution excepting a few tourist and mining towns I hit, outside of Kunming, which I dubbed the Chinese Denver, which was hard to not see as an Economic powerhouse. On that trip, I had avoided what I saw today, traveling by motorcycle into the recesses, which was the Han thing, 800 million strong, the New China thing, the success that people talk about that makes my eyes glaze over while I think of all that cool Chinese character being bulldozed into a shopping mall, Hutong Land. When people get excited about it, New China, I make a mental note to not be curious about them anymore. I smell MBA indoctrination and some secret Bougie fantasies. But here I was today, my decision on where to roam decided by a ship schedule, confronted by it.. I will say that the old China is more than there, it’s not just in the cracks, it’s still on main street. In downtown Fuquin, which the ship agent who gave me a ride there and shared lunch with me called a village, I found a small city, what felt like 20k 30k or so people, and putting the history together, the whole place was a fishing village until they built this port and free trade zone ten years ago. I still had a funny time watching an old guy pull his goat through the main intersection of town, it fighting him with all it’s might, him leaning back on the rope, still something timeless occurring, and I even gave it a tap on the haunches to help him out. But the other thing is going on too..

When I woke up and looked out at the port, it felt new, it looked new, and the agent, a kid named Antonio, which was westernized from the Mandarin word for East, confirmed I was right, ten years old and built on landfill.. he said there wasn’t much in town, and even the crew, who had to work all day anyways, told me it was a ghost town and to wait until Xiamen tomorrow to go ashore.. I wasn’t gonna sit around after 17 days on the ship (not that I was complaining, but I wanted to smell green, see trees, eat something not fried) so Antonio offered to take me in, the only drawback that I had to wait through his two phones ringing off the hook to get through conversations in his passable English, which was his college major. He had about 3 big ships a week to handle, plus what he called a feeder ship coming down the rivers or from Taiwan every day or more. He taught me a lot, and I saw a lot.. He is from Fuzhou, the provincial capital, about 2 hours away, and he said he could barely understand the locals here. But I could tell pretty quickly the locals had been marginalized by a new China, and this was an Industry town. After he took me to Immigrations to get my Visa validated, which for some reason took 20+ minutes even though I was the only customer in this massive office, he took me to town. They had created a special visa system just for Americans as part of this bullshit reciprocity thing that all these countries had started after September 11, but at least they didn’t take the humiliating step of finger printing me like some do. Anyhow, Antonio drove the company car to town, which he claimed was 20 minutes away, and that there were no taxis. This turned out to not be completely true. It took 20 minutes because he never once used his gas pedal, I actually looked, 15 kph the whole way, for safety he said.. he just put the car in drive and let the torque of the engine idling take us there.. it must have been 3 kilometers away. In fact, the whole island is only 10km long they told me, maybe 10 miles, now more a peninsula joined by both a bridge and a land fill bit they recently did, and the town sits on the south side. The downtown area is called “shady side fuqin” if I heard it right, for the shady side of the little river that runs though it. After hitting an ATM and finding an upstairs restaurant with some impressive service (they all had radio earpieces like some ultra club, but I was calmed by being able to see out a crack in the wall, no, not a window, just a gap they forgot to fill above the pisser, next to a fully functioning window, and I was able to see a sewer and a goose wandering around in a dirty back yard, which brought me back comfortably to the old China again.) for a huge bowl of seafood and Sichuan peppers that we ladled out into these tiny bowls. Antonio spit his bones out in true Chinese form, while I am sure I did something equally deemed offensive to the Chinese. Then we wandered back to his car, through farmland and a few jaunts to satisfy my curiosity, finding an old temple back in an Alley that was impressive as hell, with endless amazing colorful and gilded carvings, but with a poker game going on, and the level of restoration one might find in an old kitchen, with catalogues stacked upon them, museum quality art works, and LED lights nailed into corners and tape and glass stuck here and there. The place was awesome, and given all the reverence of a cement community center in a Great Society housing project, which I delighted in.

The town shares bottom land with the river and rises on some hills, and you can walk down an alleyway and pop into some intensively cultivated land on the banks of the river, where you would expect buildings anywhere else, just feet off the main drags, but did I mention buildings? Here is what I have been avoiding. So ten years ago they build this container port to export from Fuzhao and a few of it’s more interior provinces, and this little village becomes a boom town, and the thing impossible not to notice where these huge town house looking things, with every weird example of run together european and chinese architectural flourish, so that the whole place looked like a vertical version of a Dallas suburb sprinkled on rural Asia, or like someone took Amsterdam, carved the houses from each other, and scattered them one by one over the land randomly, with these gaudy but oddly appealing chateaus next to pig farms and lettuce plots. It ran like that for miles, with these 4 or 5 story high palatial looking apartment buildings squeezed in on these little plots, sometimes with just a dirt track leading to them. It was all so odd, so Chinese-ly odd. Context matters not after the Cultural revolution.. if the market will sustain it, build away. So the other shock was the other part of main street. Now the old china, like I said, still there.. fruit sellers and foul smells, market garbage like piles of fruit scraps and semi open sewers mixed, with noodle joints, and turtles for sale, but the part I didn’t expect? Boutiques, and the Suburban Mo’s. I got it in my head that it’s 1962 in China.. it’s conservatively sexy, the women look, well, strangely hot, and this town has a raft of married non working mom’s with cash to burn and long days to fill, likely because the harbor and nearby chemical plant pays to sustain that. I was just kind of shocked. There were endless wine shops, boutique tea stores, and homeware stores.. but not the cheap hardware stores I learned to love in Yunnan.. we aren’t talking Rodeo drive, but it was a hell of a lot closer than I expected, rain shower heads and solar hot water heaters.. and the women, with a distinct style, attractive, lot’s of wool, like a chic version of england in the 60’s, again with the crazy platform heels with tassels and fur and frills, and I was amazed at the difference in nutrition that either the one child policy, now 30 years old, or the industrialization had created, because these housewives were amazons compared to the older people you could see who had survived the Cultural Revolution and concurrent famines of those upheavals. They were tall, attractive, and fashionable decked out. It hit home most in a supermarket I found upstairs from main street. I think the fancy thing in China is to put things upstairs.. the shit you want is never at street level when it comes to food, at least so the pretension implies. I figure out that this staircase leads to a supermarket, and head upstairs. I pass a sign that says in English, to my distinct satisfaction, “High Quality Consumption Environment” and other such lines that are that kind of no beating around the bush when it comes to greed chinese language direct translations. Another I think said something like “Parking Trouble Free Shopping Experience”. It was a bit like a Whole Foods in America, in that there were actually satisfying things to see and explore, dried fish boxes of many varieties next to a handful of vegetable matters I had never quite seen before, things you expected from an outdoor market with shanks of beef hanging, bullfrogs for sale, and people spitting between the stalls, but I the setting of a western market, but it was the clientelle that hit me.. more of these hottie pottotie amazonian chinese housewives in 6 inch heels, and mostly unpretentious, all kind of ready to say hi. At one point I thought maybe one of them had pinched my butt and was looking for a little flirtation, but I figured out it was her bag, but it had that feel, a bit of Orange County, a bit of Camelot innocence with a bit of tongue in cheek randiness, don’t let the hair band fool you, Binky-san likes to party. The country couldn’t forget what it was, it was all over the streets, it still felt honest, just modern. I rue two generations from now, but this was hard to not on some level see as pleasant, maybe suburban, maybe the precedent for something horrible, Chinese Edward Scissorhands being born as I write, no doubt not nature based, not reverent, but I was suckered just long enough but the oxygen pumped breezes of the High Quality Consumption Environment simply by virtue of my not having thought in my brain of brains that china could pull it off quite so convincingly. Latin America can’t.. they hustle and they bustle, but the anxiety is always there.. same with India I imagine.. it just comes across as at odds with the gestalt, but here it was.. the new China, and I was half pleased it might have just pinched my ass..

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Why I Took This Trip

I wrote this while at sea

Why I took this trip:

  1. To allow my head to catch up to my proverbial behind while still getting where I want to go.
  2. To listen to my body since I hate going to the doctor, and figure out if I have any real ailments other than stress and a lot of time zones wearing on my body.
  3. To cross the Pacific like my dad and Colonel S had in the Military. My dad talked about it so much it left an insecurity.
  4. To see places from a new perspective and to see terra incognita
  5. To Connect Asia and North America in my head the way my trip on the QM2 had done it for me for Europe. I fee like if you take a boat between two places, it is less of a cop out or a disgrace to take a plane there next time, because you aren’t ‘skipping over’ places that might have stories and knowledge for you.. you aren’t half ass-ing part of the Earth’s tapestry.
  6. I don’t think it was intentional, but out of boredom and curiosity, I have learned a lot about the shipping industry, and the Philippians
  7. To let my the Carpal Tunnel in my right wrist heal. I have it from typing hours a day, and euphemistically, from being single for so fucking long!
  8. To get in shape and eat a healthier more consistent diet
  9. to obligate myself to sleep in one bed for a while, even if it is always moving at 20 knots
  10. in other words, to center myself, the way Alaska does, by isolation and stability, while still getting what I want, which is a chance to explore and learn about things I find exotic every day.
  11. To learn about weather, meteorology, and navigation, which might help make me a better pilot. Things happen on a boat at a much more processable speed.. it’s easier to learn here than on a plane.. you don’t have to fly and look around. You can just stare at the map for an hour while the watch office does that.
  12. To be in an all male environment for a while, my hope being that my reward might be some time in a very female environment once I get to Asia.
  13. I hate flying… from the indignity of taking off my shoes still some 9 years after Richard Reid, to the blast of carbon it creates, to the small indignities the corporate entities that handle you along the way heap upon you, to the intensity of it’s health impacts and psychological discombobulation that goes along with it, I try to avoid it whenever I can, and the alternates tend to be more rewarding.
  14. To learn about the nature and ecology of the Pacific, and to see some big storms… to see the Sea
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The Wildlife Talley

OK, so 23 Days, something like 7000 miles.. how much wildlife did I see…

Well, just enough… it’s the ocean, and due to the size of the ship, you don’t just throw a line over and trawl… maybe we could have, but the odds of something jumping up under a ship that big to take a bite seem pretty miniscule, and add to it the fact that the fan tail is like a 5 minute walk from the accommodation.. it’s not like falling asleep with your hand on the tiller and tying the line to your toe… Filipinos love a good fish, and they didn’t even try, so fishing was out…

So that brings us to whales.. when he got off the Libra, someplace between the Golden Gate and the Farrilons, the Pilot for SF bay told me to look out for whales for the next few hours, it would be good watching he said..

He was right.. I don’t think any major migrations were occurring, but a couple hours later, me still soaking up my first day on board by not wanting to retire to my room until exhausted (there would be plenty of time to rest) and realizing the guys didn’t care if I grabbed the binoculars every once in a while as long as the Titanic wasn’t bearing down on us, I caught me a nice crew of Finbacks with an up close look…   they were kind of trying to get out of the way of the boat, and you could see their long sleek bodies laboring to get away, swimming across the surface:

800px-Balaenoptera_physalus_Saint-Laurent_02

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fin_whale

There must have been 4 of them, maybe 5, and I guess this was a small portion of the roaming eastern pacific population of 25-27,000.. Wiki, which knows all, says their population has doubled or more since the 70’s, so things are good, and they are a bit of a mystery still, never quite as famous as their nearer shore relatives the humpbacks, greys, rights, or the big ol blues that do roam these waters…

The guys were always watching… I noticed that two of the Filipinos, Norman and Leo, seemed to keep a sharp eye, although I might be giving credit in a kind of Lone Ranger and Tanto way, because a lot of the Romanians seemed to have a similar eye, but those two would be standing there, perhaps not even looking out to sea, and something out the window of the bridge would catch their eye, and it would be a whale.. it happened to me once if not twice… I never determined what they were, as the waves were choppy, but you would see a spout, sometimes just a mist, but these guys had been staring at the sea for so long they would spot it… One time I hung off the side of the starboard fly bridge for 20 minutes trying to see more.. we were moving fast, but I would spot a spout every 4 or 5 minutes.. in a different time, I would have said “to the boats!”, but no longer…

The biggest classic thrill was after out big lifeboat drill, maybe 2 days out, so getting far from shore, maybe 1000 miles… I decided to do my fist wander up front, maybe my second.. I hopped up on the little platform at the very prow (The ‘King of the World Spot’ for all of us who don’t read Patrick O’Brien novels, and looked down on instinct, one hand on my helmet to I don’t lose it, the other on the little metal guard rail to keep me from falling over with a little up pressure to keep me from loosing my teeth on some sudden surge).. there, way down there, were two dolphins, two toned, riding the bulbous bow… they looked small.. it was the first time I was like oh wait.. it’s a long way down… I now realize they were like 5 feet long, but again, I was 45 feet up.. I think I was amazed instantly at two things: one, that they could go that fast.. the boat was going 21 or 22 knots.. like 24 mph… and that they would go that fast, dart away, and overtake the boat to get back in position.. I am pretty sure I saw it right, and it was impressive.. the second thing was that they were out here mid ocean.. I tend to see Dolphins like people, they think like us essentially, and  see their territory as the pelagic zone, close to shore.. a few weeks before I had been walking Venice Beach at sunset, and I saw one of those things: some tourists had jumped in the water, they seemed Latin or Italian (I guess that is Latin!) and a pod of dolphins decided to play with them.. literally, they were swimming with each other in the surf at sunset.. I was walking and just plopped down and watched.. everyone who could see it, about 10 people, felt a bit blessed… seeing them out here made me realize dolphins have balls in a funny way.. if they are 1000 miles out to shore, in what I see as shark territory, what can’t they do? Turns out these are deep water dolphins, according to ol wiki again, and they actually can be 8 ft long.. that’s how bit the boat is… I thought they were 3 feet long when I first looked down…

pacificwhitesideddolphins_swfsc

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pacific_white-sided_dolphin

Through the middle of the trip there wasn’t much wildlife… there might have been some whales gliding invisibly by, on their way from Ak to Hawaii for some well earned rest, maybe some tuna gliding round out there, but you don’t see much evidence of a food web above.. it was winter and there were big storms to the north, but the closer we got the Japan, the more I noticed birds…. I didn’t expect to.. I was noticing them around the date line and beyond… way deep in the Northern Pacific… maybe it’s the success of Fox eradication on the Aleutians, but here we were, 1000 miles out, and there are birds… You read in old sea stories how that’s a way to figure out if you are near shore, but some of these seemed like they didn’t come into shore, maybe some albatrosses, and these brown dudes,a nd grey dudes, but not being an orinthology type (can’t even spell it…) I was at a loss…

You might imagine as we got closer to Japan there wasn’t much beyond birds… The Japanese eat everything in the sea with aplumb…the furthur you get from Tokyo, the more likely you are to get something on your plate that looks like something George Lucas or Ridley Scott dreamed up., and dolphins, not so much anymore you might imagine if you have seen The Cove, all the rage these days:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mc2arU61LSg

So Flipper ain’t hanging in Japan, he’s chilling with Kurt Cobain and Philip Seymour Hoffman talking about how tough show-business is..   Off the Siberian Coast, I think nothing came in because it was such a busy port, but had I dreamed to see something, it would have been this, but no dice:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_Pacific_right_whale

Anyhow, by the time you get close to Korea, and the Sea of Japan, you start to see fishing boats, and more fishing boats, and by the time you hit the East China Sea, you wonder how there can be any fish left… I could see 50 different fishing boats one night when I walked around the ship to count.. they would fill up our radar like locusts… I imagined the crew’s bouncing along, squatting and smoking, trying to make the best of the sea… doing he most awful things with that chinese smile that makes you love ’em anyways.. there were birds, and the Chian Sea is actually shallow, so I wonder that it might produce a lot of fish, but they gotta be leaving as quick as they come in with this honeybee fleet outside of every port city…

Anyhow, that’s what I got! Next trip maybe I will bring some blow-hole identifier or something, but I might have joked, it’s about the last place on earth you don’t just settle arguments, or sate your curiosity instantly, by googling questions on your iphone! 4 or 5 finbacks, 2 or 3 dolphins, and a few sea lions as we left San Fran I neglected to mention, over 23 days, and a lot of birds.. remember this line?

What did I see? I saw the sea…

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The Numbers (for all us geeky dudes)

Everyone has a little inner geek.. maybe it’s my astrological sign, or just being a big kid that makes me memorize all this useless info..but it gives context…. feast your eyes:

The Ocean

The area of the Pacific Ocean, excluding adjacent seas, is judged to be between 63.8-70 million square miles (165.2-181.3 million square kilometers), which is twice the area of the Atlantic Ocean and greater than the total land area of the planet.
The Pacific Ocean comprises about 46 percent of the Earth’s water surface, and about 32 percent of its total surface area.
Its mean depth is 14,040 ft (4,280 m).  (from yahoo answers)

The Ship

made in Korea by Hyundai in 2009..in a town on the east coast of South Korea called Ulsan I heard, although I know CMA CGM also buys ships from a yard further south, Goeje, this island with two huge ship yards on it, because one of the officers sat there for 3 months in a hotel waiting to pick a ship up once, although he had a good time. From keel laying to floating was only like 4 months… then it was floated and finished.. I have not heard that the champagne didn’t break. Cost 300,000,000 $US. I remember that the woman who swung the Campaign was either the wife of the local mayor, or the ship yard manager.

360 m long.. the bulbous bow seems to sit just ahead of the prow by a foot or maybe more. I used to stare down at i thinking it was 20 feet below me. by the end of the trip, I realized it was closer to 50 ft down.

45 m wide

60m high the 3 masts in ‘the monkey park’ that make it higher can fold down. The bridge tends to sit like 160 ft above the water.. it’s really high!

29 m? from main deck to bottom of keel, so a huge amount of possible free-board.. the boat drafted 15m when leaving Oakland. Now with fuel, who knows, maybe 17 or 18m. Before we began fueling, we seemed to have about 2 m of red showing in still water. I read somewhere it can cost like 1 million to paint one of these, incidentally.

Huge! it’s the 4th largest class of Container vessel in the world, and he second largest for CMA CGM. Each in the class is named after a star or constellation, and there are I think 12 ships in total.

1 TEU = 20 by 2.5m by 2m.. basically a 20 ft shipping container is 1 TEU   This is the measure of shipping capacity, kind of the key measure of a Container Ship’s size and value.

11400 TEU possible payload

8600 on board.. about $600 US per TEU income crossing the Pacific.

We only seemed to be carrying one shipping container of fuel, and about 24 ‘reefers’, refrigerated units that needed to be hooked up to our electricity to stay cool. These containers are extra cost for maitnenace, monitoring, and electricty.

approximate value of the cargo for our trip: 5.16 million, although there might have been empty containers going back to China.. one guesses that the eastbound journey is the real moneymaker.. if the ship was full, the income would be: 6.84 million usd assuming it’s the same price to go to the US per TEU.

Fleet Context

Their Larger Class is a whopping 16000 TEU, and all those ships are named after famous world explorers. I think the Marco Polo was the first in that class. They are remarkable for having the smoke stack and the accomidation about a third and two thirds down the ship… ours were combined, with a huge staircase like something out of a bond film circling the stack going up the back of the accommodation, about 3/4 or 4/5 down the ship.

CMA CGM is the 3rd largest shipping company in the world, after I think Japanese NYK and Evergreen in China, although the guys seemed to think Maersk was bigger too..

They have over 100 boats, divided into fleets, perhaps 10 total.. the fleets are distinguished by the nationalities of the crews. It’s the first fleet, maybe 10 spips, likely operating out of Marseilles, that has French officers and therefore French food… if only…

A few of the ships in the fleet had specific jobs, like running things from France to their Caribbean Islands. These large routes between major shipping hubs were the bread and butter of the company.

can go 24 knots, maybe 26, but the fuel costs start to skyrocket.

we tried to average 21 across the Pacific. No one here seems to call the Pacific ‘The Puddle’. It seems like nicknames like that are for US Navy guys to sublimate their homosexuality until the next equator crossing party.

The Crew

Crew is about 30 people, with berths for 40, including rooms set aside for as many as 7 passengers.

1 captain

1 chief engineer and 1 senior officer

3 watch officers (mates)

numerous engineering officers

2 electrical officers?

1 bosun

12? able bodied seamen or bosun’s mates  (4 guys trained as firemen at least)

2 cooks

1 steward

3 cadets (2 deck, one engineering, one electrical I think, one was Filipino, the other three Romanian)

There were always at least two people on the bridge, and one in the engine room. Someone would lock all the exterior doors every night as well, never figured out who it was.

The Engine

engine is a 12 cylinder, 2 stroke, turbo charged, direct drive (no transmission, which surprised me) .. it is 3 stories high and the length of a double bus. It has the potential of 72 mw of power. the turbos alone were the size of a truck, and seemed to take up half of the engine space. In horsepower, it was some ungodly number 90,ooo hp, if I have the ordinal right.

It maxes out at like 90 rpm… one cylinder fires every 30 degrees to make for 12 firings per screw turn…

the drive shaft is about 70mm solid steel

never saw the screw,but heard it was big, 5 m or something, maybe larger…

energy use is 100 to 150 tons of bunker fuel per day cruising… We can carry 9000+ I think…plus diesel..

that calculates to a horrifying 7,333,333 pounds of carbon released per day if my math is right… (convert to gallons, then multiply by 20 pounds per gallon?)

it also has 5 generators to provide backup and house functions. They provide 6600 volts of capacity, for everything from navigation and lighting to running refrigerated containers and turning the rudder. Usually only like 2 are running at any one time. A system is being installed on this and the last journey to make it possible to plug in at shore and shut off the generators. This will lead to carbon savings in most places, especially where the grid is not heavily fossil fuel dependent,but the first time such a system was experimented with, it supposedly shut down the power in the town it was plugged into, since the demands are the equivalent of a town of 6k people in the US to as many as 30k people in the third world.

Ship Carries Bunker, Low Sulfur Bunker for use in the US, and Low Sulfur Diesel for the Generators

It also has a complex ballast system managed by computer

It has two Huge Anchors, and each chain link is steel, over 2 feet long, and weighs 100 lbs individually. I think the whole chain is almost two miles long, and we have two of them.

The Voyage

distance from Oakland to Hong Kong 6,800 miles direct, but we didn’t go direct…

Oakland to Nakhodka: 12 days 5400 miles to Tsgaru Straits of Japan by ‘ram route’ 4950 NM.. circle route would have saved 300 miles, but brought us into two huge low pressure systems near the Aleutians that would have beat us up and perhaps slowed us down more than the circle route would have saved us. The weather report that this decision was based on remained posted in the navigation area of the bridge for the duration of the trip as a kind of proof of the decision.

Time in Nakhodka 42 hours? I remember watching them disconnect the hose, a 30 minute job, on a cold night, and thinking they would show up and get us out of there, but the customs people didn’t show up until morning…

Nahodka to Fuqin  2 days?

time in Fuqin 2 nights we left through this long bay of islands, somewhat satisfying despite the haze in the air

fuqin to Xiamen 1 1/2 days…  also, coming in through the mouth of the harbor was beautiful but for the haze and the huuuuge coal plant at the mouth… mountains and islands

time in Xiamen, a long painful 24 hours getting jerked around by the customs guys, unable to go ashore

Xiamen to Chiwan Harbor 2 days?

24 hours in Chiwan

Chiwan to Hong Kong 2 hours, around Lantau Island, under the new bridge, and into Container Port 9.

Fuel Loaded 9000 tons

cost of fuel in Nakhodka 400 USD per ton

Cost of Fueling in Nahodka 3.6 Million USD

cost for same fuel in Hong Kong or US Closer to 600 USD per Ton

or 5.4 million USD…

Russian Bureaucrats who boarded to check our papers in Nakhodka: 3, although they did have a sense of humor. Upon leaving, three more, although one of them could have been a Victoria Secret Model, so no one minded as much, no matter how much we wanted to get out of there. One of the Cadet’s could barely keep still in her presence.. ah, to be 23 again….

Fuel ship seemed to have a crew of like 12, and I think they were stuck sitting there same as us, for the whole 30 hour process of fueling from when the showed up at like 5 pm yesterday to them casting off lines at about 930 pm today.

What’s on the boat?

The Bridge  the whole length of the top deck, called the bridge, but it would be equivalent to H deck from the main deck. very spacious with a lounge in the corner with espresso and coffee machine, the aforementioned sugar cookies galore, windows everywhere but the stack, and doors leading out to the fly bridge.. the elevator does not go to the top, you gotto walk that last flight.. the fly bridges have controls in the corner for docking, so that the captain or pilot can see right down to the dock. There is a navigation station, with lots of gps and other instruments, then the main console with two leather chairs and all the GPS and traffic and engine instruments both on the console and up above the windows. It was, I gotta admit, kind of neat…

Above it is the Monkey Park, all the antennas, lights, satellite units and radars, and I learned qucikly that it kicks out so much radiation, and the stack empties there so there is a lot of air polution unless you are under way with the wind (you can pass out in a few seconds from the smog we were putting out), so you don’t want to go up there. About 3 days in, they had to do some maintenance.. I was hanging out on the fly bridge and caught on, knowing they shut down all the radars for a few minutes, and it was a glorious clear day so that you could see for miles… the Filipeanos went up to do their work, and I followed… the first officer seemed to know I wanted to get upt here, and I kind of approvingly beckoned me, but then didn’t stand there and watch, giving me freedom. They didn’t begrudge me climbing to the top of the tallest middle post, waving my hand over the ship’s light, making me the highest thing on the ship, and looking around.. it was great… it was high.. you are like 200 ft up perhaps… even that post was taller than I expected, at least three of my body lengths if not 4… black metal rungs to climb up… they were cool for letting me do this, didn’t make a peep.. it somehow satisfied my need to explore the extremes of the ship. A few days before the finish of the trip, I was again on the fly bridge, and the Romanian Electrical cadet went up there. I watched him with this huge smile on his face changing the light bulb… he came down and told me it was the first time he had been up there and it was awesome. I didn’t want to burst his bubble telling him I had scampered up there and looked around for a minute a couple weeks ago.. so last week…sigh…

about 20 rooms

two dining rooms

A kitchen streatching between them, with a staircase down to the deck below with food storage and a walk in refrigerator. They preferred buying stuff in the states to china..I’ll let you imagine why..

a crew lounge (bar, fridge TV,karaoke machine, Xbox, DVD player, tables and couches, and the official ships library, a stack of old magazines and a few old novels and boxes of movies, all piled up on a table, although I did come to appreciate it after a first disappointed reaction), an officers lounge (the inner sanctum… from what I saw through the window one night, or heard down the spiral staircase into the officers mess, was a TV, Bar, Xbox which had some pretty intense FIFA soccer played on it, and a dvd that seemed to play a lot of Romanian female sung pop music.. I always assumed she was a looker..), and a passengers lounge (not much to it.. a TV and no DVD..a small fridge, not much to watch from 300 miles out to sea! they kept safely manuals in there they wanted us to read… one day I was bored, and learned a lot about fire fighting.. no one hung out there so it wasn’t much use when I had a computer to watch things on in my room).

a little work out room with a ping-pong table and punching bag.. new weight equipment arrived for our journey, purchased in Oakland, and I got to help set it up.

A pool room, a bit of a joke on board maybe 9 feet deep and 9 feet on a side.. it is filled from sea water, so you need to wait to fill it until you get to warmer climes… no one bothers until you get to like the Indian Ocean

A bunch of laundry rooms, one for the captain only with a big sign telling you they will throw your clothes off the side if you use it.. with these close to useless high efficiency European style laundry machines.. it was two weeks before someone finally taught me which ones actually worked… things drove me nuts… turns out there were some Chinese machines not up to snuff, even in that category of already useless European designs (god bless america.. you hit the button, and it just goes to work!)

The captain, Engineering officer, and the First Officer have suites, a bedroom and an office… the rest of the crew have either single or joint rooms.

There were 4 possible guest rooms on their own floor, the 7th deck, with a guest lounge. they tended to also be double size, with an office area, sometimes two beds, big square port holes… my booking agent told me to get one of the ones on the side. I started in a middle room facing front, then moved to the port front corner. Cadets lived down the hall, two of the technicians, and later, a former captain and crew chief arrived to do some safety training on coming into ports, and stayed on our floor, as well as the new captain arrived in Hong Kong, although I think he moved straight into his room, and the last captain jumped a flight that night after a 4 month shift…

The first floors had a little hospital, like 2 beds, a ships office, a little meeting room, a fire room with fire equipment they could suit up into quickly, and a locker room for the guys to gear up. We had two lifeboats hanging on the sides.. one time we all piled into it for a drill, maybe 30 guys were in before they stopped forcing more in… I kept wondering if it would snap, and we would be stuck towing all the way to china because we couldn’t get back up. I was relieved to know it had fishing equipment on it to pass the time in addition to the normal essentials.

Amount of Times I wanted to get off the Ship but couldn’t: once, In Xiamin

Amount of Times I wished I was someplace else: 0

Books I read: maybe 5

Movies I watched: over 20

bought some video games but couldn’t get em to work because of security and registration crap!

Puzzles I made from a Puzzle shop I hit in Berkley: 3   the crew helped me with this historical 3D skyline of Hong Kong.. I figured they would scoff at it, but instead, they tore though it in like 2 days as we approached Hong Kong.. I would go to bed late, wake up, and find out that a few of them had done a layer in a night over beers.. it kept on like this for like 3 nights.. I didn’t realize they were that bored…I didn’t mind, I sure as heck didn’t want to do it myself, and they did all the annoying parts!

origami things I made before I got annoyed with the hard to read directions: 1

Times I saw other people on the outer deck’s of the accommodation while in passage: 1, one of the German guys. I had read in another guys blog that he spent all his time hanging out on the balconies of the ship, but would never see the crew, they were just inside all the time… about two weeks in, I bumped into one of the Germans, and almost embarrassed him making jokes about it…  for some reason, they never went out unless they had a reason. Most of them were cold all the time even though it got up into the 60’s on part of the voyage, and had me sun bathing outside. It was, to echo that other blogger, my private domain, like a 9 story jungle gym until I got to the main deck and the second deck with the work shop where there would start to be people outside. When we came into port, people with nothing to do would sometime watch, but there were very few with nothing to do… the bridge would be alive with pilots and the whole compliment, and others would be ready to do the lines, shut down the engines, or what have you…

Times I crawled onto the top of the containers on the back of the ship: 1 in the middle of the night.. it was awesome.. there were Chinese fishing boats around, and I just watched them bounce around on the waves…

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Hot Topic 1: Plastic in the Northern Pacific Gyre… What I saw and what I learned about the legendary Floating Ocean Garbage Patch

OK, for those who don’t know, there is this famous Urban Legend about this huge patch of Garbage that floats between California, Hawaii, and Alaska, that is twice the Size of Texas (ever driven across Texas?) and just loaded with plastic. The mental impression is that you can walk over it, it’s this huge dump of plastic.. I have seen beaches littered with plastic, and heard about others. There is a famous spot that collects litter in Baja, due to the movement of tides, on the ‘elbow’ of Baja near the town of Guerro Negro, a spot called Malarrimo Beach, which I used to hear about when I lived there, so this was not a new idea to me… I was willing to believe the worst. I had seen around the world jokes and actions about it.. there were famous jokes about lost flip flops.. in Zanzibar Tanzania, they made a huge whale as an art project out of flip flops that rolled up on their shore, and sea plastic art is the new sea glass, with hippies in all sorts of beach places making designs out of bottle caps and  the like… there was even a guy named Papa Nutreno who made a barge out of Plastic and tried to float the seas… I had seen the Nuetrenos and heard their story in Key West once, and amazed a guy in Panama years later who tried to resurrect one of their boats by actually knowing the story.. we were both amazed by the odds of anyone making that connection as we tried to tug a Floating Nuetrino contraption out of a mangrove near Portobello that he wanted to turn into a bar.

http://www.floatingneutrinos.com/Message/Poppa%20Neutrino%20Speaks.html

A year or two ago I finally got a bug in my ass to start to learn about the famous garbage patch, maybe as I subconsciously meditated over trying to take this trip, and the first place I found some really good demystification mixed with an entertaining look at the matter came from Vice Magazine:

http://www.vice.com/toxic/toxic-garbage-island-1-of-3

hard to not get a kick out of young Thomas Morton, and the shipboard puppy love! I was only armed with this video when I got on the ship, but it had taught me a lot…

I am now finding that people are exploring this idea in other places:

This video isn’t quite as fun, they are a bit more earnest fair to say, but this is a group that sails from Brazil to Cape Town trying to find a similar patch in a gyre there, and sadly or not, they find one… it’s becoming a universal problem.

http://www.plasticizedthemovie.com/

I could link direct to the YouTube version, but why not let their page get the traffic…

319097_10150302240051261_586211260_8415279_1572907418_n

Anyhow, What did I see.. I saw the sea! I will keep using this joke, because one of the people I had consulted before taking this trip, who had come home from Korea in 1964 on a Military Transport had made the joke, and it turned out to be quite true… anyhow, what I am pleased to say is that I saw a lot less visible plastic than I expected, in fact, I saw hardly any the whole time, and you can see it.. if you see anything the size of a coke bottle, it pops out, even from such a large ship, because the sea tends to be a fairly consistent color… you spot birds and anything out of the ordinary in ways that start to surprise you after a bit, even on a boat with 4 or 5 floors of free board… If I could see just about any bird within a quarter or half mile, I became pretty confident that I would spot any flotsam and jetsam, and I did, and it happened like three times the whole trip.. I found his a relief… I had prepared to be horrified..

There are two major reasons I didn’t, perhaps. One reason you might have gleaned from the Vice Movie or, Plasticized…that the pieces are small to microscopic… and the other might have had to do with the fact that we went north of the gyre by a few hundred miles would be my guess.

I’m gonna steal Wikipedia’s map to prove my point:

Marine Debris Poster (4) AI9

we were maybe 500 or 1ooo miles north of it most of the way.

There were like 4 times I saw flotsam, and let me repeat that I was prepared to see these horrible garbage dumps, so not to downplay what is going on, but thankfully, it’s not depressing to cross the ocean.. it did give me the escape, as a visit to Alaska does, from the endless environmental degradation I see everywhere else… I also expected the waters off of china to be horrid.. they were interesting, loaded with fisherman, the air was thick with smog, and  the water muddy and oddly tinted, shallow and strange, but it wasn’t a floating rubbish bin as I had worried.. I stared at the sea for days, and like I said, I saw flotsam like 4 times… the most interesting moment being a time where I was hanging out with the Boson on the very front of the ship.. he and I hung out a handful of times, so I don’t remember if it was the two hours it took us to check all the bilge alarms on the ship (we must have walked 2 miles and climbed 400 ft of ladder), or the time I hung with him while we pulled up anchors in Nakhodka, or when they painted anchor chain while I hung out a few days in, but I remember it being early in the trip, just a few days out from California, me still struggling to get a basic context for things, and we were looking out to the front chatting, right on the little forecastle, and this line of flotsam went by, and instead of ignoring it like it was a common thing, he got big eyes and said “wow, looks like a fishing boat might have gotten in trouble!”.  It was a scum line with like 5 or 6 items on it, but it proved to be so irregular to see anything like that that I now realize it must have been a sunken like he mentioned, or one that had gotten in trouble, maybe up near the Aleutians or on the West Coast, and dumped some of its contents… the stuff was still together in a patch..it doesn’t stay like that for long..

So all this to say that while I expected to find something that looked like a raft party on Lake Meade or Lake Powell minus the people, something out of the T and A movie Piranha, what I saw on the macro level were clean seas, all the way past Japan where the Tsunami had occurred some two and a half years before, and past China which is the New Enviromhagheddon, and while I saw haze and perhaps strange weather, I never saw junk… the problem, as described, is sadly microscopic…