| "Twenty
years from now you will
be more disappointed by
the things you didn't do
than by those you did do.
So throw off the
bowlines. Sail away from
the safe
harbour.....Dream .
Discover " Mark
Twain
My
article this month is
about travelling by sea -
but not as we know it!.
International
travel will never be the
same after the events of
September 11 ; heightened
levels of security at
airport terminals will
cause delays and build
bottlenecks for both
travellers and cargo
alike. But apart from
these inconveniences the
real difference will be
in attitude . If you
weren't already paranoid
then you will be now -
anyone leaving their seat
during the flight will be
a potential security
threat until they return
to take their rightful
place .
The
many people that did not
enjoy air travel before
the terrorists attacks
will now be going out of
their way to avoid flying
and it is likely that
ocean travel will become
the preferred option when
they take holidays.
We
all know about the ocean
cruise lines such as
Cunard, P&O and
Viking Line but for those
travellers that can do
without the commercial
trappings there is the
appeal of jumping aboard
a cargo vessel and
sailing the high seas on
a container ship . Most
shipping lines do not
advertise the fact that
they take paying
passengers as this is not
core business activity
and it must be managed to
suit the captain and the
crew. The price of the
"ticket" is
often negotiable and is
usually similar to
airline rates to the same
destination - in the past
the price was discussed
with the master and the
money was often divvied
up amongst the crew as it
was seen as a perk of the
job. These days you need
to contact the shipping
company directly and take
it from there.

A
Regular Cruise Ship !!
When
I was at Contship
containerlines we had a
client that took an
around-the-world cruise
on one of our vessels
that departed Rotterdam
and returned there 84
days later - the vessel
had called at North
European ports , sailed
across the Atlantic to
New York then down the
eastern seaboard before
calling Tahiti, Noumea,
Auckland , Australian
ports then up through
South East Asia, the
Meditteranean and back to
Rotterdam ! We also had a
couple of writers take
long voyages because they
wanted the solitude and
inspiration of the high
seas but not the
shuttleboard games and
hordes of holidaymakers
you get on the cruise
ships . These days cargo
vessels are rarely in
port for no more than 24
hours so it doesn't leave
much time for site seeing
- you do have the option
of staying longer and
then catching a flight to
meet up with the ship
later on but that kind of
defeats the purpose
doesn't it?.

The
"Alternative"
Cruise Ship ( and yes -
it really is pink !! )
My
wife works for a shipping
company in Auckland and
one day soon she will
take a trip from Auckland
to Lyttelton on one of
their vessels as a fun
way to visit the
Christchurch office. I am
hoping to come along for
the ride as it's an
experience that not a lot
of people get to take and
will only be a day trip
down the coast which
suits me fine.
But
to do it for 84 days - I
think that's stretching
it a bit far!

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