More Gowanus soon, but for now, this follows a post from a few years back called “boxes on ships,” but what begs for attention here is the number of less common containers, these by a company called Agmark.

Maersk Vallvik actually has two centers of liquid bulk containers, Agmark toward the stern and Bertschi farther forward.

Bertschi is a Swiss company that transports, among many other things, cocoa butter, i.e., their self-described “heaven.”
All this brings me to what appears to be the biggest concentration of tanks . . . . Agmark’s. According to their site, they transport the following: “Dairy products, concentrated and single strength fruit juices, vegetable oils, spirits, wine, chocolate, alcohol, beverage preparations, essences, hot or cold bulk liquids, food products, chemicals, and fuels.”

So, this could have cold fruit juice, just like these, but in parcels rather than “shipfulls.” Others carry “rock juice” either by the shipfull or in parcels.

But i digress. I don’t know what Vallvik carried in those tanks; my point here is simply that she carried a lot of those tanks.

Back in 2013 this same vessel called attention for another type of container as here.

All photos, WVD. And that small craft in the photo above, maybe that’s in tomorrow’s post.
Another unusual container type, CATS, was featured here 10 years ago.
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January 5, 2021 at 4:13 pm
Cameron Simmons
Will, I have also seen liquid juice carried in standard 20’ containers. The shipper inserts a large flexible bag inside and then fills it with the liquid. Really messy when the vinyl bag springs a leak. In our case we had apple juice everywhere.
January 5, 2021 at 4:57 pm
tugster
THAT would be a mess!