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News

ARTICLE

Date ArticleType
6/6/2022 Member News

When shipping Containers Sink in the Drink

There is a stretch of coastline in southern Cornwall known for its dragons. The black ones are rare, the green ones rarer; even a dedicated dragon hunter can go a lifetime without coming across a single one. Unlike the dragons of European myth, these do not hoard treasure, cannot breathe fire, and, lacking wings, cannot fly. They are aquatic, in that they always arrive from the sea, and they are capable of travelling considerable distances. One was spotted, like Saoirse Ronan, on Chesil Beach; another made its home on the otherwise uninhabited Dutch island of Griend, in the Wadden Sea. Mostly, though, they are drawn to the windswept beaches of southwestern England—to Portwrinkle and Perranporth, to Bigbury Bay and Gunwalloe. If you want to go looking for these dragons yourself, it will help to know that they are three inches long, missing their arms and tails, and made by the Lego company.

Cornwall owes its dragon population to the Tokio Express, a container ship that sailed from Rotterdam for North America in February of 1997 and ran into foul weather twenty miles off Land’s End. In heavy seas, it rolled so far abeam that sixty-two of the containers it was carrying wrenched free of their fastenings and fell overboard. One of those containers was filled with Lego pieces—to be specific, 4,756,940 of them. Among those were the dragons (33,427 black ones, 514 green), but, as fate would have it, many of the other pieces were ocean-themed. When the container slid off the ship, into the drink went vast quantities of miniature scuba tanks, spearguns, diving flippers, octopuses, ship’s rigging, submarine parts, sharks, portholes, life rafts, and the bits of underwater seascapes known among Lego aficionados as lurps and burps—Little Ugly Rock Pieces and Big Ugly Rock Pieces, of which 7,200 and 11,520, respectively, were aboard the Tokio Express. Not long afterward, helicopter pilots reported looking down at the surface of the Celtic Sea and seeing “a slick of Lego.” (As with “fish,” “sheep,” and “offspring,” the most widely accepted plural of “Lego” is Lego.) Soon enough, some of the pieces lost overboard started washing ashore, mostly on Cornish beaches.

https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2022/06/06/when-shipping-containers-sink-in-the-drink?utm_source=pocket-newtab

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  • About Us
    • Letter From The Governor
    • Message From The President
    • Board of Directors
    • Our Team
    • Internships
    • What Companies Say >
      • Submit a Testimonial
    • Map of the Area
    • World Trade Centers Association
    • Contact Us
  • Services
    • Member Benefits >
      • Become A Member
      • Student Membership
    • Benefit Partners
    • Online Education
    • Import/Export Assistance
    • International Business Training
    • U.S. Office Setup
  • Business Directory
  • Events & News
    • Events >
      • Submit a Community Event
    • Picture Gallery
    • World Trade News You Can Use
    • Newsletters
    • Join Our Mailing List!
  • Resources
    • COVID-19
    • Are you Export Ready?
    • Trade Leads >
      • Submit a Trade Lead
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