How Big is a Container Terminal?

When it comes to shipping it is very easy to find out the size of things. If you want to know how large a particular ship or terminal is the statistics are freely available. But when comparing numbers, especially to a novice, it is easy to become confused or just plain bored comparing tonnage, TEU’s, acreage, crane size, etc.

Below is a picture from our ship that we snapped in Port Elizabeth, NJ. It’s taken from the bridge wing of the ship, and gives the viewer an impression of the scale of a container terminal’s operations.

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For an idea of exactly how big all this is consider: each container in this photo is 45 feet long, 8 feet wide and 9 1/2 feet high. So the stack in the picture is 38 feet high. (It will reach 66 feet eventually.) The photo also shows only the port side, meaning the stack shown is about 72 feet wide, and continues out of the frame for another 72.

Now consider how much bigger the crane is than the stack. (There are parts of 3 separate cranes in this picture) Now consider that about 2/3 of the crane is out of the frame. Now look through the cranes at all the stacks of containers in the background. Now consider all the stacks in the yard that are out of the frame. Now consider that our 1000 foot ship is one of about 10 moored to this dock at the same time, each with attendant cranes, and there are multiple docks in a terminal.

Now you start to get an idea of how big a container terminal is.

The Chop Goes Back to Sea

We’ll be ringing in the New Year aboard ship for 2014. After more than seven months ashore we’re going back out to see more of the watery part of the world. Today we’re going to Savannah to board a Maersk container ship like the one shown here, bound for Spain, Gibraltar and the Middle East.

Here’s what a 1000 foot container ship looks like leaving the port of Savannah. We’ll be back in the Spring. Until then enjoy this video.

Feature image via YouTube user Namerifrats.

Day Pajamas vs. Night Pajamas

One of the memes that’s been making its way around the Internet recently is the idea of ‘day pajamas.’ The joke behind it is that someone has, much like Garfield the cat, had a very hard day of lazing around the house and is at some point so exhausted that it is time to switch from ‘day pajamas’ to ‘night pajamas’ to become even more relaxed before bed.

It is said that there is some truth behind every jest, and here at the Baltimore Chop we, in all seriousness, fully endorse and approve the concept of Day Pajamas. We’re wearing them right now, as a matter of fact. They are, after all, the uniform of most home bloggers.

What differentiates day pajamas from night pajamas? Glad you asked. Day pajamas are a little nicer, a bit more presentable. You wouldn’t want to wear them out, but you might go as far as the mailbox or the back porch in them, or answer the door if someone’s knocking. Think of day pajamas as the v-neck undershirt that fits well, not the stained, threadbare and oversized shirt you’ve had since college and actually wear to bed. Or it could be that day pajamas aren’t pajamas at all. Perhaps they’re gym clothes and yoga pants. If you’re going to be lazy it helps to at least look sporty.

But why bother? You’re just sitting around the house anyway! This may be true if you’re alone, but if you can convince someone else to sleep over and spend all or part of the next day sitting around the house with you it helps to have something a little more presentable to reach for than a faded Melvin Mora giveaway shirt. Even for married couples it’s important to default to something half a step above a Cathy cartoon to keep things interesting.

Christmas is perhaps the most important day of the year for day pajamas. Those family photos will live forever, and if you’re caught under the tree in a ratty bathrobe and boxers with a hole in them you’ll find that look coming back to haunt you like the Ghost of Christmas past. From now until New Year’s most of us are just going to be sitting around the house anyway so it’s a perfect time to take stock of the pajama drawer and pick up an item or two at an after-Christmas sale if need be.

Some Guy Almost Killed Me Yesterday

A strange thing just happened to me riding my bike home yesterday. Some guy in a car almost ran me over. Not that there’s anything strange about that, unfortunately. It was his ultimate reasoning for doing it that was utterly baffling to me. Even after arriving at home and thinking about it for a while I’m still not sure if I should be angry, amused, annoyed, or some combination of the three.

I was coming east on Eastern Avenue through Little Italy. I had just come through a green light at President Street, and was continuing to the very end of Eastern Ave where it terminates in front of the Pier V hotel. Being a dead end, the two blocks of Eastern east of President are not very heavily trafficked by cars. I had ‘taken the lane’ as it’s called, and so was riding near the centerline of the road but still decidedly on the right hand side. My main reason in doing this is for maximum visibility but partially to stay that much further from pedestrians as well, since pedestrians are common on these blocks and are often tourists or visitors who are oblivious to their surroundings. This is a route I travel frequently in both directions.

There is a small arching bridge integrated into the road where it crosses the Jones Falls. It was when I reached the top of this bridge that I saw a blue mid-size SUV at the entrance of a parking lot about 40-50 yards ahead on my right, and marked by an X in the above photo. I was very much aware of it, as it was the only piece of vehicle traffic moving either in front of or behind me. So I saw very clearly when the driver pulled up to the road entrance, did a rolling stop, looked in the other direction briefly before pulling out right in front of me. I’d let out a very loud “Whoa!” and made sure to get into his line of sight when he did bring his eyes back to his left, which meant we both came to a stop very near to each other in the middle of the road.

Now, in two years of daily urban cycling I’ve learned well how to pick my battles with drivers. There’s a tremendous difference between someone who just doesn’t see you, someone who should have seen you but didn’t, and someone who sees you and tries to run you down anyway. So I wasn’t very angry with this guy. He should have seen me and didn’t, and while he was entirely negligent and it was a close call I didn’t think very much of it.

I’ve also learned that when picking fights with motorists less is more. Yelling at them is wildly ineffective. Usually a dirty look gets the point across. Often I make it a point not to speak unless spoken to first, as was the case here. I gave the guy a pointed look, and started pedaling again. That’s when he laid down a prolonged blast of his horn. A kind of parting shot as he began driving away.

Of course I turned around and caught up to him immediately. Did he think I wouldn’t? Couldn’t? ‘Who do you think you’re honking at?’ I asked him, his window down by now. ‘You have to stop there. It was you who pulled out in front of me.’ And here’s where it gets bizarre. What do you think he said to me? He said :

“You were going way too fast.”

Now, I know exactly how fast I ride around Baltimore. On average it’s about 13 mph. Running downhill on a street like Guilford or Saint Paul I might get up to around 19-20 mph. I know this from months of using the Map My Ride iPhone app. Coming down the back of that small bridge, I might have gone as high as 20 mph. That’s pretty fast, but it’s not Olympic cyclist fast. I only have one gear, after all. At any rate, it’s certainly not faster than a oncoming car in my position would have been coming.

Our conversation devolved pretty quickly from there. It was obvious that this guy was an oblivious, entitled yuppie saying things like ‘I work here, so I drive here every day’ and ‘I’m going to report you for speeding.’ The smarminess and entitlement and holier-than-thou blamelessness was really more than I could handle. And as I say, I didn’t really want to pick a fight with the guy to begin with. ‘Yeah, report me for speeding asshole. See where that gets you. I pedaled off, for good this time.

Half a block down there was a hotel valet who saw the whole thing. He stepped out into the road as I approached: ‘What’d he say?’ He asked me. ‘He accused me of speeding.’ I said. We both laughed out loud.

The whole thing really drove home a point for me though. If you’re on a bike, you just can’t fucking win. People will complain forever that you’re too slow and should use back streets. Then when you find a small stretch of street without too many cars, come through a green light, stay in your lane, pedal near the speed limit and do everything right motorists will still nearly run you over in their own obliviousness. When asked why they almost ran over you, instead of saying ‘My bad, sorry.’ They will say the dumbest, most illogical shit they can think of to avoid accepting responsibility.

Sadly, being a skilled cyclist and completely in the right is still no match for a steel cocoon and a yuppie sense of entitlement.

Netflix Queue Review: December 2013

Here at the Baltimore Chop we care about our readers, the good people of Baltimore Town. We want you all to have happy and fulfilling lives, especially during this, the Holiday Season. We care so much that we would even hate to see any of you be mildly inconvenienced by watching any part of a less-than-outstanding movie film. Likewise when we find an outstanding movie film it is our great honor to recommend it to you, dear readers, so that you may enjoy its awesomeness.

It is in that spirit that we humbly present the third installment in our now-monthly series Netflix Queue Review. Here’s a few things available for streaming that we’ve watched lately. Should you be watching them too?

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Fireplace for Your Home

Netflix has the Yule Log. This is great news because often this Winter we haven’t wanted to watch shitty movies anyway, and we’ve been spending more time reading and listening to music, so the Yule Log is an outstanding screen saver for the TV. This version plays Christmas music though, so you have to turn the sound all the way down. ★ ★ ★ ★

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Brian Posehn: The Fartist

We’ve always liked Brian Posehn. We even went to see him at the Ottobar when he came through a few years ago. So we’re sorry to report that this new special is pretty goddamn terrible. It’s just more of the same fart and weed and masturbation jokes that made Posehn famous, but although they’re technically new material you get the feeling that you’ve heard them all before. Posehn hasn’t aged well and neither has his material. At this point it’s truly hard to tell who’s older, fatter, more annoying or less relevant, him or Kevin Smith. We turned this off after 30 minutes because it’s garbage. ★

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Slaughterhouse-Five

The Chop is a great fan of Kurt Vonnegut, so it was with a bit of apprehension that we sat down to watch Slaughterhouse-Five. They say the movie is never as good as the book and when your books are as good as Vonnegut’s no one’s going to make a movie that lives up to them. Breakfast of Champions and Mother Night were perfectly fine movies, but were disappointing all the same. This isn’t the case with Slaughterhouse-Five. George Roy Hill is a director who understands black humor as well as anyone. This film works well because Hill uses his own dark humor throughout instead of merely trying to channel Vonnegut’s. Naturally, a movie about a character who’s become unstuck in Time is going to have a lot of jumpcuts, but Slaughterhouse-Five manages to jump time throughout the entire movie without feeling disjointed or confusing. As a bonus the actor playing Billy Pilgrim is also a dead ringer for Andy Samberg. ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

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Frances Ha

This is one of those movies that Netflix is trying to force on viewers, putting it at the top of the results for multiple menus and suggestions and such. Should you watch it? Meh, probably not. It’s shot in black and white for no discernible reason. It kind of reminded us of Tiny Furniture, and we hated Tiny Furniture. But this isn’t quite as bad as that. The characters are mostly unlikeable, but on the other hand they’re all pretty miserable throughout the film so that’s a plus. ‘What do you mean you’re miserable? Your blog looks so happy!’ There’s a bit of sample dialogue for you. If you’re one of those people who enjoys throwing the word ‘privilege’ around you’ll probably love this movie. ★ ★

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I am Not a Hipster

Closely related to Frances Ha is I am Not a Hipster which is about… wait for it… a hipster who is lonely and miserable despite having a hit record out and being popular. His mom died and he doesn’t get along with his dad, but the old man and this hipster’s 3 sisters come to visit him and scatter mom’s ashes. He cries and says he’s lonely but then feels better. Oh yeah spoiler alert or whatever. The music is pretty good in this movie even if the lip syncing is not. Plus there’s a part where this hipster singer busts into an electropop show and beats up some douchey dumbass named SpaceFace playing beats on his macbook. Worth watching for that alone. ★ ★ ★