It isn't really at 90 degrees, though, more like 30. Just looks like it's crosswise. Its bow is stuck in sand. Still I don't buy the wind theory in spite of dust in the air which I hope is why it looks so yellow around the scene.
Here's a satellite view. The appearance of it being crosswise is an illusion. (Remember that the next time there is an argument over camera angles changing the meaning of a picture).
Consider the “sail area” of a couple of square meters on your small boat versus the “sail area” of hundreds, possibly thousands, of square meters of a large container ship and its deck cargo of containers. The influence of even a slight breeze can be enormous.
Touché........ I’ve worked on the water for north of 35 years. I’ve seen countless ships of all sizes in shitty wx. Never Have I seen a ship blown sideways from wind. Only thing I can think of that might have possibly been able to do that is if the ship became a NUC, As in not under command due to a mechanical failure
I could see this as being the case, but if it was having mechanical issues wouldn't they have tugs guiding it through? Maybe it malfunctioned in the canal I dunno, but that would be a mechanical failure issue, not a "wind" issue.
It isn't really at 90 degrees, though, more like 30. Just looks like it's crosswise. Its bow is stuck in sand. Still I don't buy the wind theory in spite of dust in the air which I hope is why it looks so yellow around the scene.
Here's a satellite view. The appearance of it being crosswise is an illusion. (Remember that the next time there is an argument over camera angles changing the meaning of a picture).
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2021/03/24/suez-canal-blocked-huge-container-ship-pictures/satellite-image-showingthe-stuck-cargo-ship/
Consider the “sail area” of a couple of square meters on your small boat versus the “sail area” of hundreds, possibly thousands, of square meters of a large container ship and its deck cargo of containers. The influence of even a slight breeze can be enormous.
Thousands upon thousands of ships sailing thru canals and docking at ports everyday unaffected by wind. Try again.
Touché........ I’ve worked on the water for north of 35 years. I’ve seen countless ships of all sizes in shitty wx. Never Have I seen a ship blown sideways from wind. Only thing I can think of that might have possibly been able to do that is if the ship became a NUC, As in not under command due to a mechanical failure
I could see this as being the case, but if it was having mechanical issues wouldn't they have tugs guiding it through? Maybe it malfunctioned in the canal I dunno, but that would be a mechanical failure issue, not a "wind" issue.