Klaipėda, Aug. 14, 2025 — Low clouds cling to the cranes at the edge of the port. The smell of wheat dust hangs in the air as trucks rumble over the cobbles, one after another, their tarps snapping in the wind.
Today’s loading schedule is tight. The bulk carrier moored at Berth 7 has less than eight hours before the forecast turns bad — winds strong enough to shut down operations until tomorrow night. That means the grain convoys from inland terminals have to arrive like clockwork.
On the quay, a dock foreman watches the grabs swing over the hold, spilling golden grain in heavy arcs. He checks his watch more than the load meters. “We can’t miss the weather gap,” he mutters, walking off toward the next crew.
By mid-afternoon, the line of trucks will slow. The last convoy will roll in, the hatches will close, and the ship will ease out past the breakwater — chasing a calm sea before the Baltic changes its mind.