
Giant cargo ship crashes into man's garden - and he doesn't even wake up
A 10,000 cargo ship crashed into Johan Helberg's home in Norway but the sound of the collision did not even wake him up - the huge vessel was metres away from destroying his house
A 10,000 tonne cargo ship crashed into a man's front garden but the huge impact was not enough to wake him up from his sleep. Johan Helberg woke up to the shocking sight of a huge cargo ship wedged into his garden, just metres away from destroying his home.
The unusually calm Norwegian homeowner said: "Five metres further south, the ship would have entered the bedroom, and that would have been particularly unpleasant." The extraordinary crash happened when a Cypriot-flagged NCL Salten cargo ship - travelling from the Trondheim Fjord to Orkanger - unexpectedly went off course and hit the property at around 5am local time. Although the 135 metre vessel crashing into his garden did not wake him up, Johan said he only realised when his neighbour called him.
The homeowner said he was "quite astonished" when he eventually saw the enormous cargo ship pushed into his garden. Johan told the Guardian: "I went to the window and was quite astonished to see a big ship.
"I had to bend my neck to see the top of it. It was so unreal. Normally ships turn left or right into the fjord. But this went straight ahead. It was very close to the house."
Neighbour Jostein Jorgensen isn't as much of a heavy sleeper and the sound of the vessel crashing into the garden at full speed woke him up immediately. Jostein said: "I was sure that he was already outside, but no, there was no sign of life. I rang the doorbell many times and nothing.
"And it was only when I called him on the phone that I managed to contact him." Johan added: "The doorbell rang at a time of day when I don't like to open."
None of the 16 crew members, which included people from Norway, Ukraine, Lithuania, and Russia, on board were injured in the scary collision. Thankfully no oil spills were reported after the crash.
Officials have launched an investigation into whether a technical failure or human error was behind the vehicle going off course. The chief executive of the shipping firm NCL, Bente Hetland, said there was "no reason to believe this was intentional."
He added: "At present time, we do not know what caused the incident and are awaiting the conclusion of the ongoing investigation by the relevant authorities."
One crew member is said to currently be held by police as a suspect. The ship has remained lodged into the garden as authorities have to wait until a high tide to try and get the boat away from Johan's home.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Guardian
14 hours ago
- The Guardian
Killer sudoku 973
Click here to access the print version. Normal sudoku rules apply, except the numbers in the cells contained within dotted lines add up to the figures in the corner. No number can be repeated within each shape formed by dotted lines. To see the completed puzzle, buy the next issue of the Guardian (for puzzles published Monday to Thursday). Solutions to Friday and Saturday puzzles are given in either Saturday's or Monday's edition.


The Guardian
14 hours ago
- The Guardian
Sudoku 6,924 expert
Click here to access the print version. Fill the grid so that every row, every column and every 3x3 box contains the numbers 1 to 9. To see the completed puzzle, buy the next issue of the Guardian (for puzzles published Monday to Thursday). Solutions to Friday and Saturday puzzles are given in either Saturday's or Monday's edition.


The Guardian
a day ago
- The Guardian
The Swiss village buried by a glacier collapse
The Swiss village of Blatten was wiped out in seconds. A glacier collapsed above the village on 28 May, triggering a landslide. The 300 residents had been evacuated a week earlier, but a 64-year-old man who is believed to have stayed is missing. Tess McClure, the Guardian's commissioning editor for the Age of Extinction, reported on the aftermath. 'The Birch glacier, which sits above Blatten, is this ancient slab of ice,' she tells Helen Pidd. 'It had been loaded up with rocks and debris from the mountain above and just gave way and crumbled. 'The millions of tonnes of rock, enormous chunks of ice, all of the mud and trees and debris that it had swept up along the way, all of that just fell down the mountain on to Blatten village.' It will take time for scientists to determine the role that the climate crisis may have played in the collapse, but Tess explains why global heating will make events like this more common. 'What we can say is, basically, climate change is affecting all of the ingredients for a disaster like this. So we're seeing glaciers around the world melt at an incredible rate. They're shrinking, they're cracking, they're growing more unstable. 'We're also seeing permafrost and ice, which in an environment like this is just the glue that holds parts of the earth, parts of the mountain, is kind of holding it all together, that permafrost is also melting. 'And we also know that climate change, higher temperatures and mountains are linked, from scientific studies, to higher rates of rockfall and higher rates of that kind of disintegration. So we can't sort of say yes, the Birch glacier was climate change and climate change alone, but we can look at all of these factors, and all of them are related to global heating.' Support the Guardian today: