Seafarers Way

PODCAST · business

Seafarers Way

Making Seafaring Career easier by making all the Regulations on board easy to understand.First will be SOLAS, the Bible of Seafarers and will continue with the remaining conventions.

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    RightShip: More Than Ratings—A Safer Voyage for Seafarers

    Are you sailing on a vessel that truly meets safety standards—or just one that looks compliant on paper?In this episode of Seafarers Way, Capt. Rommel breaks down the real role of RightShip and how it directly impacts life onboard. From safer working conditions and better-maintained vessels to reduced pressure on crews to cut corners, this isn’t just about ratings—it’s about your safety, your workload, and your career at sea.Understand how external vetting systems influence ship operations, why they matter to every seafarer, and what you can do onboard to stay aligned with international standards like SOLAS, STCW, and MLC.This is not just an industry discussion—it’s a practical look at how safety systems shape your everyday reality at sea.⚓ Stay informed. Stay compliant. Sail safer—with Seafarers Way.

  2. 35

    Same Truth, Different Outcome

    How Words Onboard Can Destroy or ElevateAt sea, communication is not just about being right.It’s about being effective.In this episode of Seafarers Way, Capt. Rommel explores a powerful reality onboard ships:the same truth—when expressed differently—can either build respect or create resistance.From the bridge to the engine room, from cadets to captains, words shape culture more than we realize.Through real maritime scenarios, we break down how communication changes across three critical levels:⚓ Peer to Peer⚓ Speaking to a Superior⚓ Leading a SubordinateYou will hear practical examples of how a simple shift in wording can transform:• Conflict into cooperation• Criticism into coaching• Authority into leadershipIn an industry governed by standards from the International Maritime Organization, and conventions like SOLAS and STCW Convention, technical competence is expected.But communication…That is what defines real professionals.Because onboard a vessel,there is no escape from poor communication—only consequences.🎯 Whether you are a cadet, officer, or master,this episode will help you lead better, speak better, and build a stronger onboard culture.• Why tone matters more than content onboard• How to deliver truth without damaging relationships• The difference between attacking a person vs addressing a problem• How leaders use words to develop—not destroy—future seafarers• A simple 5-step mental checklist before speaking onboardThe sea is already harsh.Let your words not add waves.For more real-world maritime insights, leadership lessons, and onboard truths:👉 Follow Seafarers Way on Spotify👉 Share this episode with your fellow seafarers👉 Tag a shipmate who needs to hear this🔑 KEY TAKEAWAYS⚓ FINAL THOUGHT📣 FOLLOW SEAFARERS WAY

  3. 34

    Your Voice On Board: The Promotion You Don’t See Coming

    Most seafarers believe that promotion comes from sea time, exams, and certificates.But onboard… that’s only half the truth.In this episode of Seafarers Way, Capt. Rommel shares a powerful reality from years at sea and in operations:👉 Promotion often starts with something you don’t see…👉 Something you don’t measure…👉 Something you use every single day—your voice.How you speak under pressure.How you report problems.How you respond to your superiors and lead your juniors.These moments quietly build your reputation long before your next rank.Through real onboard scenarios, practical communication frameworks, and leadership insights, this episode will help you understand:⚓ Why some seafarers get promoted faster than others⚓ The three types of voices on board—and which one you are⚓ How simple communication changes can elevate your career⚓ A proven way to speak like a future officer—even as a cadetBecause onboard a vessel…Your voice is not just communication.It is your identity.It is your leadership.It is your promotion—before it even happens.🎧 Listen now and start speaking like the officer you are meant to become.

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    Modern Seafaring Fundamentals

    Modern ships are more advanced than ever.Navigation systems are smarter, communication with shore is instant, and regulations are stricter. Yet despite all the technology, one truth remains unchanged — the safety of a vessel still depends on the people who sail her.In this episode of Seafarers Way, Capt. Rommel explores the Modern Seafaring Fundamentals that every seafarer must understand, from cadet to captain. Beyond navigation, cargo operations, and machinery, professional seafaring today requires something deeper: responsibility culture, situational awareness, communication discipline, professional pride, and the endurance to carry the weight of life at sea.These are not just procedures found in manuals.They are the quiet principles that keep ships running smoothly, crews working together, and operations calm even under pressure.Through reflection and practical insight drawn from real life at sea, this episode looks at how modern seafarers can navigate not only the oceans, but the growing complexity of today’s maritime industry.Because ships may carry cargo across the world…But it is the seafarers themselves who keep the industry moving.This is Seafarers Way — where we talk about life at sea, the way seafarers truly live it.

  5. 32

    SEA vs DMW — Which Contract Really Protects You?

    Before a Filipino seafarer boards a vessel, two contracts are quietly shaping the journey ahead — the Seafarer’s Employment Agreement (SEA) and the DMW Standard Employment Contract (formerly POEA).Many focus on the SEA because it states the salary, rank, and contract duration. But when illness, injury, disability, or repatriation issues arise, a deeper question emerges:Which contract carries greater legal weight?In this episode of Seafarers Way, Captain Rommel breaks down the relationship between the SEA and the DMW contract — clearly, calmly, and without blame.You will understand:• The difference between company-issued SEA terms and government-mandated protections• Why the DMW Standard Employment Contract sets the minimum legal floor• When SEA provisions can apply — and when they cannot• How misunderstandings about contracts lead to unnecessary disputes• Why clarity before boarding prevents problems after repatriationThis episode is not about attacking companies.It is not about creating fear.It is about understanding protection — professionally.Because contracts do not begin when problems happen.They begin the moment you sign.And clarity protects careers.Seafarers WayBetween ship and shore — through understanding.

  6. 31

    The ISM Code Is Not a Book. It Is a Promise.

    Before a vessel sails…Before an alarm rings…Before an investigation begins…there is already a system at work.In this episode of Seafarers Way, Captain Rommel reflects on the ISM Code — not as a compliance requirement, but as a promise.A promise that safety does not depend on one tired officer.A promise that responsibility does not stop at the gangway.A promise that when pressure rises, someone ashore is accountable too.This is not an audit discussion.This is a conversation about fatigue, authority, silence, and courage.Because the real test of the ISM Code is not during calm seas.It is in that quiet moment…when a seafarer asks himself,“Should I speak up?”If you are at sea —or supporting those at sea —this episode is for you.— Capt. RommelSeafarers Way

  7. 30

    The Other Side of the E-mail: Understanding Ship Managers

    Behind every email marked “URGENT”…Behind every reminder about drills, documentation, or compliance…There is a system working to protect the vessel — and the people on board.In this episode of Seafarers Way, Capt. Rommel explores the perspective of the Ship Manager — not as “the office,” but as the team responsible for technical operations, crew management, safety implementation, audit readiness, and commercial coordination.Why do ship managers sound strict?Why do they push for documentation even when the crew is exhausted?Who do they answer to?And most importantly — how does proper ship management actually benefit the seafarer?Grounded in international maritime practice and global standards such as:International Maritime OrganizationISM CodeSOLASSTCW ConventionMaritime Labour ConventionThis episode does not discuss any specific company, vessel, or incident.It focuses on general international shipping practices and shared operational realities.If you are a seafarer who has ever felt frustrated by shore-based instructions — this episode will help you understand the pressures on the other side.If you are a superintendent, crew manager, or shore professional — this episode is a reminder of where you came from.Because between ship and shore…understanding is stronger than blame.🎙 Hosted by Capt. Rommel📌 Follow Seafarers Way on Spotify & Apple Podcasts🔁 Share this episode with one crewmate — and one colleague ashore

  8. 29

    STCW - What it truly says.

    STCW – The Standard Behind Every SeafarerBefore a seafarer boards a ship…Before the first watch…Before the first order is given on the bridge or in the engine room…There is already a standard at work.In this episode of Seafarers Way, Captain Rommel breaks down STCW – the Standards of Training, Certification, and Watchkeeping—not as a legal document, not as a checklist of courses, but as what it truly is:the global foundation of competence, safety, and life at sea.Many seafarers know STCW only through certificates and renewals.But few understand why it exists, what it protects, and who it is really for.This episode explains:Why STCW was created and why it became a global standardWhat training, certification, and watchkeeping really mean in practiceWhy rest hours and fatigue are central to safetyWhat STCW guarantees—and what it does notHow STCW quietly works in the background of every voyageSTCW is not about paperwork.It does not promise employment or promotion.It demands competence—because the sea does not forgive shortcuts.This episode is for:Cadets trying to understand their first certificatesOfficers renewing and upgrading their licensesRatings standing long watchesAnd shore personnel who once sailed and should never forget life onboardSTCW is written from lessons learned the hard way.And every time you stand a watch at 2 a.m., it is there—protecting the ship, the crew, and your chance to come home safely.This is Seafarers Way.Real talk. Real standards. Real life at sea.

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    THE CONTRACT AT SEA - "When Health, Life and Family Are Involved"

    When Health, Life, and Family Are InvolvedSome parts of the contract are meant to be understood long before they are ever needed.In the final episode of SEAFARERS WAY – The Contract at Sea, Captain Rommel discusses the most serious provisions of the POEA/DMW Standard Terms and Conditions—those covering injury, illness, disability, death, and occupational diseases.This episode covers:What makes an injury or illness work-relatedMedical treatment and sickness allowanceThe importance of post-employment medical reportingDisability grading and compensationBenefits for death and dependentsOccupational diseases and long-term health risksThis episode is not meant to create fear.It is meant to create understanding—for seafarers, families, and those working ashore.Because when something serious happens,the contract becomes the seafarer’s voice.

  10. 27

    THE CONTRACT AT SEA - "Signing Off, Termination, and Repatriation Part 2"

    Every seafarer signs on—but signing off is where questions often begin.In this episode of SEAFARERS WAY – The Contract at Sea, Captain Rommel explains how the POEA/DMW Standard Terms and Conditions govern termination of employment, sign-off, and repatriation, and why ending a contract is not always as simple as finishing a tour.This episode covers:When a contract normally ends and why arrival at the point of hire mattersSign-off due to medical reasonsTermination due to shipwreck, vessel sale, lay-up, or change of principalWhat wages and benefits are due when termination is not the seafarer’s faultWhy clarity at the end of a contract protects both sidesThis episode is not about disputes or blame.It is about understanding how contracts are meant to end—fairly, clearly, and with dignity.Because how a voyage ends matters just as much as how it begins.

  11. 26

    THE CONTRACT AT SEA - "Signing Off, Termination, and Repatriation"

    Every seafarer signs on—but signing off is where questions often begin.In this episode of SEAFARERS WAY – The Contract at Sea, Captain Rommel explains how the POEA/DMW Standard Terms and Conditions govern termination of employment, sign-off, and repatriation, and why ending a contract is not always as simple as finishing a tour.This episode covers:When a contract normally ends and why arrival at the point of hire mattersSign-off due to medical reasonsTermination due to shipwreck, vessel sale, lay-up, or change of principalWhat wages and benefits are due when termination is not the seafarer’s faultWhy clarity at the end of a contract protects both sidesThis episode is not about disputes or blame.It is about understanding how contracts are meant to end—fairly, clearly, and with dignity.Because how a voyage ends matters just as much as how it begins.

  12. 25

    THE CONTRACT AT SEA - "When Issues Arises on Board"

    Problems at sea are unavoidable. How they are handled makes the difference.In this episode of SEAFARERS WAY – The Contract at Sea, Captain Rommel discusses how the POEA/DMW Standard Terms and Conditions provide a clear process for grievances, discipline, and investigations onboard—and why following that process protects both the seafarer and the ship.This episode covers:Why the contract includes a grievance machineryWhere and how a seafarer should raise concerns onboardThe importance of written complaints and documentationThe role of the Master in handling unresolved issuesHow investigations and disciplinary actions are supposed to be conductedWhy fairness at sea depends on procedure, not emotionThis is not about encouraging conflict or confrontation.It is about understanding the proper way to speak up, protect yourself, and maintain professionalism in a confined shipboard environment.Because at sea, silence can make problems grow—but process keeps them contained.

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    THE CONTRACT AT SEA - "Your Time, Your Pay, Your Work Part 2"

    Time at sea feels endless—but the contract measures every hour.In this episode of SEAFARERS WAY – The Contract at Sea, Captain Rommel explains how the POEA/DMW Standard Terms and Conditions define basic wage, payment timing, allotments, working hours, overtime, rest, leave pay, and shore leave—and why many misunderstandings onboard start with time and pay.This episode discusses:What “basic wage” really means—and why it mattersWhen wages are paid and until when employment continuesWhy allotments are mandatory and how they protect familiesRegular working hours versus overtimeEmergency duties, rest periods, and holidays at seaLeave pay and shore leave—what the contract allows and whyThis is not a discussion about complaints or disputes.It is a calm, seafarer-to-seafarer conversation about understanding how work and time are structured under the contract—so expectations remain clear on both ship and shore.Because your time has value.And knowing your contract does not make you difficult—it makes you prepared.

  14. 23

    THE CONTRACT AT SEA - "Your Time, Your Pay, Your Work Part 1"

    Your Time, Your Pay, Your WorkTime at sea feels endless—but the contract counts every hour.In this episode of Seafarers Way, Captain Rommel explains how the POEA/DMW contract defines basic wage, payment timing, allotments, and wage records, and why many pay-related misunderstandings happen onboard.This episode covers:What “basic wage” really means—and what it does not includeWhen wages should be paid and until whenWhy allotments are mandatory and how they protect familiesYour right to a written account of wages and service recordThis episode is not about complaints or disputes.It is about understanding how time and pay are structured under the contract—so expectations remain clear on both ship and shore.Because knowing your contract does not make you difficult.It makes you prepared.

  15. 22

    THE CONTRACT AT SEA - "The Contract Starts Before You Board Part 2"

    The Contract Starts Before You BoardBefore a seafarer steps on the gangway, the contract is already at work.In this episode of Seafarers Way, Captain Rommel walks you through the foundations of the POEA/DMW Standard Terms and Conditions—starting with what many seafarers misunderstand: when employment actually begins.This episode explains:What “point of hire” really meansWhy definitions in the contract matterThe duties of both the employer and the seafarerWhy discipline, obedience, and professionalism are contractual, not personalThis is not a legal discussion and not a company critique.It is a seafarer-to-seafarer conversation about understanding the document that quietly governs life at sea.Because shipping is simple—but complex.And clarity always comes before conflict.

  16. 21

    THE CONTRACT AT SEA - "The Contract Starts Before You Board Part 1"

    The Contract Starts Before You BoardBefore a seafarer steps on the gangway, the contract is already at work.In this episode of Seafarers Way, Captain Rommel walks you through the foundations of the POEA/DMW Standard Terms and Conditions—starting with what many seafarers misunderstand: when employment actually begins.This episode explains:What “point of hire” really meansWhy definitions in the contract matterThe duties of both the employer and the seafarerWhy discipline, obedience, and professionalism are contractual, not personalThis is not a legal discussion and not a company critique.It is a seafarer-to-seafarer conversation about understanding the document that quietly governs life at sea.Because shipping is simple—but complex.And clarity always comes before conflict.

  17. 20

    Between Ship and Shore - "Do Not Forget The Sea"

    Leadership Is Felt, Not AnnouncedBetween Ship and Shore – SeriesLeadership in shipping is not defined by rank, title, or authority.It is defined by how decisions are felt—onboard and ashore.In this episode of Seafarers Way, Captain Rommel reflects on leadership as a lived experience in the maritime industry. From shipboard command to shore-based management, this conversation explores how trust, consistency, and understanding shape real leadership far more than instructions alone.This episode speaks to officers, masters, and shore leaders—especially those who have crossed from sea to shore—reminding us that influence is earned through actions, not announcements.Part of the Between Ship and Shore series, this episode closes the arc by focusing on responsibility, memory, and the human side of leadership in shipping. A reflective listen for current and future maritime leaders.

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    Between Ship and Shore - "When Compliance Meets Reality"

    When Compliance Meets RealityBetween Ship and Shore – SeriesCompliance is essential in shipping—but it does not exist in isolation.In this episode of Seafarers Way, Captain Rommel explores what happens when written procedures meet real conditions at sea. Drawing from patterns seen in publicly available accident investigations and industry safety studies, this conversation reflects on why compliance sometimes feels difficult to apply, even when intentions are right.This episode is not about breaking rules.It is about understanding the gap between paperwork and practice, and why safety depends on more than perfect documentation.Part of the Between Ship and Shore series, this episode invites both ship and shore to reflect on how compliance can support real operations—rather than compete with them.A thoughtful episode for seafarers, superintendents, and maritime professionals.

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    Between Ship and Shore - "Managing Somehow"

    Fatigue You Don’t See: The Cost of Always “Managing Somehow”Fatigue in shipping rarely announces itself.It builds quietly—between watches, port calls, and responsibilities—until “I can manage somehow” becomes the norm.In this episode of Seafarers Way, Captain Rommel talks about fatigue not as a regulation, but as a lived experience. From the seafarer pushing through exhaustion, to shore teams relying on reports that don’t always show the full picture, this episode explores why fatigue is so difficult to see—and so easy to ignore.This is not an episode about weakness.It is about limits, honesty, and safety culture.Part of the Between Ship and Shore series, this episode encourages reflection on how endurance is valued in shipping—and at what cost.

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    Between Ship and Shore - "The Silent Gap"

    The Silent Gap: Why Ship and Shore Misunderstand Each OtherHave you ever read an email from shore and felt misunderstood?Or sent a message ashore and wondered why the ship reacted differently than expected?That space in between is what we call the silent gap.In this episode, Captain Rommel discusses why ship and shore—despite working for the same objective—often misunderstand each other, not because of bad intentions, but because of missing context, different pressures, and unseen realities.This conversation explores how communication slowly shifts from understanding to compliance, and how silence can quietly replace trust.Part of the Between Ship and Shore series, this episode invites listeners to pause, reflect, and see familiar frustrations from a wider perspective.🎧 A must-listen for anyone working at sea or supporting vessels ashore.

  21. 16

    Between Ship and Shore - "Shipping in the eyes of the beholder"

    Shipping in the Eyes of the Beholder(Shipowners, Ship Managers, and Seafarers)Shipping looks simple from the outside—but inside, it is shaped by very different perspectives.In this episode of Seafarers Way, Captain Rommel explores how shipping is viewed through three lenses: the shipowner, the ship manager, and the seafarer. Each role carries its own pressures, priorities, and fears—yet all are working toward the same goal.This episode is not about blame.It is about understanding.By stepping into each perspective, we begin to see why misunderstandings happen—and why empathy is essential in a complex industry like shipping.This episode is part of the Between Ship and Shore series, where we reflect on the real space between sea and shore, and why understanding it matters.

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    SOLAS - Episode 12 "SOLAS: Because Someone Did Not Come Home"

    SOLAS: Because Someone Did Not Come HomeThis is not just the final episode of Seafarer’s Way.It is a pause.In this closing episode, Captain Rommel steps away from chapters, checklists, and regulations to reveal the truth behind SOLAS — the Safety of Life at Sea Convention — and why it must never be treated as “just paperwork.”Every SOLAS requirement exists for one reason:because someone did not come home.This episode reminds listeners that SOLAS was not written in comfort or theory. It was written in response to fire that spread too fast, water that entered where it never should have, ships that capsized in minutes, radios that stayed silent, and decisions that came just a little too late. SOLAS is not proactive — it is reactive. It exists because the sea exposed failures, and humanity chose to remember instead of ignore them.Captain Rommel reflects on the moment when SOLAS becomes real — not during inspections, not during audits, but during the seconds when alarms are real, the ship is listing, the lights go out, or a decision must be made under pressure. In those moments, no one reaches for a regulation book. They rely on habits, discipline, training, and the courage to act or speak up.This episode speaks directly to every listener:to cadets about to sail for the first time,to officers balancing routine and vigilance,to Masters carrying the weight of command,and to shore-based personnel whose decisions reach ships across oceans.It delivers one clear truth:SOLAS does not exist to protect ships.Ships can be replaced.SOLAS exists to protect people.The cadet on his first contract.The AB on night watch.The engineer deep in the engine room.The cook asleep after a long day.The Master standing alone on the bridge at 0300.This episode challenges listeners to confront the greatest modern danger in maritime safety — forgetting why the rules exist. Forgetting the cost behind them. Forgetting that safety is fragile and must be believed in, not performed.SOLAS is written in sacrifice.And every time it is respected,those lives are honored.This is not an ending.It is a reminder.

  23. 14

    SOLAS - Episode 11 "Maritime Security & the ISPS Code"

    Maritime Security & the ISPS Code: When the Threat Is Not an AccidentNot every danger at sea comes from weather, machinery, or human error.Some threats arrive with intention.In Episode 11 of Seafarer’s Way, Captain Rommel explores SOLAS Chapter XI-2 and the ISPS Code — Maritime Security — through the human side of vigilance, awareness, and preparedness in a world where ships are no longer just vessels, but potential targets.This episode looks beyond fences, passes, and procedures to explain why security is fundamentally about people and behavior. It asks listeners to reflect on moments they may recognize: something that didn’t feel right, a routine that became predictable, a detail that was easy to ignore. These moments, often dismissed, are where security failures begin.Captain Rommel explains how global events reshaped maritime security and why the ISPS Code was introduced to protect ships, ports, and — most importantly — the people onboard. From piracy hotspots to port access control, the episode highlights how treating ISPS as “just paperwork” has made ships vulnerable, while vigilance and training have saved lives.Listeners will learn why security levels are not administrative labels, but indicators of readiness. Why predictability is one of the greatest risks onboard. And why security is not the responsibility of one officer alone, but a shared mindset that depends on every crew member speaking up.This episode also explores an uncomfortable truth: most security breaches begin quietly. They don’t start with violence. They start with complacency and silence.SOLAS Chapter XI-2 exists to remind us that security is not about fear — it is about awareness.It is about noticing what doesn’t belong.And acting before intention becomes harm.Because when the threat is deliberate,preparation is the only protection.

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    SOLAS - Episode 10 "ISM Code”

    The ISM Code: When the System Exists… but Safety Depends on PeopleMost maritime accidents don’t begin with broken equipment.They begin with silence.In Episode 10 of Seafarer’s Way, Captain Rommel explores SOLAS Chapter IX — the International Safety Management (ISM) Code — not as a manual or an audit requirement, but as a deeply human system built around behavior, trust, and decision-making under pressure.This episode looks beyond procedures and paperwork to ask the uncomfortable questions: Why do accidents still happen in companies that are “fully compliant”? Why do near misses go unreported? Why do people follow procedures they know don’t quite fit the situation — or stay quiet when something feels wrong?The ISM Code was created after investigations revealed a hard truth: many disasters occurred not because rules were missing, but because communication failed, concerns were ignored, and safety culture was weak. Ships had manuals. Companies had systems. But people didn’t feel safe speaking up.Captain Rommel reflects on how safety culture actually shows itself — in small, everyday moments. A junior officer deciding whether to challenge a decision. A crew member is debating whether to report a defect. A Master choosing between schedule pressure and safety. These moments, often invisible, are where ISM either lives or fails.This episode also examines one of the most misunderstood ideas in maritime safety: that ISM is not about preventing mistakes. Mistakes are inevitable. ISM exists to prevent the same mistake from happening again — by learning honestly, without blame, and without fear.Listeners will hear why near misses are some of the most valuable safety signals a company can receive — and why failing to act on them is a warning sign of deeper system failure. The episode also explores the reality of the Master’s overriding authority, and the difference between authority that is written down and authority that is truly supported.This is not an episode about audits.It is about people.Because inspectors leave.Paperwork ends.But emergencies don’t wait.SOLAS Chapter IX exists to remind us that safety is not automatic.It is intentional.And it depends on whether people feel supported enough to speak — before silence becomes an accident.

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    SOLAS - Episode 9 " CARGO AND DANGEROUS GOODS"

    Cargo & Dangerous Goods: What the Ship Carries Can Change EverythingCargo is easy to underestimate.Most of the time, it sits quietly behind steel bulkheads or inside sealed containers. It doesn’t look dangerous. It doesn’t make noise. And it often feels like “someone else’s responsibility.”Until it shifts.Until it reacts.Until it heats up.Until it burns.In Episode 9 of Seafarer’s Way, Captain Rommel explores SOLAS Chapters VI and VII — Cargoes and Dangerous Goods — and reveals why cargo is one of the most underestimated threats at sea. Ships do not only face danger from weather and machinery; they face danger from what they carry, and from what that cargo does under pressure, motion, moisture, and heat.This episode breaks down cargo safety in plain, practical terms: stowage, securing, cargo information, weight distribution, and why “ordinary” cargo can still turn deadly when stability and stress are ignored. It also takes listeners into the darker side of cargo operations: misdeclared dangerous goods, incorrect documentation, and the reality that crews are often left to fight emergencies involving cargo they were never properly warned about.Captain Rommel touches on modern incidents where misdeclared cargo — including lithium batteries — contributed to major fires at sea, forcing crews into prolonged firefighting operations and even abandon-ship situations. These events are reminders that cargo documentation is not office paperwork; it is survival information. In an emergency, those details determine whether the crew uses the right method — or makes a decision that worsens the situation.This episode also highlights a hard truth: once the ship sails, the cargo is no longer just a commercial product. It becomes a force governed by physics. And if something goes wrong, the ship and crew pay the price first.SOLAS Chapters VI and VII exist because cargo has sunk ships, burned ships, and killed crews — often without warning.Cargo does not read the manifest.It behaves according to nature.And that is why what you carry… matters.

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    SOLAS - Episode 8 "SURVEYS and CERTIFICATION"

    Surveys & Certification: When the Paper Says Safe… but the Sea DecidesCertificates feel reassuring.They’re stamped, signed, and valid — proof that a ship has been inspected, approved, and declared fit to sail.But here is the uncomfortable truth:a certificate does not guarantee safety.It only proves that, at a specific moment in time, someone believed the ship met the standard.In this reflective episode of Seafarer’s Way, Captain Rommel explores SOLAS Chapter I — Surveys and Certification — and reveals why this “quiet” chapter is one of the most important safeguards in modern shipping. Because many maritime disasters do not begin with storms or collisions. They begin slowly: corrosion ignored, defects normalized, temporary repairs extended, and hazards hidden behind clean paperwork.This episode looks into the purpose of surveys: initial, annual, intermediate, renewal, and additional surveys after damage. Not as repetitive bureaucracy, but as a cycle designed to prevent a dangerous illusion — the belief that safety is permanent once declared.Listeners will be taken into the reality of what happens between surveys: the long gaps where risk grows quietly and small defects become accepted “normal.” It is in those gaps where safety culture is tested — and where honesty matters most.Captain Rommel also touches on real tragedies that revealed the gap between documentation and reality, including cases where ships carried valid certification while structural weakness and corrosion were already threatening the vessel’s survival. The lesson is sobering: paper can look perfect while steel quietly fails.This episode challenges listeners to rethink what certification truly means. Surveys are not meant to “catch” crews — they are meant to protect them. But a safety system can only work when the crew and the company treat it with integrity.Because the sea does not care about stamps.It cares about maintenance.It cares about discipline.And it cares about the truth.

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    SOLAS - Episode 7 "FIRE AT SEA"

    Fire at Sea (Deep Dive): What Fire Does to the MindFire at sea is not just a physical emergency.It is a psychological one.In Episode 7 of Seafarer’s Way, Captain Rommel returns to SOLAS Chapter II-2 — Fire Safety — but from a deeper, more human perspective. This episode goes beyond equipment and procedures to explore what fire does to the mind, and why fear, confusion, and loss of clarity have been at the center of so many maritime fire tragedies.Fire behaves differently at sea. Ships are enclosed steel environments where heat has nowhere to escape and smoke becomes the silent killer. This episode explains why most victims of shipboard fires do not die from burns, but from smoke — and why disorientation, loss of visibility, and panic can overwhelm even experienced crews.Through real-world tragedies such as the Scandinavian Star fire, listeners are reminded how quickly smoke-filled corridors can trap people who know the ship well, and how those losses reshaped fire boundaries, escape route markings, emergency lighting, and drill requirements across the industry.Captain Rommel also explores the psychology of panic: why people freeze, rush, forget training, or abandon roles during real fires — not because they are unprepared, but because fear hijacks decision-making. This is why SOLAS emphasizes drills, repetition, and discipline — not to test knowledge, but to condition response when the senses can no longer be trusted.The episode addresses common but dangerous behaviors, including rushing drills, leaving fire doors open for convenience, and hesitating to activate fixed firefighting systems out of fear of consequences. These moments of hesitation, often rooted in human emotion, can decide whether a fire is contained or allowed to grow.Fire does not respect rank.It does not respect experience.It respects preparation.SOLAS Chapter II-2 exists because fire has already taught the industry what happens when discipline gives way to fear.

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    SOLAS - Episode 6 "CONSTRUCTION, STABILITY AND WATERTIGHT INTEGRITY"

    Construction, Stability & Watertight Integrity: When the Sea Enters the ShipThere is a moment every seafarer hopes never comes — the moment when water enters the ship where it should not be.In Episode 6 of Seafarer’s Way, Captain Rommel explores SOLAS Chapter II-1: Construction, Stability, and Watertight Integrity — one of the most critical, and often misunderstood, pillars of maritime safety. This episode is not about formulas or drawings. It is about time, discipline, and the thin line between survivability and disaster.Flooding is different from other emergencies. Fire gives you a chance to fight. Navigation gives you a chance to correct. Flooding does not wait. Once water breaches the hull or crosses a watertight boundary, the clock starts ticking — quietly, relentlessly.This episode reflects on real tragedies that reshaped stability rules, including the capsizing of the Herald of Free Enterprise, where calm weather and routine operations masked a fatal vulnerability. It also touches on modern passenger ship accidents that revealed how quickly stability can be lost when watertight integrity is compromised, even on advanced vessels.Captain Rommel breaks down complex ideas like stability and free surface effect in plain, human terms — explaining why a ship’s ability to recover after being pushed by the sea is what ultimately keeps people alive. Listeners are reminded that watertight doors, subdivision, and structural strength are not design inconveniences, but time-buying measures written in response to lives already lost.This episode also confronts an uncomfortable truth: many flooding casualties did not result from catastrophic damage alone, but from small decisions — doors left open, leaks ignored, limits underestimated. SOLAS Chapter II-1 exists because water is patient, and discipline is often the first thing tested.Construction and stability are not just engineering concepts.They are promises.Promises that when the ship is hurt, she will fight long enough to give her people a chance.

  29. 8

    SOLAS - Episode 5 "SAFETY OF NAVIGATION"

    Safety of Navigation: Every Mile Is a DecisionNavigation accidents rarely begin with alarms.They begin quietly — with confidence, routine, and assumptions that feel harmless in the moment.In this episode of Seafarer’s Way, Captain Rommel takes listeners into the real meaning of SOLAS Chapter V: Safety of Navigation. Not as a technical lecture, but as a conversation about judgment, awareness, and the small decisions that silently shape every voyage.This episode explores why navigation is uniquely dangerous at sea. Fire and flooding announce themselves. Navigation mistakes don’t. The ship keeps moving. The sea stays calm. And only later does reality reveal itself — sometimes with devastating consequences.Drawing from real incidents, including the grounding of the Royal Majesty and major collisions caused by poor lookout and overreliance on electronic systems, this episode highlights a hard truth of modern shipping: technology is a tool, not a navigator.Listeners will understand why SOLAS Chapter V emphasizes voyage planning, lookout, bridge teamwork, weather awareness, and routeing systems. Not because seafarers lack skill — but because familiarity breeds comfort, and comfort erodes vigilance.Captain Rommel reflects on how many navigation accidents are not caused by one dramatic mistake, but by a chain of small decisions that felt reasonable at the time. A missed cross-check. A delayed course alteration. A lookout who wasn’t really looking.This episode challenges listeners to rethink how they approach navigation — not as a routine task, but as a continuous process of awareness and responsibility.SOLAS Chapter V exists because the sea does not forgive assumptions.Every mile is a decision.And every decision leaves a trace.

  30. 7

    Modern SOLAS and the Misunderstood requirement

    Modern SOLAS is not a relic of maritime history.It is alive — revised, amended, and strengthened every time the sea exposes a weakness we failed to see before.In this segment, we step away from dates and documents and look at what SOLAS has become today: a living agreement between nations, companies, and seafarers that safety must never stop evolving. As ships grew larger, routes became busier, and technology more complex, SOLAS adapted — adding new chapters, new requirements, and new expectations.Modern SOLAS reflects hard truths learned from tragedy: that fire spreads faster in enclosed steel spaces, that flooding overwhelms ships in minutes, that silence on the radio can cost lives, and that human behavior is just as critical as design. It is why today’s vessels are divided into fire zones, fitted with advanced life-saving appliances, connected to global distress systems, and managed under structured safety frameworks.This segment reminds listeners that SOLAS is not about perfection — it is about learning. It exists not because the industry got everything right, but because it chose to remember its failures and turn them into protection for the next voyage.Modern SOLAS is the sea reminding us: “I have shown you what happens before. Do not ignore it again.”The Most Misunderstood SOLAS RequirementThere is one mistake made on ships all over the world — quietly, repeatedly, and often without bad intention.Treating SOLAS requirements as something to satisfy inspectors, instead of something meant to protect lives.In this segment, we confront the most misunderstood truth about SOLAS: that compliance is not the goal — preparedness is. Drills are rushed. Muster lists are signed but not memorized. Fire doors are propped open for convenience. Checks are done because they are required, not because they are believed in.SOLAS was never written for inspections. Inspectors leave.Emergencies don’t.The rules were designed for moments when alarms are real, visibility is gone, communication is chaotic, and fear takes over. In those moments, no one reaches for a regulation book. They rely on habits, muscle memory, and training that was either taken seriously — or not.This segment challenges listeners to rethink how they view SOLAS. Not as paperwork. Not as a burden. But as a quiet system built to support them when stress erases clarity and seconds matter more than authority.The most misunderstood requirement is not technical.It is mental: taking SOLAS seriously before you need it.

  31. 6

    SOLAS - Episode 4 "RADIO COMMUNICATION"

    The Moment You Call for HelpAt sea, isolation is real.And sometimes, the only thing standing between disaster and survival… is a voice.In this deeply emotional episode of Seafarer’s Way, Captain Rommel explores SOLAS Chapter IV — Radio Communications — through the human side of distress calls, watchkeeping, and the unseen network that listens when everything else is failing.This episode is not about buttons and frequencies.It’s about what it feels like to press the distress button knowing your voice might carry fear, hope, and responsibility all at once.Listeners are invited to imagine the moment when hands shake, words don’t come easily, and training takes over. The quiet power of a calm “Mayday” spoken into the dark. The relief of hearing another voice answer back.Captain Rommel reflects on why radio communication is one of the most life-saving advances in maritime history. Before SOLAS Chapter IV and GMDSS, ships disappeared silently — no position, no last words, no chance. Today, even if a vessel is lost, its call for help can still be heard.This episode highlights the silent heroes of maritime safety: EPIRBs that activate when no one can speak, radio watches that catch faint calls in heavy static, and crews who understand that listening is just as important as transmitting.You’ll also hear why treating radio checks as routine can be dangerous, why continuous watchkeeping matters, and why respect for radio equipment is ultimately respect for human life.Radio communication is not just technology.It is a connection.It is a reassurance.It is a hope traveling across the ocean.SOLAS Chapter IV exists so that no ship ever has to disappear without being heard.And in the middle of the sea, that makes all the difference.

  32. 5

    SOLAS - Episode 3 "ABANDONSHIP"

    When Staying Onboard Is No Longer an OptionThere is a moment every seafarer hopes never comes — the moment when the ship that has protected you can no longer do so.In Episode 3 of Seafarer’s Way, Captain Rommel speaks honestly and calmly about abandon ship — not as a dramatic scene from a movie, but as a deeply human decision made under pressure, fear, and responsibility.This episode asks you to imagine waking in the middle of the night to alarms, shouting, and a vessel already listing. Not during a drill. Not during training. But for real. And in that moment, asking yourself one question: Do I know exactly what to do?Drawing lessons from real maritime tragedies, including the sinking of the ferry Estonia, this episode explores why survival is not just about having lifeboats onboard — but about being able to reach them, launch them, and survive long enough to be rescued.Captain Rommel explains why SOLAS Chapter III is not just about equipment. It is about the entire journey from alarm to survival: muster lists, escape routes, lighting, drills, immersion suits, and crew familiarity. Every detail exists because, at some point in history, people believed they had more time than they did.This episode challenges listeners to be honest with themselves. Do you truly know your muster station? Your primary and secondary duties? Or do you rely on the idea that you’ll “figure it out” when the time comes?You’ll hear why panic is the enemy of survival, why rushing causes mistakes, and why SOLAS doesn’t ask seafarers to be heroes — it asks them to be prepared.Abandon ship is not about fear.It’s about acceptance.Acceptance that discipline, training, and calm decision-making are what stand between survival and tragedy.This episode is a quiet reminder that drills are rehearsals for moments that don’t allow second chances.

  33. 4

    SOLAS - Episode 2 "FIRE"

    Why Fire Is Every Seafarer’s FearFire at sea is different.It doesn’t knock.It doesn’t give warnings you can prepare for.It starts quietly — often when most of the ship is asleep — and then it spreads with a speed that turns routine into chaos.In this episode of Seafarer’s Way, Captain Rommel takes you into the reality of fire onboard a vessel — not as a checklist, not as a drill, but as an experience every seafarer fears and respects.This is not a technical lecture about extinguishers and alarms.This is a conversation about what really happens when smoke fills a passageway, visibility disappears, radios become noisy, and people forget what they thought they knew.You’ll hear why fire is uniquely dangerous at sea — why a ship, unlike a building ashore, becomes a sealed steel box where heat has nowhere to escape and smoke becomes the silent killer. You’ll understand why SOLAS Chapter II-2 assumes fires will happen, and why it focuses so heavily on prevention, containment, detection, and crew readiness.Captain Rommel shares real-world observations from incidents where the fire itself wasn’t the biggest problem — confusion was. People went to the wrong stations. Fire doors were left open. Communication broke down. Not because crews didn’t care, but because mindset and discipline failed under pressure.This episode also reflects on real tragedies, including passenger ship fires that reshaped global fire safety standards. Lives were lost not because rules were missing — but because they hadn’t yet been learned the hard way.You’ll come away understanding why smoke, not flames, kills most victims of shipboard fires. Why fire doors matter more than convenience. Why drills should never be rushed. And why preparation, not bravery, is what fire truly respects.This episode is a reminder that SOLAS does not exist to make life difficult — it exists because fire has already taught the industry what happens when safety is taken lightly.Fire doesn’t care about rank.It doesn’t care about experience.It only respects preparation.

  34. 3

    Why SOLAS

    This episode is a preparation for Episode 1, which will dive deep into every Chapter of SOLAS.

  35. 2

    SOLAS

    Why these RULES exist.From the Titanic disaster to the formation of the first SOLAS convention.This is not merely memorizing the regulations, but understanding them. Regulations that exist to protect us in the memories of those lives that have been sacrificed.

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

Making Seafaring Career easier by making all the Regulations on board easy to understand.First will be SOLAS, the Bible of Seafarers and will continue with the remaining conventions.

HOSTED BY

cyonsalinas

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