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Thread: Going Out in a Blaze of Glory (My Final Voyage)

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    Going Out in a Blaze of Glory (My Final Voyage)

    The only reason that I returned to shipping about 6 years ago was because despite a 15 year absence, I still had all the necessary endorsements and certifications to sail as a Chief Steward, which is a department head position that typically paid close to 20K a month with the majority of the contracts offered

    a Chief Steward is essentially a maritime version of a hotel manager. My responsibilities included creating a daily menu (breakfast/lunch & dinner), maintaining a supply of beef, poultry, pork, chicken and fish…dairy products, fresh fruits and vegetables, and various perishables and canned goods.

    In addition, I supervised a small crew of two cooks and a steward assistant which involved maintaining my own high standards of hot and fresh meals, delegating overtime, and dealing with foreign ship ‘chandlers’ abroad when supplies ran low on extended overseas voyages

    Its worth noting that the vast majority of those working in the steward department within the union membership are almost exclusively African Americans from the south, or northeast. Keep in mind I identify as a suburban white male from the California suburbs…so if anyone ever cares to discuss what ‘racism’ really means…well, do the math.

    So I flew to Charleston, South Carolina to join what is known as a ‘RoRo’ (roll on roll off) car carrier for ARC/Tote Marine Services. The ship had been subcontracted by DoD to transport desert camo humvees and an assortment of munitions sailing past Gibraltar, up through the Suez Canal and finally through the narrow Strait of Hormuz which is an extremely narrow (but necessary) transit route for oil tankers which is only a few short miles off the Iranian coast.


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    I joined this ship not long after the Iranians seized a British oil tanker, so needless to say tensions were running high, and in addition to the standard crew of merchant mariners, we were escorting 5 ranking naval intelligence officers and scheduled to pick up these private armed escorts working with a company called ‘Trident Maritime Security’. These guys were basically ex-Greek special forces and two retired U.S. Navy Seals who were tasked with patrolling the ship 24/7 to ensure the Iranians didn’t fuck with us

    Ok that should set the table nicely, lets move on…

    So in addition to the standard crew of 35, now I’m responsible for feeding another 11 subcontractors, and ‘riders’ with no additional compensation.

    When I picked up the ship in Charleston, we were already short a Chief Cook, so it was just myself, a brand new fresh out of school cook on his first trip ever shipping, and my steward assistant Marcel.

    So literally 2 hours before our ship sailed towards Gibraltar 11 days away, my one cook freaked out and quit. At the time I wasn’t too upset because our union would pay what is known as ‘missing man’ wages. Which meant Marcel and I would be equally dividing the base wages of the two missing cooks.

    Except for one small glitch…

    ARC Tote Marine was the ONLY contract our union didn’t provide missing man wages for. So basically not only would I be preparing 3 meals a day by myself for almost 50 grown men, I was still ultimately responsible for my own duties as Chief Steward.

    The day after we sailed, I was on the phone with my port agent in Oakland saying in a matter of words, ‘yo what the hell…are you at the very least going to kick Marcel and I a ton of extra OT ?’…only to get dismissed like I was some peasant lucky to have the job in the first place and to suck it up and represent my union pride

    Best case scenario I’d be pulling a triple workload without making a dime more, but (sigh) whatever its only 11 days to get my replacement cooks in Gibraltar, so I’ll be a team player and just deal with it like a good little boy.

    Except for one small problem…neither job got picked up at the Oakland union hall, and after we left Gibraltar we only had one more stop in Malta before traversing the Strait of Hormuz, and then it was 45 days straight stuck in the cesspool known as the middle east without any chance of filling the two cook jobs

    Before I prepare part 2 of this tale, lets just say I was not pleased


    TO BE CONTINUED….

     
    Comments
      
      Sanlmar: tyde stories
      
      donkdowndonedied: Waiting for part 2 obv
      
      Starbucks Spunk Bucket: This is a bummer, man
      
      NaturalBornHustler: GOD
      
      Pablo: Gather round
      
      NickyPipes: Looking forward to more

  2. #2
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    so unaware

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    Quote Originally Posted by limitles View Post
    so unaware

    God I can’t fucking wait until Trump gets reelected and nukes Canada

     
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      dwai:

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    Quote Originally Posted by Tyde View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by limitles View Post
    so unaware

    God I can’t fucking wait until Trump gets reelected and nukes Canada

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    Hurricane Expert tgull's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Tyde View Post
    The only reason that I returned to shipping about 6 years ago was because despite a 15 year absence, I still had all the necessary endorsements and certifications to sail as a Chief Steward, which is a department head position that typically paid close to 20K a month with the majority of the contracts offered

    a Chief Steward is essentially a maritime version of a hotel manager. My responsibilities included creating a daily menu (breakfast/lunch & dinner), maintaining a supply of beef, poultry, pork, chicken and fish…dairy products, fresh fruits and vegetables, and various perishables and canned goods.

    In addition, I supervised a small crew of two cooks and a steward assistant which involved maintaining my own high standards of hot and fresh meals, delegating overtime, and dealing with foreign ship ‘chandlers’ abroad when supplies ran low on extended overseas voyages

    Its worth noting that the vast majority of those working in the steward department within the union membership are almost exclusively African Americans from the south, or northeast. Keep in mind I identify as a suburban white male from the California suburbs…so if anyone ever cares to discuss what ‘racism’ really means…well, do the math.

    So I flew to Charleston, South Carolina to join what is known as a ‘RoRo’ (roll on roll off) car carrier for ARC/Tote Marine Services. The ship had been subcontracted by DoD to transport desert camo humvees and an assortment of munitions sailing past Gibraltar, up through the Suez Canal and finally through the narrow Strait of Hormuz which is an extremely narrow (but necessary) transit route for oil tankers which is only a few short miles off the Iranian coast.


    Name:  CC1F4C2A-15A9-447A-9340-F17DEE9D73B2.jpeg
Views: 407
Size:  16.7 KB


    I joined this ship not long after the Iranians seized a British oil tanker, so needless to say tensions were running high, and in addition to the standard crew of merchant mariners, we were escorting 5 ranking naval intelligence officers and scheduled to pick up these private armed escorts working with a company called ‘Trident Maritime Security’. These guys were basically ex-Greek special forces and two retired U.S. Navy Seals who were tasked with patrolling the ship 24/7 to ensure the Iranians didn’t fuck with us

    Ok that should set the table nicely, lets move on…

    So in addition to the standard crew of 35, now I’m responsible for feeding another 11 subcontractors, and ‘riders’ with no additional compensation.

    When I picked up the ship in Charleston, we were already short a Chief Cook, so it was just myself, a brand new fresh out of school cook on his first trip ever shipping, and my steward assistant Marcel.

    So literally 2 hours before our ship sailed towards Gibraltar 11 days away, my one cook freaked out and quit. At the time I wasn’t too upset because our union would pay what is known as ‘missing man’ wages. Which meant Marcel and I would be equally dividing the base wages of the two missing cooks.

    Except for one small glitch…

    ARC Tote Marine was the ONLY contract our union didn’t provide missing man wages for. So basically not only would I be preparing 3 meals a day by myself for almost 50 grown men, I was still ultimately responsible for my own duties as Chief Steward.

    The day after we sailed, I was on the phone with my port agent in Oakland saying in a matter of words, ‘yo what the hell…are you at the very least going to kick Marcel and I a ton of extra OT ?’…only to get dismissed like I was some peasant lucky to have the job in the first place and to suck it up and represent my union pride

    Best case scenario I’d be pulling a triple workload without making a dime more, but (sigh) whatever its only 11 days to get my replacement cooks in Gibraltar, so I’ll be a team player and just deal with it like a good little boy.

    Except for one small problem…neither job got picked up at the Oakland union hall, and after we left Gibraltar we only had one more stop in Malta before traversing the Strait of Hormuz, and then it was 45 days straight stuck in the cesspool known as the middle east without any chance of filling the two cook jobs

    Before I prepare part 2 of this tale, lets just say I was not pleased


    TO BE CONTINUED….
    Man nobody wants to hear about you making grilled cheese sandwiches for a bunch of horny sailors. Ok? What we want hear about is that epic story Hut alluded to where you were arrested overseas from the boat for being severely intoxicated and your Union had to fly you home. That story, got it? Cancel the one about bologna and cheese loafs and Sunday brunch pancakes with Tyde.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Tyde View Post
    First off, DID NOT READ obv

    secondly, why even bother because even without reading a single word of that massive wall of gobbledegook, there is literally a 100% chance of everything you just wrote being completely made up bullshit




     
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      tyde: well played sir

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    Quote Originally Posted by tgull View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by Tyde View Post
    The only reason that I returned to shipping about 6 years ago was because despite a 15 year absence, I still had all the necessary endorsements and certifications to sail as a Chief Steward, which is a department head position that typically paid close to 20K a month with the majority of the contracts offered

    a Chief Steward is essentially a maritime version of a hotel manager. My responsibilities included creating a daily menu (breakfast/lunch & dinner), maintaining a supply of beef, poultry, pork, chicken and fish…dairy products, fresh fruits and vegetables, and various perishables and canned goods.

    In addition, I supervised a small crew of two cooks and a steward assistant which involved maintaining my own high standards of hot and fresh meals, delegating overtime, and dealing with foreign ship ‘chandlers’ abroad when supplies ran low on extended overseas voyages

    Its worth noting that the vast majority of those working in the steward department within the union membership are almost exclusively African Americans from the south, or northeast. Keep in mind I identify as a suburban white male from the California suburbs…so if anyone ever cares to discuss what ‘racism’ really means…well, do the math.

    So I flew to Charleston, South Carolina to join what is known as a ‘RoRo’ (roll on roll off) car carrier for ARC/Tote Marine Services. The ship had been subcontracted by DoD to transport desert camo humvees and an assortment of munitions sailing past Gibraltar, up through the Suez Canal and finally through the narrow Strait of Hormuz which is an extremely narrow (but necessary) transit route for oil tankers which is only a few short miles off the Iranian coast.


    Name:  CC1F4C2A-15A9-447A-9340-F17DEE9D73B2.jpeg
Views: 407
Size:  16.7 KB


    I joined this ship not long after the Iranians seized a British oil tanker, so needless to say tensions were running high, and in addition to the standard crew of merchant mariners, we were escorting 5 ranking naval intelligence officers and scheduled to pick up these private armed escorts working with a company called ‘Trident Maritime Security’. These guys were basically ex-Greek special forces and two retired U.S. Navy Seals who were tasked with patrolling the ship 24/7 to ensure the Iranians didn’t fuck with us

    Ok that should set the table nicely, lets move on…

    So in addition to the standard crew of 35, now I’m responsible for feeding another 11 subcontractors, and ‘riders’ with no additional compensation.

    When I picked up the ship in Charleston, we were already short a Chief Cook, so it was just myself, a brand new fresh out of school cook on his first trip ever shipping, and my steward assistant Marcel.

    So literally 2 hours before our ship sailed towards Gibraltar 11 days away, my one cook freaked out and quit. At the time I wasn’t too upset because our union would pay what is known as ‘missing man’ wages. Which meant Marcel and I would be equally dividing the base wages of the two missing cooks.

    Except for one small glitch…

    ARC Tote Marine was the ONLY contract our union didn’t provide missing man wages for. So basically not only would I be preparing 3 meals a day by myself for almost 50 grown men, I was still ultimately responsible for my own duties as Chief Steward.

    The day after we sailed, I was on the phone with my port agent in Oakland saying in a matter of words, ‘yo what the hell…are you at the very least going to kick Marcel and I a ton of extra OT ?’…only to get dismissed like I was some peasant lucky to have the job in the first place and to suck it up and represent my union pride

    Best case scenario I’d be pulling a triple workload without making a dime more, but (sigh) whatever its only 11 days to get my replacement cooks in Gibraltar, so I’ll be a team player and just deal with it like a good little boy.

    Except for one small problem…neither job got picked up at the Oakland union hall, and after we left Gibraltar we only had one more stop in Malta before traversing the Strait of Hormuz, and then it was 45 days straight stuck in the cesspool known as the middle east without any chance of filling the two cook jobs

    Before I prepare part 2 of this tale, lets just say I was not pleased


    TO BE CONTINUED….
    Man nobody wants to hear about you making grilled cheese sandwiches for a bunch of horny sailors. Ok? What we want hear about is that epic story Hut alluded to where you were arrested overseas from the boat for being severely intoxicated and your Union had to fly you home. That story, got it? Cancel the one about bologna and cheese loafs and Sunday brunch pancakes with Tyde.

    Bottomset my condolences for living what appears to have been an average, mundane, cookie cutter life with no particular purpose or meaning

    Its not too late to turn things around

    hang in there pal

  8. #8
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    I tried to say what cgull is saying.
    The stories worth the read date back to
    Jewdonk days. Crazy, wild etc.

    Printing essays about your everyday life does not
    make the grade.

    It’s embarrassing. A few morons may encourage you
    but it is borderline pathetic

    You don’t seem knowledgeable about anything else
    but still

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    Quote Originally Posted by limitles View Post
    I tried to say what cgull is saying.
    The stories worth the read date back to
    Jewdonk days. Crazy, wild etc.

    Printing essays about your everyday life does not
    make the grade.

    It’s embarrassing. A few morons may encourage you
    but it is borderline pathetic

    You don’t seem knowledgeable about anything else
    but still
    Tyde is not your monkey.

    You post constant inane shit that no one wants to read. Then you post this? Stop being a clown and let Marty post what he wants. If you weren't 10x the offender then maybe your words would have a hint of gravity.

    I've met and seen 1000s of truckers in my life. I have never knowingly met a mariner. fuck off.

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    Hurricane Expert tgull's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by donkdowndonedied View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by limitles View Post
    I tried to say what cgull is saying.
    The stories worth the read date back to
    Jewdonk days. Crazy, wild etc.

    Printing essays about your everyday life does not
    make the grade.

    It’s embarrassing. A few morons may encourage you
    but it is borderline pathetic

    You don’t seem knowledgeable about anything else
    but still
    Tyde is not your monkey.

    You post constant inane shit that no one wants to read. Then you post this? Stop being a clown and let Marty post what he wants. If you weren't 10x the offender then maybe your words would have a hint of gravity.

    I've met and seen 1000s of truckers in my life. I have never knowingly met a mariner. fuck off.
    LOL, I have met two truckers in my life, one tried to pick me up at a 7-11. I mean give me a break hoser. You literally are the worst. Were all glad you stopped your crippling opium addiction but kindly fuck off and stop being Tyde's penis protector every thread. It's annoying.

     
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      donkdowndonedied: Do you not know what "seen" means, boy? You think you've only seen 2 truckers your whole life? Okey dokey.

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    Brother I found your post very interesting and look forward to more stories.

    Brother I once applied to work on cruise ships when I got back from Asia. Some broad sent me an ebook explaining how to get hired at the major cruise liners. I followed that and applied to every major company I could find and got rejected or didn’t hear back from all of them!

    Brother it’s surprising to see so much negativity about unique, quality content

    Brothers some people only obtain joy from misery.

    Do you understand?

  12. #12
    Plutonium sonatine's Avatar
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    tyde please msg me part 2 of this and ill post it here if druff does not object.

     
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      1marley1:
    "Birds born in a cage think flying is an illness." - Alejandro Jodorowsky

    "America is not so much a nightmare as a non-dream. The American non-dream is precisely a move to wipe the dream out of existence. The dream is a spontaneous happening and therefore dangerous to a control system set up by the non-dreamers." -- William S. Burroughs

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