Shenanigans abound offshore. Some are the predictable result
of having six guys cooped-up in a smallish aluminum box with limited outlets
for recreation.
Some are the result of laziness or restricted bandwidth at the
management level, which shouldn’t tolerate such things (coming in Part Two). Some are pure
criminality (see Part Three).
There is an entire seabag of tricks to screw-around with
newbies. I probably don’t even know the best ones, but they include things
like: sending the green guy to get a bucket of prop wash, replacing spark plugs
on the (diesel) mains, tuning the radars ….
That last one involves having the new guy wander around the
dock with a foil-covered hard hat, a metal rod of some sort and a hand-held
VHF. It is … almost … plausible. And hilarious.
At the beginning of the last hitch, there was much
discussion about preventive measures to avoid the dreaded “dickworm.” There was
even an ersatz Wikipedia article about penile helminthes, and warnings flashed
from new guy to new guy across the fleet.
All of this from an off-hand remark after the newbie wondered why chlorine tabs were being dropped into the rig water we took on at
the dock.
New guys get f*cked with. A lot. Often to the point of
counterproductivity. Recently the captain of one of our other boats was
painting a dire picture of the chances of a romantic relationship surviving a
deckhand’s new career. Jody was mentioned. At length.
That deckhand made it about a week before rushing home.
I’ve seen some captains call the office and demand a
replacement for a newbie on the first hitch. Or state angrily that they’re not
training someone without extra pay.
This is disheartening.
All of us started our workboat careers knowing nothing about
the job. Every. Single. One of us.
And training is a privilege that comes with a
license, and with experience, and the last time I checked was part of the job
description.
I was proud to be a temporary part of a temporary crew at
the beginning of the last hitch. With two Short Service Employees (SSEs, or FNGs,
if you like), the other captain and I collaborated to bring them up to speed as
quickly as possible.
Five in-depth actual emergency drills in seven days. A
near-complete review of the company’s new Safety and Environmental Management
System. Pop quizzes.
People staying up into the next watch to provide hands-on
instruction. Extra folks on deck during cargo operations. Words of
encouragement when a tired, overwhelmend new guy says dejectedly: “I’m never
going to get this!”
It was pretty awesome. And it still left time for some
people to worry about dickworms.
#dickworms
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ReplyDeleteThe truly hilarious aspect of the whole "dickworms" fiasco was that it was used to great effect on several new hands even after you had moved on. I can assure you that your legacy on that particular vessel lived on.
ReplyDeleteToo funny. Good to hear! It was inspiration born of an idle day at the dock, for sure ....
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