Tranona
Well-Known Member
Words fail me. Can you try writing in sentences that have some meaning?I raised history precisely because it’s irrelevant. Times change and capability grows.
Words fail me. Can you try writing in sentences that have some meaning?I raised history precisely because it’s irrelevant. Times change and capability grows.
Yes words do seem to fail you. Your reading comprehension seems fairly poor. I’ve been fairly clear, what is it you don’t understand? Our rules were created for simpler times. Have you visited Lloyds? It’s a time capsule right down to the door men. I worked there for a while so have seen much of this system in action. Well, as close to action as it gets…Words fail me. Can you try writing in sentences that have some meaning?
What are you smoking?Yes words do seem to fail you. Your reading comprehension seems fairly poor. I’ve been fairly clear, what is it you don’t understand? Our rules were created for simpler times. Have you visited Lloyds? It’s a time capsule right down to the door men. I worked there for a while so have seen much of this system in action. Well, as close to action as it gets…
I’m struggling to see what part you don’t understand. Fundamentally the rules around losses in shipping were borne of wooden fleets hundreds of years ago and have changed very little. A little man at Lloyds still writes in a big book with a fountain pen when we lose a boat. You clearly have no experience of Lloyds or the system we have.How can you possibly say that our "rules were created for simpler times" when they are being constantly revised and tested.
Be preprepared for the "leave the thinking to the adult in the room" response. I have discovered that there is an Ignore feature on this platform and it works. The only time I know he's posted is if someone else engages with him. It saves a lot of scrolling to get to something worth reading.What I have difficulty in understanding is ramblings that are often unconnected not only with the subject but with each other. It is often very difficult to find words that you understand because your usual response is a meaningless one liner or you change the subject. What on earth does the fact that you once worked at Lloyds and it has doormen got to do with anything?
It is the easy solution for the relevant authorities just not what you would like.That’s literally the opposite of a solution. It’s avoidance in every way.
You are an intelligent person - go back and read the whole thread again. Nobody has argued in favour of dumping crap in the sea. People are questioning your assertions that the current system is defective and that your proposed solution is as simple as you claim. Everyone wants fewer containers in the sea and everyone wants the impact of those which do end up there minimised. However you have alleged that anyone who doesn’t agree with your beliefs on how that is achieved has some vested interest. Quite odd.You’re on a yachting forum arguing in favour of dumping crap in the sea. I can’t think of another sensible angle to view that from.
how are you planning to fasten a suitable tow line to a container bouncing and rolling around at sea which has no cleats or bollards to secure it to? Then when you eventually drag them back one at a time to the dock you need to some how rig lifting slings onto the crane to get it out. Salvage towing is a specialist job with extra risks involved. Personally I can’t see how the merits of stopping bananas or baby milk from ending up on a beach (and being cleared up and taken to the same landfill) justify the risks involved.If they’re floating any tug in the country could tow one. Do you disagree?
Containers have plenty of securing points. Have you ever seen one? I’ve not suggested doing it the moment they fall in, the often float for weeks or months.how are you planning to fasten a suitable tow line to a container bouncing and rolling around at sea which has no cleats or bollards to secure it to? Then when you eventually drag them back one at a time to the dock you need to some how rig lifting slings onto the crane to get it out. Salvage towing is a specialist job with extra risks involved. Personally I can’t see how the merits of stopping bananas or baby milk from ending up on a beach (and being cleared up and taken to the same landfill) justify the risks involved.
I certainly have seen them. The “lashing points” are intentionally recessed - no way you are hooking them from the deck of a moving tug.Containers have plenty of securing points. Have you ever seen one?
But that’s exactly what you were suggesting - that containers which washed ashore a couple of days later should not have been left but retrieved. Where, in UK waters has a container knowingly been lost and still been bobbing around months later presenting an environmental and shipping hazard? If it was within a Harbour Authority area it probably would have been removed. If it was easy to do elsewhere then SOSREP may well have intervened. Once again you are inventing a problem that doesn’t really exist.I’ve not suggested doing it the moment they fall in, the often float for weeks or months
Not at all - someone shows me a video of a safe recovery of multiple containers (they don’t usually fall off one at a time) being recovered in the sort of seas that make containers fall off, with equipment found in most ports around the country and I’ll be all ears. Until then I’m going to claim it’s fantasy. Refusing to consider that as an IT specialist you might not be the person government would turn to for advice of salvage operations or environmental precautions is comical. BTW I’m also not a salvage expert - so happy for someone who is to tell me that they easily pluck lost containers from the sea - that’s being open minded.Try not to be so dismissive of change and progress, it’s unhelpful and makes you seem negative and closed minded.
You have once again demonstrated your ignorance on this subject. What "rules" are you talking about that have not been updated? Please provide references to any that date from the days of wooden ships that have remained unchanged. BTW Lloyds have little to do with the regulation of shipping. That is done primarily by the IMO and the state government departs responsible for shipping - the MCA in the UK. There are dedicated organisations and standards for shipping containers and their usage. Read this sinay.ai/en/what-are-the-international-rules-and-standards-for-containers/ as a useful summary of the regulatory regime - all established since the late 1960s when containers came in. Long after the demise of wooden commercial ships.I’m struggling to see what part you don’t understand. Fundamentally the rules around losses in shipping were borne of wooden fleets hundreds of years ago and have changed very little. A little man at Lloyds still writes in a big book with a fountain pen when we lose a boat. You clearly have no experience of Lloyds or the system we have.
What’s your aim here? You’re trying to argue against progress and improvement and clearly have no idea about the system or how it came about.
Not long ago, the best rocket scientists in the world said we couldn’t land a rocket on a barge. The unimaginative always find it easy to say things can’t be done and can’t change while others go about proving them wrong. Nobody remembers the people without vision.The soft face of reality, practicality and common sense crashes against the hard wall of unicorns, fluffy bunnies and dreams.....![]()
Did I say they hadn’t been updated? No, I didn’t.What "rules" are you talking about that have not been updated?
You should start a container towing business to address this unmet market need.Not long ago, the best rocket scientists in the world said we couldn’t land a rocket on a barge. The unimaginative always find it easy to say things can’t be done and can’t change while others go about proving them wrong. Nobody remembers the people without vision.
It’s not rocket science to tow a floating container from Bembridge on a calm day. That anyone would say it’s impossible says a lot about their attitude in life.
There isn’t a market until the regs change, that was my whole point!You should start a container towing business to address this unmet market need.
Then you did not mean what you wrote in post#64. Read it again - unless you are unable to understand what you write.Did I say they hadn’t been updated? No, I didn’t.
You must have been a public servant in a previous life, they’re the only people this resistant to change and progress!
What nonesense. I’m a public servant. It’s constant change. Why make such a sweeping none sense statement.Did I say they hadn’t been updated? No, I didn’t.
You must have been a public servant in a previous life, they’re the only people this resistant to change and progress!
Tell us precisely, including a reference exactly what the "regs" are, what they currently say and what you would like them to say.There isn’t a market until the regs change, that was my whole point!
I said “have changed very little”. What’s your problem?Then you did not mean what you wrote in post#64. Read it again - unless you are unable to understand what you write.