Waterloo Region Record

Passengers opt for ‘cruise to nowhere’

- Brian Witte

MIAMI — When they first boarded the Norwegian Escape a week ago, passengers knew exactly where they were going. Now they have no idea.

The cruise ship, with about 4,000 guests on board, departed from Miami on Sept. 2 and was scheduled to return a week later, after making stops in Honduras, Belize and Mexico.

The boat made it to the Honduran island of Roatan on Monday and Belize the following day. But on Tuesday, passengers were told that their ports of call at Mexico’s Cozumel island and the Costa Maya had been cancelled.

The dangerous and powerful hurricane Irma, which had carved a path of death and destructio­n across a string of Caribbean islands, was headed straight for Florida, home to a fair number of passengers on the ship. Many of those passengers had already switched from relaxation to disaster-preparatio­n mode, and were eager to get home to secure their belongings and ensure the safety of their pets.

Michael Davis, who lives near the water in St. Augustine, Fla., was one of them.

“Once they said: ‘We’re heading back,’ then the mood shifted from vacation time to, ‘All right, let’s get home and get it taken care of,’” said Davis, 42.

But there was only a short window of time to drop them off before it would be too dangerous to dock in Miami. So the ship arrived in port Thursday afternoon, two days early, allowing hundreds of passengers to disembark.

Hundreds more had no reason to get off, however, and knew that vying with Florida residents evacuating the state ahead of the storm for rental cars and flights was a losing propositio­n. So they chose a second option: a “cruise to nowhere.”

The Escape headed back out to sea Thursday evening, with a new manifest of about 4,000 that included both some of the original passengers as well as some fellow travellers who disembarke­d early from a separate ship called the Norwegian Sky. They, too, had decided to prolong their seagoing adventures.

The cruisers have no idea where they are headed or when they will return. A lot of it, they were told, would be up to Irma: which path she decides to take and how long she will linger.

“We said to guests that we cannot confirm when or where you’ll be coming back, but obviously we’ll make every effort to return the ship to port as soon as it’s safe to do so,” said Norwegian Cruise Line spokespers­on Vanessa Picariello.

Picariello said the ship “is heading west,” but she did not have a more precise route. She said the ship will try to make a port of call if it’s safe to do so “but if not, guests will enjoy a cruise to nowhere and be able to be safe and out of the storm.”

 ?? BRIAN WITTE, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Barbara Engel, of Dallas, decided to stay on the Norwegian Escape. Engel said she was unable to get a flight home and felt staying aboard the ship was her best choice.
BRIAN WITTE, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Barbara Engel, of Dallas, decided to stay on the Norwegian Escape. Engel said she was unable to get a flight home and felt staying aboard the ship was her best choice.

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