The Denver Post

Even idle, cruise ships still enthrall

- By Ceylan Yeginsu

As the ferry slowly turned the corner of the Hengistbur­y headland off Britain’s southwest coast, the passengers on board stood up and gaped at the silhouette­s of giant cruise ships moored in the distance, letting out bursts of exhilarati­on as the vessels came into focus.

“What a beauty. What a sight,” one man shouted as he scuttled to the front of the boat to take a closer look. “They’re alive. They’re breathing,” said another, pointing to the plumes of smoke visible through his binoculars. “Absolutely stunning,” said a woman, her hand resting on her heart. “I just can’t wait to hop back on.”

Avid European cruise ship fans, who would normally be traveling around the world this time of year but have had their expedition­s canceled to prevent the spread of the coronaviru­s, are instead flocking to the southern coast of Britain to catch a glimpse of the empty liners. These vessels, belonging to various cruise companies, are anchored in small clusters across the English Channel.

The interest has been so high that Paul Derham, a former deputy captain for P& O cruises, has deployed one of his small passenger ferry boats in Dorset to give people close- up tours of the ships. The idea, first announced on his Facebook page in August, became an instant success, with the tours booking up within hours.

“One day I noticed some of the most famous cruise ships anchored right here in my back garden, and I just wanted to give people the rare opportunit­y to see them close up,” Derham said as he steered his boat toward the vessels. “It’s really a unique, spectacula­r sight.”

As he pulled up closer to the 225,282- ton Allure of the Seas, the 24 ferry passengers, suddenly dwarfed by the giant blue hull of the ship, lined up to take selfies as if they had just spotted a celebrity. The 6,780- person vessel, operated by Royal Caribbean Internatio­nal, is known to be one of the largest and liveliest ships in the world, but on this day it appeared eerily empty with its lights out and curtains drawn.

The cruise fans did not allow the atmosphere to dampen their spirits. For many of them, the tour was a way to relive past excursions, when the ships were filled with music, bright lights, bustling restaurant­s and people sprawled out across the lido decks.

“It’s like taking your own hotel with you wherever you want to go, without any hassle of changing rooms and luggage,” said Victor Francisco, a fashion salesman, who had been hoping to get a glimpse of the P& O- operated Aurora on the tour. He had booked it for a December cruise, before it was canceled.

“It’s also so much more than that,” he continued. “You get to have these really special experience­s like dressing for dinners and cocktail parties with the captain and attending lectures with maritime historians. But the best part is the inner peace and pleasure you get from being out at sea and away from everything.”

Some 30 million people sailed on a cruise last year, helping the $ 150 billion cruise industry to continue its record growth over the last decade. But now most of the nearly 350 vessels operated by major cruise companies worldwide are idle in open waters or docked at ports.

A no- sail order issued by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for all U. S. cruises is in place until Sept. 30. In most European countries, cruises remain restricted until local authoritie­s deem it safe to resume operations. Industry officials remain optimistic that cruising will bounce back, but the unpredicta­bility of the pandemic is forcing many companies to consider what to do with fleets should the financial challenges become untenable.

Most of the cruisegoer­s touring Britain’s southern coast said they could not wait to get back on the ships and had booked excursions for next year, even as their cruises for 2020 continue to be canceled.

Never mind that cruise ships played a significan­t role in the initial spread of the coronaviru­s and several operators continued to sail despite outbreaks on their ships.

Gay Courter, a 75- year- old American novelist and avid cruisegoer, was stranded on the Diamond Princess in Japan in February as hundreds of guests

and crew members became infected with the virus. Luckily, Courter did not contract the virus, but her experience in quarantine — the first 12 days confined to her cabin, followed by 15 days at a U. S. Air Force base in Texas — was so distressin­g that she received therapy for post- traumatic stress disorder when she returned home.

Still, every day she contemplat­es when she will return to a cruise.

“I understand why so many people are eager to go back,” she said in a telephone interview. Courter said cruising triggers endorphins, and “like a drug, it becomes addictive, and I think many people can’t find that level of satisfacti­on anywhere else.”

Yet Courter said she cannot realistica­lly consider cruising until an effective vaccine becomes available and everybody on board is inoculated.

“I think a lot of people are in denial,” she said. “We need a full prescripti­on that includes vaccines, rapid testing and even medication in case you get infected when you are out in the middle of the Indian Ocean.”

Several cruise companies that resumed operations over the summer were forced to cut short their expedition­s because of suspected or confirmed infections on board.

Some European cruise operators, like the Italian line Costa, have started reduced- capacity local cruises within Italy and require all crew members and guests to be tested before they board the vessel.

Craig Lee tested positive for the virus on the Diamond Princess even after two weeks of quarantine in his windowless cabin. The retired schoolteac­her from Canada said he could not imagine going back on a cruise without the requiremen­t of mandatory testing.

“I was lucky because I was asymptomat­ic and did not have any problems breathing, but then you think of all the people you came into contact with during the trip, and that is very concerning,” Lee, 72, said in a telephone interview.

When Canada lifts its travel restrictio­ns, Lee plans to travel to England to see his relatives and then explore small cruise routes from Britain to Europe.

“I trust the Europeans a lot more than I do the Americans right now,” he said, laughing.

Other cruise loyalists, including those who traveled to Dorset to view the idled ships, said they trusted the operators to take all the necessary precaution­s in the future.

Shannon Wright, a 45- year- old beautician, drove six hours with her family to Osmington Mills, a coastal hamlet in Dorset that offers some of the best views of the ships.

“Nobody really knew how the virus worked at the beginning, and now that they do, I trust that they will take all the right measures,” she said.

While the ship sightseers have been part of a tourism wave welcomed by coastal communitie­s, some local residents worry about the ships’ effect on the environmen­t, especially in the seaside town of Weymouth, where people have noticed a new yellow smog in the atmosphere.

Unlike planes, which are switched off when they are not being used, cruise ships run auxiliary engines when moored at sea, enabling power for maintenanc­e procedures and safety precaution­s in the event of bad weather.

“Most cruise ships operate on heavy fuel oil, which is really thick, toxic, bottom- of- the- barrel fuel,” said Lucy Gilliam, an aviation and shipping campaigner for Transport & Environmen­t, a nonprofit group that promotes sustainabl­e transport.

“When anchored they have a base load of energy demand for air filtration systems, keeping the lights on, keeping the auxiliary engines ticking over, being able to do all of that maintenanc­e and cater for the skeleton staff that are on board,” she explained. “It’s not going to be at the same level as if they had a full passenger load, but the chimneys are still going to be pumping out pollutants.”

Local officials in Dorset rejected claims that the cruise ships were causing smog over Weymouth Bay. “The summer weather we have been experienci­ng is causing temperatur­e inversions — these are responsibl­e for producing smog, trapping the pollutants produced by all vehicles, fires and industrial activities,” a spokeswoma­n for the Dorset council said in an email.

All the cruise ships anchored across the British coast are required to meet environmen­tal regulation­s imposed by the Internatio­nal Maritime Organizati­on, which are strictly enforced, according to the British Maritime and Coastguard Agency.

“The U. K. monitors emissions from vessels very closely. They must use fuel within approved limits to make sure they comply with these regulation­s,” a spokeswoma­n for the agency said in an email.

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 ?? Photos by Guy Martin, © The New York Times Co. ?? An early evening on the shoreline in Weymouth, England on Sept. 8, with cruise ships in the distance.
Photos by Guy Martin, © The New York Times Co. An early evening on the shoreline in Weymouth, England on Sept. 8, with cruise ships in the distance.
 ??  ?? Passengers wave at idled cruise ships during a day trip in Bournemout­h, England, on Sept. 8.
Passengers wave at idled cruise ships during a day trip in Bournemout­h, England, on Sept. 8.

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