Life Offshore

I don’t find anything describing life offshore, whether on an OSV, Barge, Rig or, as in this case, on a Production Platform.
I’m sure there are lots of anecdotes about the the life offshore, both the hardship and the joy, if any, among the forum members.

Since I’m no longer an active participant in the offshore life, I’ll start this off with a full length video of the trial and tribulations of working on the Floating Production Platform “Gjoea” in the Norwegian North Sea: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zk6LSJ39q1E#t=2101.77056

Two weeks onboard - followed by four weeks off - may not be everybody’s picture of hardship though.

FYI: The Gjoea Oil & Gas Field is positioned in the northern North Sea, abt. 80 km off the Sognefjord, at a water depth of 360 – 380 meters. Here is a bit more about the field: https://www.r-stahl.com/.../04_Gjoa_field_in_the_Norwegian_part_of_the_North_Sea

[QUOTE=ombugge;186140]anything describing life offshore[/QUOTE]

Lock all friends and family outside. Your only means of communication should be with letters that your neighbors have held for at least three weeks, discarding two of five.
Surround yourself with 200 people that you don’t really know or like: people who smoke, snore like Mack trucks going uphill, and use foul language like a child uses sugar on cereal.
Unplug all radios and TVs to completely cut yourself off from the outside world. Have a neighbor bring you a Time, Newsweek, or Proceedings from five years ago to keep you abreast of current events.
Monitor all home appliances hourly, recording all vital information (ie: plugged in, lights come on when doors open, etc.)
Do not flush the toilet for five days to simulate the smell of 40 people using the same commode.
Lock the bathroom twice a day for a four-hour period.
Work in 19-hour cycles, sleeping only four hours at a time, to ensure that your body does not know or even care if it is day or night.
Listen to your favorite CD six times a day for two weeks, then play music that causes acute nausea until you are glad to get back to your favorite CD.
Cut a twin mattress in half and enclose three sides of your bed. Add a roof that prevents you from sitting up (about ten inches is a good distance) then place it on a platform that is four feet off the floor. Place a small dead animal under the bed to simulate the smell of your bunkmate’s socks.
Set your alarm to go off at ten-minute intervals for the first hour of sleep to simulate the various times the watchstanders and nightcrew bump around and wake you up. Place your bed on a rocking table so you are tossed around the remaining three hours. Make use of a custom clock that randomly simulates fire alarms, police sirens, helicopter crash alarms, and a new-wave rock band.
Have week old fruit and vegetables delivered to your garage and wait two weeks before eating them.
Prepare all meals blindfolded using all the spices you can grope for, or none at all. Remove the blindfold and eat everything in three minutes.
Periodically, shut off all power at the main circuit breaker and run around shouting “Fire! Fire! Fire!” and then restore power.
At least once a month, force the commode to overflow to simulate a “black water system” boo-boo.
Study the owner’s manual for all household appliances. Routinely take an appliance apart and put it back together.
Remove all plants, pictures and decorations. Paint everything gray, white, or the shade of hospital smocks.
Buy 50 cases of toilet paper and lock up all but two rolls. Ensure one of these two rolls is wet all the time.
Smash your forehead or shins with a hammer every two days to simulate collision injuries sustained onboard Navy ships.
When making sandwiches, leave the bread out for six days, or until it is hard and stale.
Every ten weeks, simulate a visit to another port. Go directly to the city slums wearing your best clothes. Find the worst looking place, and ask for the most expensive beer that they carry. Drink as many as you can in four hours. Take a cab home taking the longest possible route. Tip the cabby after he charges you double because you dress funny and don’t speak right.
Use fresh milk for only two days after each port visit.
Keep the bedroom thermostat at 2 deg C and use only a thin blanket for warmth.
Ensure that the water heater is connected to a device that provides water at a flow rate that varies from a fast drip to a weak trickle, with the temperature alternating rapidly from -2 to 95 deg C.
Use only spoons which hold a minimum of 1/2 cup at a time.
Repaint the interior of your home every month, whether it needs it or not.
Remind yourself every day: "It’s not just a job, It’s An Adventure!
Mix kerosene with your water supply to simulate the de-sal plant on the ship picking up jp5 in the intake – if a lit match thrown into your coffee pot doesn’t ignite it, add more kerosene.
Stand outside at attention at dawn and have the poorest reader you know read the morning paper out loud. Be sure to have him skip over anything pertinent.
Every four hours, check the fluid level in your car’s radiator. Check the tire pressure and replace air lost from excessive pressure checks. Be sure to place red tag on ignition stating “DANGER: DO NOT OPERATE” while you perform these checks. Inform your neighbor as to the results of these checks, have him tell you to repeat the checks because he did not see you perform them.
Paint your house gray (exterior) include windows except for rooms you do not frequent, paint your car gray, paint your driveway a different shade of gray.
Clean your house until there’s absolutely not a speck of dust anywhere. Call on a stranger to come inspect your house. Ensure stranger sees dust that has collected in the time it took to find him. Stranger cannot leave until he finds irrational fault with your house/belongings.

Knots, that was an awesome post. So true on many levels. And then the landlubbers wonder why we so CrayCray.

I’ve said it before… What the hell people must think about me by coming to my house. Everything wherever it won’t look terrible is (stainless) through-bolted, weather tight, and generally tugboat-tech. And then there’s the bleach hot mop, exterior surfaces painted with surplus interthane 990… The list goes on.

And then there’s going home and having to relearn which way the doorknobs turn to get the damn doors to open and how to turn on the TV.