Saturday, February 28, 2026

🚢 When Heavy Weather Is Not the Real Enemy: The Silent Risk of Wet Damage on Bulk Carriers

 

🚢 When Heavy Weather Is Not the Real Enemy: The Silent Risk of Wet Damage on Bulk Carriers

At sea, we often blame the storm.
The Beaufort scale rises, green seas sweep the deck, and the vessel works heavily.

But after discharge… when surveyors step into the hold and the top layer of grain is wet…
Was it really the weather?

Or was it something quieter. Something we overlooked.

Wet damage on bulk carriers continues to be one of the most costly and frustrating cargo issues in our industry. As highlighted in Wet Damage on Bulk Carriers (The Swedish Club, 2018) , the pattern is clear: heavy weather alone does not damage cargo — poor hatch cover integrity does.

Let’s talk about what this means for us onboard and ashore.

 

1️ Heavy Weather Is a Test — Not the Root Cause

We have all sailed through rough oceans. Hatch covers buried in green water. The vessel pitching, rolling, flexing.

Heavy weather is part of shipping life

But the real issue begins when hatch covers are not truly weathertight.

Many claims reviewed in the report show a common pattern:

  • Leaking cross-joints
  • Worn rubber gaskets
  • Corroded compression bars
  • Blocked drain channels
  • Misaligned panels

In several cases, hatch covers passed a hose test in port — but failed under real sea pressure. Ultrasonic testing later revealed compression failure in cross-joints.

The lesson?
The ocean only exposes weaknesses. It does not create them.

A well-maintained hatch system should withstand heavy weather. A poorly maintained one will fail — silently — and the cargo pays the price.

#BulkCarriers #Seamanship #CargoCare #HeavyWeather #ShipManagement

 

2️ Tape Is Not Maintenance

Let’s be honest.

How many times have we seen hatch covers taped before departure?

Tape and sealing foam may give psychological comfort. But they are not engineering solutions.

The report clearly notes that in many wet damage cases, crews had taped cross-joints and hinges. Yet during the voyage, tape peeled off under sea pressure.

Water does not respect temporary fixes.

True protection comes from:

  • Proper gasket elasticity
  • Correct compression bar alignment
  • Functioning non-return drain valves
  • Cleats properly adjusted — not overtightened
  • Bearing pads within tolerance

Maintenance is not about passing a survey.
It is about protecting the cargo owner’s trust.

And remember — a vessel may be “seaworthy” while still not being “cargo-worthy.” A few tons of seawater may not sink the ship — but it can destroy a full cargo.

#LossPrevention #HatchCovers #MaritimeLeadership #CargoClaims #PrudentOperator

 

3️ Testing: What We Think Is Tight… May Not Be

Water hose tests are common practice.

But under real sea loads, pressures are far greater than what a fire hose can simulate. In several documented cases, hatch covers passed hose testing but later failed ultrasonic testing — only after cargo damage occurred .

Ultrasonic testing offers a more accurate picture:

  • Identifies exact leakage points
  • Confirms gasket compression
  • Can be done during loading
  • Works even in sub-zero conditions

As Masters and Operators, we must ask:
Are we testing to comply?
Or testing to protect?

Because once the discharge surveyor starts taking silver nitrate samples… it is already too late.

#MarineSafety #UltrasonicTesting #BulkShipping #OperationalExcellence #RiskManagement

 

4️ Weather Routing: Leadership Beyond Maintenance

Maintenance alone is not enough.

Weather routing is operational leadership 🧭

Today’s market pressures push for strict ETAs. But running into avoidable heavy weather increases:

  • Structural stress
  • Fuel consumption
  • Cargo risk
  • Crew fatigue

Professional weather routing services help vessels:

  • Avoid the worst systems
  • Update ETAs realistically
  • Balance safety and schedule

Good leadership is not about arriving fastest.
It is about arriving safely — with cargo intact.

#WeatherRouting #MaritimeOperations #ShipMasters #ShippingIndustry #SafeVoyage

 

5️ The Bigger Lesson: Act Like a Prudent Uninsured

Insurance exists. P&I cover exists.

But the principle remains clear:
Act as a prudent uninsured.

Wet damage claims are expensive. They affect reputation. They create disputes. They strain relationships between owners, charterers, and cargo interests.

And most importantly — they are largely preventable.

Maintenance recorded in PMS.
Original spare parts.
Proper cleat adjustment.
Functional drain valves.
Regular inspections.

These are not small details.
They are leadership actions.

A Master who insists on proper hatch inspection before departure…
An operator who schedules ultrasonic testing ahead of sensitive cargo…
A manager who invests in manufacturer service engineers…

That is how we protect both vessel and career.

#ShipOpsInsights #MaritimeMentorship #BulkCarrierLife #ShippingWisdom #ProfessionalGrowth

 

Final Thought from ShipOpsInsights

The sea will always test us.

But most wet damage cases are not born in storms —
They are born in neglected maintenance routines.

If you are sailing on a bulk carrier today, ask yourself:

Have we truly checked our hatch covers?
Or have we simply assumed they are tight?

👇 I would genuinely like to hear from you:

  • Have you experienced a wet damage claim onboard?
  • What was the root cause in your case?
  • Do you prefer hose testing or ultrasonic testing?

👍 If this resonated, like the post.
💬 Share your experience in comments.
🔁 Forward this to a fellow Master, Chief Officer, or Operator.
Follow ShipOpsInsights with Dattaram for practical maritime leadership and real shipping wisdom.

Let’s learn from the sea — before it teaches us the hard way. 🚢

 

🚢 When the Cargo Itself Becomes the Enemy: Fire Risks We Quietly Underestimate at Sea

 

🚢 When the Cargo Itself Becomes the Enemy: Fire Risks We Quietly Underestimate at Sea

There is something about the word “Fire” on board a ship.

It travels faster than smoke.
It freezes conversations.
It sharpens every decision.

At sea, there is no fire brigade waiting outside the gate. As highlighted in “Fire! – A Guide to the Causes and Prevention of Cargo Fires” by The Swedish Club , when a fire breaks out onboard, it is the crew who stand between control and catastrophe.

And what makes it more uncomfortable?
Many cargo fires are not caused by negligence.
They are caused by misunderstanding.

Let’s reflect on the risks we sometimes carry—without fully realizing their nature.

 

1️ Self-Heating: When the Cargo Fights From Within

Bulk carriers load coal, DRI, seed cake, biomass… and once the hatch covers close, the real chemistry begins.

Self-heating is not dramatic at first. It is silent. It starts with oxidation. Restricted heat dissipation. A gradual temperature rise.

As explained in the guide, many cargoes such as coal, DRI, charcoal and seed cake can undergo exothermic reactions. If oxygen, moisture, or improper loading temperatures combine with restricted ventilation, the cargo itself becomes the ignition source .

Onboard, this shows up as rising CO readings, increasing %LEL, or unusual smells.

The emotional reality?
You stand on the bridge at 0200 hours, reviewing gas logs. You ask yourself:
Is this routine… or the beginning of something serious?

Leadership here means discipline:

  • Monitoring trends, not isolated readings
  • Understanding cargo properties before sailing
  • Following IMSBC requirements without shortcuts

Self-heating rarely announces itself loudly.
It whispers first.

#BulkCarrierLife #CargoCare #IMSBC #Seamanship #RiskAwareness

 

2️ Misdeclared Cargo: The Hidden Risk in Containers

Container vessels and Ro-Ro ships carry diversity. That diversity is strength—but also vulnerability. 🚢

The statistics in the guide show that while cargo fires are relatively rare in number, they contribute significantly to overall claim cost .

Case studies highlight charcoal and calcium hypochlorite misdeclared as non-dangerous cargo. Containers loaded below deck. CO₂ released. Repeated firefighting. Smoke returning.

This is not theory.
This is operational reality.

As operators or Masters, we rely heavily on documentation.
But documentation is only as reliable as the honesty behind it.

Leadership here means:

  • Questioning unusual declarations
  • Understanding IMDG classes
  • Ensuring correct stowage categories
  • Maintaining fire detection readiness

In many incidents, the crew did everything correctly.
The weakness was upstream—in cargo declaration.

And yet, at sea, the crew carries the consequence.

#ContainerShipping #IMDG #MaritimeSafety #FirePrevention #ShipManagement

 

3️ Conflicting Reactions: Coal, Methane & Tough Decisions

Coal is familiar. Almost routine.

But some coal can both self-heat and emit methane. And that creates a leadership dilemma. 🧭

Ventilation helps reduce methane accumulation.
But ventilation also introduces oxygen—fuel for self-heating.

The guide clearly explains this operational conflict .

Imagine the pressure:
Gas readings rising.
Weather building.
Charterers asking about ETA.

Do you ventilate more?
Do you seal holds?
Do you seek technical advice?

This is where experience matters.

Real command is not about appearing confident.
It is about knowing when to escalate, consult, and protect the vessel first.

Sometimes the safest decision is slowing down operations.
Sometimes it is discharging cargo early.

At sea, there are no perfect answers—only informed ones.

#CoalCargo #ShipMasters #OperationalJudgment #MaritimeLeadership #BulkShipping

 

4️ Small Ignition Sources, Big Consequences

Not all cargo fires begin with chemistry.

Sometimes it is something as simple as cargo hold lights left energized. Or hot work permits treated as routine paperwork. Or vehicle batteries short-circuiting in Ro-Ro decks .

In shipping, small oversights multiply at sea.

I have always believed this:
Fire prevention is not a dramatic act.
It is a culture of small disciplines.

Removing fuses before loading.
Checking fuel tank heating limits.
Ensuring proper ventilation isolation.
Confirming packaging and separation compliance.

These are not heroic actions.
But they prevent heroic emergencies.

Professional pride in shipping is not only about smooth voyages.
It is about the incidents that never happened because someone was careful.

#ShipboardSafety #FireRisk #MaritimeCulture #ProfessionalDiscipline #SeafarersLife

 

Final Reflection from ShipOpsInsights

Fire onboard is not just a technical subject.
It is a leadership subject.

It tests preparation.
It tests documentation discipline.
It tests courage under pressure.

Most cargo fires do not begin with flames.
They begin with assumptions.

If you are sailing today, ask yourself quietly:

Do I truly understand the cargo in my holds?
Or am I only trusting the manifest?

If this reflection resonated with you:

👍 Like this post
💬 Share your experience or lessons learned
🔁 Forward this to a fellow seafarer or operator
Follow ShipOpsInsights with Dattaram for grounded maritime wisdom

Let us build a shipping culture where prevention is stronger than reaction. 🚢

 

🚢 When the Sea Turns Uncertain: Leadership in a Conflict Zone Is Tested in Silence

 

🚢 When the Sea Turns Uncertain: Leadership in a Conflict Zone Is Tested in Silence

There are voyages where the weather is predictable, cargo is routine, and port calls follow a familiar rhythm.

And then there are voyages where a single geopolitical event changes everything.

An airstrike. A sudden escalation. A notification from the office.
The sea is the same — but the atmosphere onboard is not.

When tensions rise near conflict zones like the Gulf of Oman, every decision becomes heavier. Every instruction carries consequence. And leadership — both onboard and ashore — is quietly tested.

This is not about fear.
This is about composure under pressure.

Let us reflect on what truly matters in such moments.

 

1️⃣ When Strategy Changes Mid-Voyage: The Discipline to Pause

Suspending a voyage is never a small decision.

Fuel planning is disturbed. Charterers are waiting. Schedules are tight. Commercial pressure builds. Yet when security risk escalates, prudence must override momentum.

Navigating 50–60 nautical miles away from potential conflict areas is not retreat — it is responsible seamanship. Maintaining distance from high-risk zones and strictly avoiding restricted EEZ boundaries is strategic risk management.

In moments like this, a Master’s bridge becomes a command center of calm thinking. The crew observes. They sense the seriousness. They also sense the confidence.

The strongest leaders know this:
Pausing is sometimes the most powerful action.

#MaritimeLeadership #RiskManagement #Seamanship #ShipSafety #ConflictZoneAwareness

 

2️⃣ BMP5 & SSP: Procedures Are Your Silent Bodyguards

When tensions escalate, procedures stop being paperwork — they become protection.

Strict compliance with BMP5 and the approved Ship Security Plan is not optional. It is discipline.

Increasing bridge manning. Maintaining full engine room readiness. Keeping main engine and machinery in standby condition. These are not symbolic acts — they are layered safety buffers.

A fully alert bridge team, continuous radar watch, vigilant traffic monitoring — this is what transforms a vessel from vulnerable to prepared. 🚢

Experienced officers understand this deeply:
Security is not about reacting late. It is about being prepared early.

Checklists done properly. Watches conducted seriously. No complacency.

In shipping, professionalism shows most clearly when risk increases.

#ShipSecurity #BMP5Compliance #MaritimeSafety #BridgeTeamManagement #OperationalExcellence

 

3️⃣ Preparedness Is Confidence in Action

Trying out the emergency generator. Testing fire pumps. Ensuring emergency systems are operational.

Securing accommodation openings. Locking skylights from inside. Suspending deck work. Maintaining VHF listening watch.

These actions are not driven by fear — they are driven by foresight.

A vessel in drifting position with machinery ready to move immediately reflects operational maturity. Engine room manned. Bridge fully staffed. Emergency equipment tested.

Preparedness reduces uncertainty.

And when the crew sees systems checked and leadership proactive, anxiety reduces automatically. 🧭

Because uncertainty is easier to manage when readiness is visible.

#EmergencyPreparedness #MaritimeOperations #SafetyCulture #EngineRoomReadiness #ShipboardDiscipline

 

4️⃣ The Most Important Instruction: Do Not Panic

Among all operational orders, one instruction carries emotional intelligence:

Do not panic. Avoid panic-like situations onboard.

In conflict-sensitive waters, rumors travel faster than ships. News spreads through phones. Speculation rises.

Here is where true command presence matters.

The Master sets the tone.
Senior officers stabilize conversations.
Clear communication reduces assumptions.

Calm instructions. Transparent updates. Professional demeanor.

A composed bridge creates a composed vessel.

The sea may be unpredictable.
But leadership must remain steady.

#MaritimeMindset #CommandPresence #LeadershipAtSea #CrewWelfare #CalmUnderPressure

 

🌍 Final Reflection

Shipping professionals operate in an environment where geopolitics, safety, commerce, and human lives intersect daily.

Moments like these remind us:

Leadership is not loud.
It is steady.
It is disciplined.
It is calm under pressure.

To every Master, officer, and crew navigating uncertain waters — your professionalism matters more than ever.

If this reflection resonated with you:

👍 Like this post
💬 Share your experience of handling high-risk waters
🔁 Forward it to fellow seafarers and operations colleagues
Follow ShipOpsInsights with Dattaram for grounded maritime leadership insights

Because in shipping, we learn not only from textbooks —
We learn from each other.
⚓🚢

 

Friday, February 27, 2026

⚓ “In Shipping, Easy Choices Create Average Officers — Hard Choices Create Legends.”

 

“In Shipping, Easy Choices Create Average Officers — Hard Choices Create Legends.”

There are nights at sea when the bridge is silent, radar humming softly, and responsibility feels heavier than the ocean itself.

You stand there — Master, Chief Mate, 2/O, Engineer — knowing that one wrong decision can cost cargo, reputation, even lives.

Shipping has never been about comfort.
It has always been about character.

Recently, I reflected on powerful lessons from Do Hard Things — and I realized something deeply relevant for our maritime world:

Easy voyages create routine officers.
Difficult voyages create dependable leaders.

Let me share 5 lessons — not from theory — but from shipping life itself.

 

1️⃣ Pressure at Sea Builds Character — Not Just Experience

At sea, pressure is not optional.

Port State Control inspections.
Weather routing decisions.
Engine alarms at 0200 hours.
Crew fatigue during tight port rotation.

In those moments, comfort disappears — and character shows up.

Hard things onboard do not just improve your CV. They shape who you are under pressure.

The junior officer who volunteers for extra navigation planning.
The engineer who stays longer to fully understand a machinery fault.
The Master who takes responsibility instead of shifting blame.

That is where discipline is forged.

Psychology tells us confidence grows through completed challenges — not motivational talks. At sea, that is lived reality.

When you handle one difficult situation well, the next one feels manageable.

#ShippingLeadership #SeafarerLife #MaritimeMindset #BridgeToBoardroom

 

2️⃣ Reputation in Shipping Is Built in Difficult Moments

In our industry, reputation travels faster than vessels.

Charterers remember performance.
Managers remember reliability.
Crew remember leadership during crisis.

Confidence is not loud talk. It is visible discipline.

When you finish cargo calculations accurately despite fatigue.
When you respond calmly to a cargo claim.
When you submit reports on time — consistently.

Studies show most career success depends on attitude and discipline, not just intelligence. In shipping, that is obvious.

Many technically strong officers fade because they avoid hard responsibility.
Others rise because they embrace it.

Shipping respects consistency.

#OperationalExcellence #ShippingCareers #MaritimeReputation #ProfessionalGrowth

 

3️⃣ Small Daily Discipline Onboard Creates Big Career Breakthroughs

Hard things are not always dramatic emergencies.

Sometimes they are small daily decisions.

Putting the phone away during watch.
Double-checking passage plan one more time.
Studying COLREGS again even after years of sailing.
Maintaining fitness onboard instead of excuses.

Small habits compound.

The officer who studies 30 minutes daily will outgrow the one who crams before exams.

The crew member who respects routines builds silent credibility.

Shipping rewards long-term discipline. Not shortcuts.

Ordinary routine gives ordinary career. Slight extra effort builds extraordinary growth.

#Seamanship #DailyDiscipline #MaritimeExcellence #CareerAtSea

 

4️⃣ Failure at Sea Teaches More Than Smooth Voyages

Every experienced seafarer has a story.

A near-miss.
A wrong calculation.
A cargo discrepancy.
A machinery oversight.

The difference between average and exceptional professionals is not absence of mistakes — it is response to them.

You fall.
You learn.
You correct systems.
You become sharper.

Growth mindset research confirms what seasoned captains already know: treating failure as feedback builds long-term excellence.

The safest officers are not those who never failed — but those who learned deeply from it.

#MaritimeSafety #LearningCulture #ShippingLessons #LeadershipAtSea

 

5️⃣ Early Career Discipline Defines Long-Term Maritime Success

There is a dangerous mindset among young professionals:

“I will enjoy now. Seriousness can wait.”

Shipping does not reward delayed discipline.

The habits you build as a cadet shape you as Chief Mate.
The responsibility you show as 3/O defines you as Master.

Brain science tells us habits formed before 25 wire deeply into behavior patterns. In maritime careers, this is visible every day.

The most dependable Masters I’ve met were disciplined as cadets.

Foundation years decide command years.

#CadetLife #FutureMasters #ShippingMentorship #MaritimeCareers

 

🌅 A Simple Maritime Morning Discipline

Before watch or office duty:

🧭 5 minutes silent reflection
📖 10 pages of professional reading
📋 Write top 3 operational priorities
Complete the toughest task first
🏃 Move your body — even 20 minutes

Confidence follows execution.

 

🚩 Final Reflection from the Bridge

Most professionals drift into routine.

Very few deliberately choose the harder path.

In shipping:

Easy choice = crowd.
Hard choice = character.
Character = trust.
Trust = leadership.
Leadership = legacy.

If this resonates with you:

👍 Like this post
💬 Share your toughest lesson at sea
🔁 Forward it to a fellow seafarer
Follow ShipOpsInsights with Dattaram for grounded, practical maritime growth

Let’s grow — not just as shipping professionals — but as leaders the industry can rely on.

 

⚓ The Real Crisis at Sea: Why Shipping Professionals Must Do the Hard Things

 

The Real Crisis at Sea: Why Shipping Professionals Must Do the Hard Things

There’s a quiet moment on the bridge at 0400 hrs.

Autopilot steady. Radar humming. Sea calm. 🌊
But inside, many officers are drifting.

Not because they lack opportunity.
Not because the industry has no scope.

But because comfort slowly replaces capacity.

This is not about unemployment.
This is about underutilized potential in the maritime profession.

If you are a Master, Chief Engineer, Operator, or young cadet — this is about you.

Let’s talk honestly.

 

1️⃣ The 50% Capacity Trap at Sea

Onboard, I have seen two types of officers.

One finishes watch and scrolls for hours.
The other finishes watch and opens a stability book, charter party clause, or leadership podcast.

Both are tired.
Both work hard.

But only one is growing.

Today, the average professional spends 2–4 hours daily on social media. That’s nearly 60 days per year. Imagine converting even half of that into upgrading your knowledge of cargo operations, vetting requirements, or chartering basics. 📊

Shipping is unforgiving. Promotions don’t come from years alone — they come from preparedness.

Easy comfort creates slow decline.
Hard learning creates command readiness.

Before your next contract ends, ask yourself:
Are you returning better — or just older?

#ShippingLife #MaritimeLeadership #SeafarerGrowth #BridgeToBoardroom

 

2️⃣ The Youth Myth in Shipping 🧭

Many young officers believe:
“I’ll get serious after I become Chief Mate.”
“I’ll learn chartering when I go ashore.”

This is dangerous thinking.

Shipping rewards early responsibility.

History shows leaders rise young. At sea too, the officers who become dependable leaders start building maturity early — not after stripes arrive.

Between 20–30 years, your mental adaptability is highest. This is when you should:

• Master COLREG interpretation
• Understand laytime calculations
• Learn basic commercial shipping
• Build communication confidence

Waiting is comfort disguised as planning.

Rank does not create leadership.
Responsibility does.

When a port delay happens at 0200 hrs — your mindset shows.

#FutureCaptain #YoungSeafarers #MaritimeMindset #ShippingCareers

 

3️⃣ Comfort Zone vs Growth Zone in Maritime Careers 🚢

Comfort onboard is subtle.

“Cargo completed safely. Good enough.”
“No major PSC remarks. Fine.”
“Vessel trading okay. Why push more?”

But growth lives in voluntary discomfort.

• Leading toolbox meetings confidently
• Handling tough crew conversations
• Learning bunker claims documentation
• Preparing for command interviews months early

Harvard research confirms deliberate, repetitive practice builds mastery — not talent alone.

In shipping, boring repetition builds legends.

Checklist reviews.
ISM familiarity.
Emergency drills taken seriously.

Glamour fades. Systems stay.

#OperationalExcellence #ShipManagement #MaritimeDiscipline #Seamanship

 

4️⃣ Five Hard Things Every Shipping Professional Must Do 📊

Let me make it practical.

1. Do what feels beyond your rank
Study charter parties even if you’re onboard.

2. Do what feels boring
Revisit stability calculations repeatedly.

3. Do what only you can do
Protect your health. Maintain integrity.

4. Do what is uncomfortable
Correct unsafe practices — even if unpopular.

5. Commit long-term
Decide your 10-year maritime direction.

These are not dramatic actions.

They are quiet decisions repeated.

Hard things build maritime identity.

#ShippingCareer #MaritimeGrowth #LeadershipAtSea #ProfessionalDevelopment

 

5️⃣ Discipline Over Motivation in Shipping

Motivation is high before joining ship.

Discipline matters in month four.

Research shows habit formation averages 66 days.
At sea, discipline separates reliable officers from average ones.

Create non-negotiables:

🌅 Morning: 20 mins reading (ISM, cargo ops, leadership)
🎯 Watch hours: 100% situational awareness
🌙 Night: Review 1 operational learning

Shipping is not a sprint contract.
It is a 25-year voyage.

Systems sustain careers. Motivation does not.

#MaritimeHabits #SeafarerLife #BridgeRoutine #ProfessionalStandards

 

6️⃣ Hard Choices Build Maritime Strength 🛠

Avoiding tough conversations weakens authority.

Addressing poor performance strengthens command presence.

Psychology calls it exposure response — repeated exposure reduces fear.

At sea:

Speak in meetings.
Take ownership of mistakes.
Say no to shortcuts in documentation.

Confidence is built by confronting discomfort — not avoiding it.

#CommandPresence #ShipLeadership #MaritimeConfidence #BridgeAuthority

 

7️⃣ Character Over Comfort — The Maritime Legacy 🌊

Comfort gives rest.
Character gives reputation.

In shipping, reputation travels faster than vessels.

Port agents remember professionalism.
Charterers remember reliability.
Crew remember fairness.

Shortcuts may pass one inspection.
Character sustains a career.

Mediocre professionals seek ease.
Maritime leaders choose responsibility.

Comfort keeps you small.
Character builds destiny.

#MaritimeValues #ShippingEthics #SeafarerIntegrity #LegacyAtSea

 

📌 Final Reflection from ShipOpsInsights with Dattaram

Your real competition is not another officer.
Not another operator.
Not another fleet.

It is your comfortable version.

Choose responsibility.
Reject shortcuts.
Build systems.
Do the hard things.

And watch your maritime journey transform — from contract-based survival to legacy-based leadership.

 

If this resonated with your shipping life:

👍 Like this post
💬 Share your experience — what hard thing are you choosing this year?
🔁 Share with your fellow seafarers
Follow ShipOpsInsights with Dattaram for grounded maritime wisdom

We grow stronger — together.

 

🚢 When Heavy Weather Is Not the Real Enemy: The Silent Risk of Wet Damage on Bulk Carriers

  🚢 When Heavy Weather Is Not the Real Enemy: The Silent Risk of Wet Damage on Bulk Carriers At sea, we often blame the storm. The Be...