Showing posts with label Bore Line. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bore Line. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 04, 1990

Bore Britannica

Bore Britannica

18.05.1989 - 05.06.1989 OS
19.06.1989 - 13.07.1989 OS
18.12.1989 - 04.01.1990 OS
09.04.1990 - 20.04.1990 OS
24.05.1990 - 25.06.1990 OS
26.06.1990 - 05.07.1990 AB

After my military service I got employed back by Bore Line to Bore Britannica and I guess things were looking a bit up by now in Finnish shipping as they had bought a new vessel to the fleet albeit 2nd hand. I was also given a permanent contract this time. 

Britannica was ex APL ship that had been running over the Oceans and she had been modified a few times and had been manned by Brits. To . The covered weather deck was in such a thick rust that one could kick up sheets of it when walking to the forward mooring station. I guess because of the weather deck covering they had fitted the sponsors on the side to improve her stability.

Bore Britannica

She had as propulsion two V-engine Pielsticks made in Japan that I remember well after I helped out in the engine room doing a haul out of 2 pistons during a stopover in port. By then it became more common to have hired riding crews coming into port and overhaul any due machinery before departure so it was start to finish in one go, be it 24 or 48hrs. In todays STCW resting hours regime this would not fly anymore.

The vessel itself was pretty comfy and worked well, she was just very run down and crew was working hard to bring her up to minimum standard. Company also started saving as she was never painted the signature Bore yellow. The yellow was actually a custom color shade developed for Bore by Hempel and one could hardly see any other yellow ships on the seas as the old conventional style was black or any darkish color to hide the rust streaks.

In 1990 I resigned to join Aboa Mare school and continue my studies to become an OOW (Officer of the watch) as I thought I had gained enough experience as well as my fiancee at that time also pushed for it.

Tuesday, March 01, 1988

Work experience as rating

In 1985 I graduated from the General Rating class on 31st of May as was customary for schools in Finland. During the spring I had been running to different shipping companies looking for a job and as it was a recession period in those days it was pretty hard to get hired. Finally, I apparently managed to impress the HR Manager at Bore Line, Mr. Kari Salminen, who sent me a letter of employment a couple of weeks after I've finished school. I was by then cleaning a supermarket as I needed a job to get myself some money and experience. Those days I was so fed up on school that I was in the mind set of never setting my foot in a school ever again.

m/s Bore Sun

I can still remember the day when I was walking along the piers in Turku port towards m/s Bore Sun with my first employment letter in the back pocket. She is built in 1978 in Norway as a newbuild for Bore Line. Originally she was tailormade to fit the locks up to La Rochelle, France.

Once onboard I was showed to the telegraphist who got annoyed as I did not have a medical certificate with me. So much for the use of schooling... I had to get into a taxi and go downtown to see the Seaman's Doctor to get myself certified medically fit for duty. Once done I was signed on and then the "Muster Man", as he was called, stamped the ships roll.

The sister ships, now renamed Norking and Norqueen and extended
m/s Bore King, built 1980 in Rauma

m/s Bore Queen, built 1980 in Rauma

I was doing leave replacing on many of the Bore Lines ships and was in those days probably the youngest employee in the Company. I was sailing to Harwich and Chatham, UK, Terneuzen, Holland and Cuxhaven, Germany. I was never employed as permanent staff as it would have been too costly to get rid of me in case business turned sour. This trend was new and is continuing even today all over the shipping industry. I held OS, AB and Engine apprentice positions and once I was replacing the Carpenter.

m/s Bore Britannica, ex APL ship, built in Korea

m/s Fortuna, ex. Schulau (Photo Jan G. Rautawaara)

In between contracts I did a trip on m/v Fortuna that was a German built small coaster from 1958, loading capacity some 725 DWT. The ship was owned by 2 brothers from Rauma and on this particular trip we were on our way to east UK, Gunness, with a crew of five. Captain, his wife, an Engineer, an AB and me. I still recall how we ran out of fresh food a day or two before UK and we had only some frozen peasoup to eat.

As a footnote to this ship can be said that she sank during a storm in the autumn of 1987 overloaded on sugarbeets in the Turku archipelago. Luckily the crew managed to climb on top of the hull and they were picked up by a passing passenger vessel, m/s Wellamo.


m/v Pasila, Owner: ESL Shipping

Then just before I was joining the Navy I did a short stint on m/v Pasila, the old one. It was a bulk carrier and we shipped coal from Poland to Finland and pyrite in bulk to Norway. It had 3 cranes with hydraulic grabs attached on them. The ship was depressing as I recall how I had to every day wipe the deck in my cabin clean from coal dust that had permeated everywhere.

In 1988 I was drafted to do my military service and I entered the Navy for the next 11 months.


Tuesday, January 13, 1987

Bore Queen

Bore Queen
Ordinary Seaman

26.02.1986 - 26.03.1986
11.04.1986 - 20.05.1986
01.07.1986 - 09.09.1986
23.09.1986 - 14.01.1987

In -86 I got a long run on Bore Queen replacing a deckhand on sick or paternity leave as I remember and it was good line, took us about 2 weeks to complete a round trip that took us from Helsinki - Kotka - Hamburg, Germany - Terneuzen, Holland - Chatham, UK - Cuxhaven, Germany - Helsinki.

In Terneuzen we always got a night over in port and many times I volunteered as the night watch (20-08hrs) because it gave good overtime and next morning I could go sightseeing, not that there was much to see in Terneuzen as it was a small village opposite of Vlissingen in Flanders along the Schelde river. The docks were behind a lock so there was no rope watching per se, only during loading and discharging that happened in daytime, very civilized. In those days one usually looked for stuff you could not find at home and there was quite a lot of that, especially in Holland & Germany the electronics were cheap. I once bought a microwave oven for my mother and it is still 35 years later working. 

Bore Queen (unknown photographer)

In Chatham we usually stayed 2 nights, I think the issue was waiting for return cargo as the remaining cargo discharge was done in a day. Here we also stayed behind a lock, the port was actually an old submarine port from 2nd WW. One could still see the hidden grooves for mooring ropes so submarines could be submerged in port in case needed.

The quiet evenings many crew booked theatre tickets in London and saw Cats etc. I was too young to appreciate such things and preferred doing the night watch and go daytime mooching around in London. I'd get off at 8am and get going in the morning train with the blue collar folks. Sometimes there was space only available in vans with no benches and people reading their news papers sitting on the floor.

Once in London I'd get a day pass for a pound and travel the tube everywhere, Carnaby street for leather products, High Street to buy music at Virgin. I remember I was once rescued by sure serious accident as I was walking along with my head up gawking at buildings when I suddenly felt someone grab me from behind and a car whizzed past me. Had that man not grabbed me I would have stepped under it. After a few hours in town I'd get the train back to Chatham and get a few hours of kip before the next nightwatch.

All the the other ports along the line were pretty busy, the main cargo was always loaded in Kotka as sto-ro so it was time consuming and we usually got a night out there as well. In Hamburg and Chatham we'd get the people over from the seamans service (MEPA) bringing papers & magazines and changing our video library (VHS) and then the Seamans mission (like Stella Maris). Usually they offered rides to the mission where one could come for a cup of coffee, go around shopping or just talk to the priest if you were inclined like that. In Terneuzen I think the people from the Antwerp mission would come to visit us.

Bore Queen had a nice crew, they were very close knit I think because they had a few years charters down the west coast of Africa and crew did not change except going higher in rank or pension. Like on Bore Sun I was a junior 17yrs of age and next eldest person were in their 30's and several were in their 50's.

Then in 1987 the other persons leave was finished and I was transferred to Bore Sun where I worked until it was time for me to do my military service.

Norqueen (photo Rickard Sahlsten)

As a footnote to the vessel, she was lengthened like her sistership 30m and renamed Norqueen in 1996. Next charter put her on liner traffic between UK and continent for P&O ferries for the next 20yrs. After that she was sold and sailed for Greece to be laid up and was renamed several times and then she was sold again and nowadays located in the Philippines as Supershuttle Roro 9 in 2013. I think that is where she probably still remains to this day (2017).  

Saturday, July 20, 1985

Bore Sun

Having completed my General ratings school and received the relevant certificate I could not find a job from the employment centre and I was cleaning up a supermarket to earn a living from something. It was pretty tedious job as I always went in after closing hours when the mates started drinking beer and having fun as I remember. The shopkeeper was also very particular, there was to be no streaks on the floors so the machine needed changing water every so often and the pre-sweeping had to be very thorough. At least it taught me doing a proper job if nothing else.

Bore Sun (by Tommy Gjerling)

I already had a union calendar with all the shipping companies listed in them but every so often when I called to ask for a job the reply was always "no have". Then I thought (or probably my mom told me) of going to see the Personnel Managers in person and I went to those shipping companies in my home town of Turku. I can only remember the Bore Line office that was in the Rettig Palace in those days on Nunnankatu. Today it is a museum as the family donated(?) the estate to the city and when they did some works on the foundations they discovered a major archaeological find. The exhibit is really worth seeing, but I digress, back at Bore Line offices I met with the HR manager Kari Salminen and had a short chat with him, can't remember about what though. I must have made an impression as after a few weeks I received a letter from his office with "report to work" header and a date, 14th June 1985, I think it was a 2 weeks temp job replacing someone who was sick or had summer leave.

Anyway, the date came and I remember that after stepping off the bus and walking into the port I was sitting on a bollard on the jetty smoking and watching Bore Sun a few hundred meters away. I finished the smoke, picked up my bag and sauntered over to the ship, I think I met the Chief Officer on the ramp and as I explained my business he waved me to the crew staircase leading up to the weatherdeck.

"North State" was the real mans ciggie in those days, enough tar and nicotine to put an elephant down

Up on the weatherdeck I had to walk along the "cowbridge", a walkway that was used by crew to get to the engine room and holds from the accommodation that was in the forward. Once at the accommodation block I somehow ended up in the telegraphists office who did the duties of the purser onboard among things. I showed him my paper from the office and I think he already had my contract ready for signing but then he asked for my certificates and medical, I had the OS certificate but medical, huh? Sparky, Mr Helminen, huffed and swore under his breath and called HR in office (ship was connected to phone-grid when in port):
- They don't teach these kids anything in school these days, this new chap has come onboard without a medical cert!
- ...[office]...
- What? Send him to the Doctors? Where? Ok! Bye!
He slammed the phone and turned to me, wrote down the address and told me to get going there for my medical and be quick about it as the ship was leaving in a few hours. I think I got money for taxi and examination, had it done and returned maybe an hour later at the doorstep of Sparky. He was satisfied he could sign me on and I was duly signed on by the port official ("mönsträysmies-sign on man") and I was also issued a seamans book, wage book and a customs book. Where I would need these was still a mystery for me and as time went by these became obsolete and only the Customs book was needed to import goods bought abroad based on an elaborate points system. This was of course basis of always come up with as low as possible receipts for the Customs officers in order to save your import points and to avoid paying custom taxes.


Seamans discharge book with yours truly

At some point I got a cabin too, nice single room with ensuite and a porthole one deck above weather deck. On top of me were the officers cabins and then there was the Saloon and Captain's quarters with Owner's cabin. On top was of course the bridge. It would take me weeks before I was even taken to the bridge or meet the Captain. Then came evening and and I think it was around 8'ish all ropes were let go and I was looking aft as my hometown slowly disappeared behind the archipelago and sun was setting. I suddenly realized I did not even know where we were heading to. I found someone and asked where we were going and was told our next stop was Kiel canal and straight after that Cuxhaven in Germany and then it was Harwich in UK before heading back to Finland. We were doing 1 week roundtrips to Turku.

Boatswain S. Tilander mixing paint

On deck there was 6 guys and 3 of them were daymen and the other 3 watchmen. The pecking order was strict, the older chaps got the daymen duties and then after that the better watches (8-12) but as I was 16 I was not allowed watchduty before I had 1 year under my belt so I became dayman as well and worked 8-17. Of course in evenings there was many times cargo handling and mooring operations that I had to participate in. The 2 cargo lifts were always operated by crew back then, nowadays there are just ramps on ro-ro ships. 

One evening the older guys (I was 16 and the next oldest was 30 something) were drinking beers in the dayroom and of course as the youngest I got to bring beers from such and such cabin. As I was coming down the stairs with my hands full of beer an old codger climbed up the stairs and I just wondered who that was, it turned out to be Captain Nisse.

Weatherdeck of Bore Sun, on the right is the "cowbridge"

My temp contract went well, I worked hard and everyone liked me, I sort of became the mascot of the ship because of my age and I think my temp contract was extended a couple of times. Then suddenly the summer was over and so was my contract on 20th July 1985 and I remember it took me weeks before I could find my next job that was on m/s Fortuna but that's another story and thus my seafaring career began...