Wednesday, February 25, 2026

🚢 When the Sea Tests You: The Fire of Purpose Every Shipping Professional Must Carry 🔥⚓

 

🚢 When the Sea Tests You: The Fire of Purpose Every Shipping Professional Must Carry 🔥⚓

There are two important days in a seafarer’s life.

The day you step nboard for the first time…
And the day you understand why you chose this life.

Because shipping is not just a career.
It is long watches, port pressures, audit stress, commercial heat, family sacrifices, and silent resilience.
🌊

This is not about motivation.
It is about mission.

Motivation fades after a rough voyage.
But purpose?
Purpose keeps you steady when the sea, the market, and even people test you.

Let’s talk about that fire.

 

1️⃣ Your “Why” at Sea – What Truly Drives You?

Every Master, Chief Engineer, Operator, or Chartering Executive eventually faces a moment of fatigue.

A delayed port clearance.
A charter party dispute.
A PSC inspection at 0300 hrs.
A difficult crew situation.

In those moments, your salary will not wake you up. Your designation will not push you. Your ego will not sustain you.

Only your WHY will.

Some join shipping for money. Some for prestige. Some to prove something. But those reasons weaken under pressure.

The professionals who last 20–30 years in this industry have something deeper:
They see their role as responsibility. Contribution. Leadership. Legacy.

When your purpose is bigger than your position, pressure becomes training — not punishment.

Ask yourself:
Are you sailing for income… or impact?

#ShippingLife #SeafarerMindset #MaritimeLeadership #PurposeDriven #ShipOpsInsights

 

2️⃣ When Things Break – Turning Pressure into Power 🚢

In shipping, something is always breaking.

A pump fails mid-voyage.
Weather drops your speed below CP warranty.
Freight markets crash.
Crew morale dips after long contracts.

It’s easy to feel personally attacked by circumstances.

But seasoned professionals understand something critical:
Breakdowns refine capability.

A tough dry dock sharpens technical control.
A claim situation improves documentation discipline.
A commercial loss builds negotiation maturity.

Neuroscience tells us that struggle strengthens resilience pathways in the brain. In simple words — pressure builds strength.

Young officers often think, “Why is this happening to me?”
Experienced Masters ask, “What is this teaching me?”

That shift changes careers.

In shipping, calm seas do not create competent leaders.
Storms do.

#Seamanship #MaritimeResilience #ShipManagement #GrowthAtSea #ShippingWisdom

 

3️⃣ Busy or Building? The Mission Question 🧭

Many shipping professionals are extremely busy.

Emails. Laytime calculations. Bunker planning. Crew changes. Vetting prep. Commercial negotiations.

But being busy is not the same as building.

Five years can pass in constant movement — and yet no real strategic growth happens.

Have you defined:

  • What kind of leader you want to become?
  • What reputation you want in the industry?
  • What legacy you want attached to your name?

A Chief Officer may aim to become a Master.
But beyond rank — what kind of Master?

Strict but respected?
Calm and decisive?
Commercially aware and technically strong?

Clarity defines direction. Direction defines progress.

Without a clear mission, you drift — even on a straight course.

 

 

4️⃣ Beyond Salary – Contribution in Shipping

Shipping can become transactional.

Freight rates. Daily hire. Demurrage. Overtime. Claims.

But professionals who find long-term energy in this industry operate differently.

They see their work as enabling global trade.
They move energy, food, steel, coal — the backbone of economies.

A well-managed vessel means safe cargo delivery.
A disciplined crew means safe return home.
A strong operator means stable employment for many families.

When your work becomes contribution, fatigue reduces.

The question shifts from:
“What am I getting from this contract?”
To
“What value am I creating through this voyage?”

That shift changes mindset — and performance.

#GlobalTrade #MaritimeContribution #PurposeAtSea #ShippingLeadership #ProfessionalGrowth

 

5️⃣ Fear, Discipline & Environment – The Silent Influencers 📊

Every shipping professional carries fear.

Fear of PSC detention.
Fear of cargo claim.
Fear of commercial loss.
Fear of reputation damage.

Without purpose, fear creates hesitation.
With purpose, fear creates preparation.

Discipline is what keeps standards high even when no one is watching.

Logbooks maintained properly.
Emails drafted carefully.
Checklists followed thoroughly.
Crew briefings done sincerely.

Environment matters too.

If you surround yourself with professionals who complain, you will shrink.
If you align with disciplined, growth-focused leaders, you will rise.

Shipping rewards consistency — not noise.

#MaritimeDiscipline #ShippingStandards #BridgeLeadership #ProfessionalIntegrity #ShipOpsInsights

 

6️⃣ The Question Every Shipping Professional Must Ask 🧭

If I continue working the way I am today…
Will I be proud of my career five years from now?

Am I just surviving contracts…
Or building mastery?

Is my work aligned with something meaningful — or just monthly income?

When your purpose is clear:

  • Pressure becomes preparation
  • Delays become discipline
  • Claims become lessons
  • Fatigue becomes temporary

Shipping will always test you.

But purpose will always steady you.

 

🌊 Final Thought from ShipOpsInsights

We are not in shipping just to complete voyages.

We are here to build competence. Character. Credibility.

Rebuild yourself — not from ego.
Rebuild from mission.

Because when your purpose is strong:

Effort becomes consistent
🚢 Energy becomes sustainable
📊 Success becomes meaningful

If this resonated with you:

👍 Like this post
💬 Share your “why” in the comments
🔁 Forward this to a fellow seafarer or shipping colleague
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Let’s grow — together. 🌍⚓

 

🚢 When Saving Time Costs Millions: The Hidden Risks of Simultaneous Multi-Grade Discharge

 

🚢 When Saving Time Costs Millions: The Hidden Risks of Simultaneous Multi-Grade Discharge

It usually starts with a simple sentence:

“Can we discharge both grades simultaneously? It will save time.”

You are alongside. Stevedores are ready. Charterers are pushing. Receivers are waiting. Laytime is ticking.

On paper, it sounds efficient.
In reality, it can quietly become one of the most expensive decisions of the voyage.

This is not a theoretical risk.
This is operational reality — the kind that only reveals itself when the hatches are empty and the claims letters start arriving.

Let’s talk about it calmly.

 

1️ When Commercial Convenience Overrides Operational Discipline

Simultaneous discharge of multiple grades — to different receivers, sometimes across different ports — is often presented as a commercial efficiency.

Faster turnaround.
Lower port costs.
Reduced congestion exposure.

But here is what really happens onboard:

  • Two grades running through different grabs or conveyors
  • Multiple tallies being maintained
  • Stevedores focusing on speed
  • Superintendents watching laytime
  • Master balancing stability and stress

Everyone is busy. Everyone is under pressure.

And in that environment, one small misallocation — even 0.5% — becomes invisible in the moment.

The problem?
You cannot see the error until the very end.

By then, it is no longer an operational issue.
It becomes a legal one.

#BulkShipping #CargoOperations #ShipManagement #MaritimeRisk #Seamanship

 

🧭 2️ The Illusion of Control: Why Intermediate Draught Surveys Fail Here

Intermediate draught surveys are powerful tools — when used properly.

If you discharge one grade at a time, you can:

  • Measure quantity removed
  • Compare against bills of lading
  • Detect discrepancies early
  • Adjust before exposure escalates

But during simultaneous discharge?

The survey only tells you total cargo out.

It does not tell you:

  • How much of Grade A left
  • How much of Grade B remains
  • Whether allocation matched bills

You think you are monitoring.
In truth, you are measuring only the combined result.

It is like checking your bank balance without knowing which account the money came from.

By the time final figures emerge, the imbalance has already solidified.

And that is when the emails begin.

#DraftSurvey #MarineOperations #CargoControl #ShipMasters #OperationalExcellence

 

🚢 3️ When Discrepancies Turn into Claims and Customs Problems

The most common pattern is predictable:

  • Shortage under one bill of lading
  • Excess under another

Receivers file claims immediately.

But in some jurisdictions, something more serious happens.

Customs intervenes.

Excess cargo may be viewed as:

  • Unauthorized import
  • Fiscal control violation
  • Regulatory breach

Even if the root cause was purely operational.

Once customs steps in:

  • Fines are imposed
  • Administrative penalties apply
  • Excess cargo may be moved to bonded warehouse
  • Storage costs accumulate — sometimes for years

And suddenly, what started as a “time-saving decision” becomes:

A multi-party dispute involving owners, charterers, receivers, customs authorities, P&I clubs, and surveyors.

That is when stress moves from the deck to the boardroom.

#MaritimeClaims #CustomsRisk #PAndI #ShippingDisputes #BulkTrade

 

📊 4️ The Financial Exposure Nobody Mentions During the Pre-Voyage Call

Let us speak plainly.

Financial exposure in these cases may include:

  • Shortage claims under B/L
  • Customs fines and penalties
  • Bonded warehouse storage for excess cargo
  • Additional stevedoring and re-handling
  • Re-weighing and segregation
  • Disposal or salvage sale of surplus

Depending on commodity value and volume, exposure can quietly reach millions.

And when disputes begin, each party starts looking backward:

“Who agreed to simultaneous discharge?”
“Was the Master comfortable?”
“Were objections recorded?”

This is why documentation and communication matter more than speed.

Because once exposure crystallizes, no one remembers the laytime saved.

They only remember the losses.

#ShippingFinance #RiskAwareness #Chartering #MaritimeLeadership #OperationalRisk

 

🛡 5️ The Quiet Strength of Saying: “Let’s Do It Properly”

Simultaneous multi-grade discharge is strongly discouraged for a reason.

Sometimes it is unavoidable.

But when commercial pressure builds, leadership is tested.

A calm Master or Operator will:

  • Raise early concerns
  • Seek written confirmation
  • Document operational risks
  • Recommend sequential discharge where possible
  • Ensure transparent communication with all parties

Because prevention is always cheaper than defense.

In shipping, discipline is not stubbornness.
It is professionalism.

And professionalism protects not just the vessel —
but the reputation of everyone involved.

#ShippingLeadership #Seamanship #MastersResponsibility #MaritimeWisdom #ShipOpsInsights

 

Final Reflection

In shipping, the most dangerous decisions are not the dramatic ones.

They are the routine ones.

The ones made in the name of efficiency.
The ones justified by time pressure.
The ones everyone assumes will “be fine.”

Until they are not.

If you have faced simultaneous discharge challenges —
or if you have successfully avoided one — your experience matters.

 

🤝 Let’s Learn Together

Have you encountered quantity discrepancies during multi-grade discharge?

How did you manage the pressure — onboard or ashore?

Share your insight in the comments.
Your experience may prevent someone else’s loss tomorrow.

If this article resonated with you:

👍 Like
💬 Comment
🔁 Share with your maritime colleagues
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Because in shipping, wisdom shared is risk reduced.

 

🚢 When Charterers Nominate a War-Sensitive Port: What Every Shipowner Must Calmly Understand

 

🚢 When Charterers Nominate a War-Sensitive Port: What Every Shipowner Must Calmly Understand

There are moments in shipping when the sea is calm…
but the email from charterers is not.

“Kindly confirm vessel can proceed to Israel.”

At first glance, it’s just another port nomination.
But behind that one line lies insurance exposure, crew safety, political risk, legal interpretation, and commercial pressure.

If you’ve ever sat in an operations chair during a geopolitical flare-up, you know this feeling.

This article is not about fear.
It is about clarity.

Let us quietly break it down.

 

1️ What a Strong Trading Clause Really Means

On paper, the clause looks long, legal, and complicated.

In reality, it says something simple:

The vessel is allowed to trade only in safe, insurable, and non-sanctioned areas.

It restricts:

  • War and warlike zones
  • Listed Joint War Committee areas
  • Sanctioned countries
  • Certain piracy exposures
  • Politically unstable regions

This is not aggression toward charterers.
It is risk management.

When Owners agree to a time charter, they are not handing over unlimited navigation rights. They are handing over commercial employment within defined safety boundaries.

And one sentence matters more than all others:

“The instructions of vessel’s war risk underwriters always to be followed.”

That sentence is your shield.

#ShippingLaw #NYPE #CharterParty #RiskManagement #ShipOps


🧭 2️ Israel Is Not Named — But That’s Not the Full Story

Many professionals ask:

“Israel is not specifically excluded. So we must go, correct?”

Not exactly.

The clause excludes:

War and warlike zones as defined by Lloyd’s of London.

That means if the Joint War Committee (JWC) classifies an area as Listed or Enhanced Risk, the port becomes conditionally tradable.

Not prohibited.

But not automatic either.

In today’s geopolitical environment — with regional missile risks, drone incidents, and wider Middle East tensions — underwriters often:

  • Require notice
  • Impose Additional Premium (AP)
  • Reserve cancellation rights
  • Demand enhanced reporting

So the question is not:
“Is Israel named?”

The real question is:
“What do our underwriters say today?”

And that answer can change quickly.

#WarRisk #MarineInsurance #ShippingReality #Lloyds #PAndI

 

🚢 3️ Can Owners Legally Refuse an Israel Nomination?

Short answer: Yes — but only under clear conditions.

Under NYPE principles, charterers must nominate a safe port.

Safe does not only mean:

  • No shallow draft
  • No unsafe berth

It also means:

  • No real risk of war damage
  • No sudden port closure
  • No credible missile threat
  • No insurance refusal

Owners may refuse if:

  1. War underwriters decline cover
  2. Additional Premium is extreme and charterers refuse to pay
  3. Sanctions exposure exists
  4. The port becomes prospectively unsafe

But Owners cannot refuse simply due to political discomfort.

Shipping is not emotional.
It is evidential.

If underwriters approve and AP is paid, refusal becomes difficult to justify.

#SafePort #OwnersRights #Chartering #BulkShipping #MaritimeLaw

 

📊 4️ Who Pays the Additional Premium?

Under standard NYPE structure:

  • Additional War Risk Premium → Charterers’ account
  • K&R cover → Charterers’ account
  • Extra security → Charterers’ account
  • War delay → Hire continues

This is commercially established practice.

But Owners must formally notify charterers:

“Trading subject to war risk underwriters’ approval and AP for charterers’ account.”

Without that written position, ambiguity creeps in.

And ambiguity is where disputes are born.

#HireContinuity #APPremium #CommercialShipping #MaritimeOperations #VoyageRisk

 

🛡 5️ The Calm Professional Approach

The wrong response:
“Owners refuse Israel.”

The right response:
“Owners request confirmation of war risk approval, AP rate, and P&I advisory.”

This is leadership.

You do not escalate.
You do not panic.
You do not argue.

You investigate.

You protect.

You document.

Then you decide.

In most cases today, vessels still call Mediterranean Israeli ports — but always:

  • With AP paid
  • With underwriter clearance
  • With security awareness
  • With master’s discretion respected

Shipping is about measured courage — not reckless compliance, and not emotional refusal.

#LeadershipAtSea #ShipManagement #MaritimeMindset #Seamanship #ShipOpsInsights

 

🚢 Final Reflection

Shipping has never been about avoiding storms.

It has always been about understanding them.

A strong trading clause is not a weapon.
It is a compass.

Use it wisely.

When charterers nominate a sensitive port:

  • Ask.
  • Verify.
  • Protect.
  • Then proceed — or decline — with documentation.

That is professional seamanship ashore.

 

🤝 Let’s Talk

Have you handled a war-sensitive nomination recently?

Did underwriters approve smoothly — or was it a long negotiation?

Share your experience in the comments.
Your story may guide another professional facing the same email tomorrow.

If this article helped clarify your thinking:

👍 Like
💬 Comment
🔁 Share with your maritime network
Follow ShipOpsInsights with Dattaram for grounded, experience-driven shipping wisdom.

We grow stronger when we think clearly — together.

 

⚓ When the Anchor Drags: The Collision That Started One Hour Too Early

 

When the Anchor Drags: The Collision That Started One Hour Too Early

At anchor, the sea looks calm.

Engines are on standby. Crew relax slightly. The pressure of navigation eases. You tell yourself: We are safe now.

But anchorage is not rest.
It is waiting under responsibility.

A recent case study by The Swedish Club (February 2026) describes how a bulk carrier dragging anchor in deteriorating weather collided with another vessel at anchor .

No injuries. No pollution.
But significant damage.

And one powerful lesson:

Dragging anchor rarely becomes an emergency suddenly.
It becomes an emergency slowly — while we convince ourselves it is manageable.

Let’s reflect together.


🧭 1️ The First Warning Is Never the Collision — It’s the Subtle Movement

In the case study, weather deteriorated from Beaufort Force 3–5 to Force 8–9 during the afternoon .

At 16:30, the OOW observed slow anchor dragging. The distance between the two vessels reduced. The Master placed the engine on 5 minutes’ notice.

No further preventive action was taken.

One hour later, the vessel accelerated to 1–2 knots dragging speed — straight toward another anchored bulk carrier.

This is how most anchorage incidents begin.

Not with panic.
Not with alarms.
But with a small drift on radar.

We have all seen it:

  • “It’s just a gust.”
  • “The anchor will hold.”
  • “Let’s monitor.”

But monitoring is not action.

At anchor, early decisiveness is seamanship.

#AnchorWatch #BridgeTeam #SituationalAwareness #Seamanship #ShipSafety

 

🌬 2️ Weather Deterioration Is Not a Surprise — It Is a Forecast

The environmental limits in the case study are clearly defined:

Outside sheltered waters:

  • Current velocity: max 1.5 m/sec
  • Wind velocity: max 11 m/sec
  • Significant wave height: max 2 m

Yet how often do we truly compare forecast values with anchoring limits?

At anchor, complacency creeps in.

The engine is stopped.
Cargo work is pending.
The crew is between operations.

But the sea does not pause because we are waiting for berth.

Proactive weather monitoring is not about checking the forecast once.
It is about asking every hour:

“If wind increases another 10 knots, what is our plan?”

Masters who survive long careers are not lucky.
They are anticipatory.

#WeatherMonitoring #MarineLeadership #AnchorageSafety #RiskManagement #MaritimeOperations

 

🚢 3️ Engine Readiness Is Not a Formality — It Is Survival Time

In the incident, emergency measures were attempted — engine preparation, heaving anchor — but delays and ill-considered manoeuvring worsened the situation .

Every minute matters when dragging accelerates.

At 1 knot dragging speed, reaction window shrinks.
At 2 knots, you are no longer controlling — you are reacting.

Ask yourself honestly:

  • How quickly can our engine truly be ready?
  • Is the engine tested periodically at anchor?
  • Does the bridge team know the real time, not the theoretical one?

“5 minutes’ notice” is not a checkbox.
It is a life-saving buffer.

If the wind is building, sometimes the safest decision is not to wait — but to heave up and leave early.

That decision requires courage.

#EngineReadiness #ShipHandling #BridgeTeamwork #MaritimeDiscipline #SafetyCulture

 

4️ The Most Dangerous Thought: “This Couldn’t Happen on Our Vessel”

The Swedish Club case invites us to reflect without judgment .

Because at the time, every action probably felt reasonable.

  • Engine on standby
  • Monitoring distance
  • Attempted emergency measures

And still — collision.

Why?

Because anchorage incidents are rarely about negligence.
They are about hesitation under deteriorating conditions.

The real question is not:

“What did they do wrong?”

It is:

“Under similar pressure, would we act faster?”

Anchoring procedures in the SMS are important.
But discipline under stress is what protects steel — and reputation.

#SafetyReflection #ShipManagement #MaritimeLessons #BridgeLeadership #ContinuousImprovement

 

Final Reflection: Anchor Is Not Security — It Is Responsibility

At sea, we respect storms.

At anchor, we sometimes underestimate them.

This case is not about failure.
It is about timing.

The collision did not begin at 17:53.

It began at 16:30 — when dragging was first noticed.

In shipping, the difference between incident and safe passage is often one decision made one hour earlier.

 

🤝 Let’s Reflect Together

  • When was the last time you reviewed anchoring limits with your team?
  • How realistic is your engine readiness time?
  • Would you leave anchorage early if forecast worsened?

If this story made you pause — that is its purpose.

👍 Like
💬 Share your anchoring experiences in the comments
🔁 Share with your bridge team and fleet colleagues
Follow ShipOpsInsights with Dattaram

Because at anchor, vigilance is not optional — it is leadership.

 

🚢 When Transshipment Becomes a Test of Leadership: Are You Truly Ready Offshore?

 

🚢 When Transshipment Becomes a Test of Leadership: Are You Truly Ready Offshore?

There are port calls that look routine on paper.
And then there are operations that quietly test your planning, your documentation, your communication… and your leadership.

Offshore transshipment at anchorage.
Shuttle vessels.
Double banking.
Multiple stakeholders.
Tight approvals.

On email, it feels procedural.

On deck, it feels very different.

Let’s talk about what really matters.

 

1️ Offshore Transshipment Is Not “Just Cargo Transfer”

When a vessel is scheduled to discharge part cargo via a shuttle vessel at anchorage using ship’s cranes and grabs, the complexity multiplies immediately.

You are no longer dealing with:

  • One berth
  • One terminal
  • One set of stevedores

You are dealing with:

  • Double banking risk
  • Weather exposure
  • Crane limitations
  • Stability management
  • Cargo sequencing
  • Port authority approvals

At anchorage, there is no margin for casual planning. The sea does not forgive assumptions.

Every shift of cargo affects trim.
Every delay affects approvals.
Every miscommunication affects safety.

And the Master stands at the center of it all.

#Transshipment
#OffshoreOperations
#ShipManagement
#Seamanship

 

2️ Documentation Is Not Paperwork — It Is Protection

When authorities request:

  • GA Plan
  • Mooring Plan
  • Final Pre-Stowage Plan
  • Risk Assessment
  • Method Statement
  • Double Banking Application
  • Weather Forecast

It may feel administrative.

But these documents are not bureaucracy.

They are your shield.

A properly prepared mooring plan prevents drift incidents.
A well-documented risk assessment protects you during investigations.
A clear method statement prevents unsafe improvisation on deck.

I have seen operations delayed not because of weather — but because documentation lacked clarity.

In shipping, paperwork is operational armor. 📊

#MaritimeCompliance
#OperationalExcellence
#PortStateMindset
#LeadershipAtSea

 

3️ Double Banking Is a Stability and Communication Exercise

Double banking is not just tying two ships together.

It is:

  • Fender positioning accuracy
  • Load distribution awareness
  • Crane outreach calculation
  • Continuous weather monitoring
  • Real-time communication between Masters

One sudden swell.
One slack mooring.
One crane misalignment.

And the entire operation becomes unsafe.

This is where experience speaks quietly.

A calm Master.
A prepared Chief Officer.
Clear toolbox meetings.
Defined communication protocol.

That is what keeps cargo moving — and people safe. 🚢

#DoubleBanking
#ShipStability
#BulkCarrierLife
#MarineOperations

 

4️ Weather Is Not a Forecast — It Is a Variable

Offshore operations depend heavily on:

  • Wind direction
  • Swell height
  • Current
  • Squall lines
  • Tidal windows

A forecast is not a guarantee.

It is a probability.

Professional operators plan for:

  • Worst-case interruption
  • Crane shutdown thresholds
  • Emergency separation
  • Contingency ballast adjustments

True seamanship is not reacting when weather worsens.

It is planning before it does. 🧭

#WeatherRouting
#SeafarerLife
#RiskManagement
#MaritimeLeadership

 

5️ Leadership Shows in Preparation — Not in Crisis

The smoothest transshipment operations I have seen had one thing in common:

Preparation before pressure.

  • Clear communication with port authority
  • Documents submitted early
  • Crew briefed thoroughly
  • Cargo plan aligned with shuttle sequence
  • Safety roles clearly assigned

When approvals finally come through, the operation should already be mentally rehearsed.

Because offshore, delays are expensive.

But incidents are far more costly.

The difference between stress and control is preparation.

And that difference is leadership.

#ShipOpsInsights
#MasterMariner
#MarineLeadership
#OperationalDiscipline

 

🌊 Final Reflection

Transshipment at anchorage is not just about moving cargo.

It is about:

  • Discipline
  • Documentation
  • Communication
  • Stability
  • Judgment

The sea tests systems.
Authorities test compliance.
Commercial teams test timelines.

But leadership — that is tested in silence.

If you are involved in offshore operations, pause today and ask yourself:

Are we reacting… or are we truly prepared?

 

🤝 Let’s Learn Together

If you’ve handled offshore transshipment or double banking operations:

  • 👍 Like this post if it resonated
  • 💬 Share one operational lesson you learned offshore
  • 🔁 Forward to a colleague who handles bulk operations
  • Follow ShipOpsInsights with Dattaram for practical maritime leadership insights

Because in shipping, experience shared is risk reduced.

 

🚢 When the Sea Tests You: The Fire of Purpose Every Shipping Professional Must Carry 🔥⚓

  🚢 When the Sea Tests You: The Fire of Purpose Every Shipping Professional Must Carry 🔥⚓ There are two important days in a seafarer’...