First
Really foreign port – Port Said
Now, said
Colin, watch out after the gangway was lowered in Port Said!
The first
thing that happened was that we were surrounded by people in colourful clothes
trying to sell us stuff.
The
problem was we did not know what they were saying as they spoke a sort of
pidgin English with words that had no meaning like “gulli gulli man” and those
that were more explicit “feelthy pictures”!
They
crowded around us, so it was difficult to get away. One guy cornered me with his
gulli gulli shout. He squatted on the deck and produced 3 coloured balls.
Rapidly hiding and showing the balls as he moved them around, he covered them
all and asked us where the red ball was. Piece of cake, I thought, but no it
was not and then began the betting. £5 if you can guess where the red ball is.
£5 lost and I realised that I was been duped and on a salary of £10 per month I
had just lost 2 weeks’ pay!
Enough. I
told you so said Colin with a big grin. But it was too late. Ralph had bought a
“Rolex” watch for a bargain price and when he got it back to his cabin, he
found it ran in an anti-clockwise direction and after a couple of hours stopped
all together!
Of course,
we could not resist looking at these “feelthy pictures”. We gathered round and
he produced some well-worn prints. There is one with a donkey he said. Our eyes
widened and our sexual education took a whole new direction!
to collect the airmail letters from home, the first of the trip. There was one from Mum hoping I was being a good boy and drinking my lime juice! As the daughter of a Captain, she knew far more than me of life aboard ship, especially in the tropics and was lucky enough in the 1920’s to get ashore in Port Said and see the pyramids. That is her on a camel.
If you
have letters to go, then hurry as the port agent will not be long on-board
shouted Colin. I had written a short letter so put it in an airmail envelope
and then what I shouted. Take it down to the purser’s office said Colin.
The purser’s
office was full of Egyptians, all wanting to talk to Percy, the purser, at the
same time. Put your letter on the table over there shouted Percy above the hubbub
of sound.
Back in our
mess for a little peace after all the chaos of arriving I asked Colin on the
whole business of port agent and letters.
Boyo, said
the slim senior apprentice from Wales through a cloud of smoke from his pipe,
that is a bit of a challenge, and you will learn a little more when you start
your correspondence course! But here is some background.
There are
different types of shipping services in the world. For conventional cargoes
such as tractors and beer and camels and jute there are 2 distinct services. One
is called tramp shipping where a ship is hired to take cargo from one port to
another and then must seek further cargoes. This might mean that a tramp ship must
go empty or in ballast to a third port to find a cargo. Such a service can take
these ships all over the world.
The other
type of service is the liner service where a shipping company places its ships
on a scheduled service between areas of the world. We are in the liner trades
offering cargo services between Western European ports and Indian ports calling
at ports between. We also offer a service from India to the east coast of the
USA and then back to Western European ports. Such liner services are highly
organised with dedicated docks and cargo handling equipment allowing shippers
of goods to assemble their goods in warehouses before loading on the next
available ship. The schedule is fixed and enables a shipping company to offer
secure regular services unlike the tramp trades.
Many liner
shipping companies join into what is called “liner conferences” to stabilise
freight rates and avoid competition within a conference. The counter argument
is that conferences bar other countries and shipping companies to offer
services on the same routes. This has been especially true for developing
countries because most shipping lines are from the European countries, and they
carry cargo from developing countries denying competition from developing
countries who must pay freight to the liner companies to export their own goods.
Partly because of this the United Nations formed a new agency called UNCTAD
(United Nations Conference on Trade and Development) to control the liner
trades and regulate the share of liner services between nations.
Operationally
shipping companies hire agents in all the ports they call. Their job is to
arrange for cargo to be loaded and discharged and the ship to receive stores,
fuel and water as well as handling our mail.
So, there you are, liner services in a nutshell!
Now we
need to get back on our watch system as we join the southbound convoy through
the Suez Canal in an hour.
The Suez
Canal offered a convoy system both southbound and northbound and as it was not
possible to pass ships in the Canal the southbound convoy must anchor halfway
down in the Bitter Lakes to allow the northbound convoy to pass. (Authors
note: the Suez Canal has been widened to accommodate larger vessels and enable
ships to pass at certain places without anchoring today).
However, the Bitter Lakes have a special place in my memory as my father was stationed there in the Second World War. In the photo he is on the left. On the backside of the photo are his notes stating he was running a navigation class. After been captured at sea by the Germans and released in Norway he was transferred to the RNR (the Royal Navy Reserve) and stationed at HMS Saunders in the south of the Great Bitter Lake. The station was part of a Combined Operations setup by Churchill to carry out offensive operations. In the case of HMS Saunders, it was primarily to train personnel
in the use of landing craft for assaults in the Mediterranean theatre of war. Later it also became a camp for Italian prisoners of war.
We
anchored in the Bitter Lakes to allow the northbound convoy to pass and then we
continued south to exit the canal at Suez to proceed south down the Red Sea.
Now, said Colin, you will learn what it is like to be onboard ship in the
tropics, a whole different existence, he said, with a broad smile. What are we
in for now, I wondered?