No problem. The load axis isn't in pressure obviously, as there is no pressure sensor. Its 'TP', or 'theoretical pulsewidth'. The numbers (13 to 66) your looking at above are unscaled, which is how most people prefer to view the maps. Here's how it works- the ECU measures some mass of air with the MAF sensor. Then, with the current RPM it calculates the theoretical pulsewidth needed to achieve 14.7:1. This TP value is then used as the load. Its a little odd, but its really just another way of saying 'Volumetric Efficiency'. To see that, think about it like this- the ECU knows the actual mass flow of the engine for a given RPM (via the MAF sensor), and you can calculate the ideal mass flow based on the displacement of the engine (and same RPM). Then the ratio of those two is your actual efficiency (the RPM terms cancel, and you've simply got actual mass flow over ideal mass flow).
Anywho, knowing that the load is really in terms of pulsewidths, its really hard to load the engine enough to need a really long pulsewidth at low RPM, so that part of the map isn't a big deal.