Mirelle
N/A
A couple of years ago there was a thread on this subject, and I, working as I do "in the business", rather pooh-poohed the idea that boxes routinely fall off merchant ships in large numbers.
I was wrong. The two shipping companies that I have spent my career with do not lose boxes over the side in large numbers.
However, on Saturday I was chatting to the Master of one of our ocean greyhounds in his day cabin at Felixstowe when he said "When the "XXXX Bridge" (Japanese ship in the next berth, right ahead of us) pulls out, have a look at the "XXX XXXX" ahead of her (naming our Most Hated Competitors). We were within a few miles of her through that depression in the Western Approaches on Thursday, same route, same cargo. She lost fifty boxes!"
I did, and she had. Collapsed container stacks are not easy for terminals to sort out, so the evidence was still there.
The ship which I am not going to name was the same size as ours (very big) and even newer.
<hr width=100% size=1>Que scais-je?
I was wrong. The two shipping companies that I have spent my career with do not lose boxes over the side in large numbers.
However, on Saturday I was chatting to the Master of one of our ocean greyhounds in his day cabin at Felixstowe when he said "When the "XXXX Bridge" (Japanese ship in the next berth, right ahead of us) pulls out, have a look at the "XXX XXXX" ahead of her (naming our Most Hated Competitors). We were within a few miles of her through that depression in the Western Approaches on Thursday, same route, same cargo. She lost fifty boxes!"
I did, and she had. Collapsed container stacks are not easy for terminals to sort out, so the evidence was still there.
The ship which I am not going to name was the same size as ours (very big) and even newer.
<hr width=100% size=1>Que scais-je?