- Squalid, smelly and steamy, the crippled ship Carnival Triumph limped toward port Thursday, its passengers and crew looking forward to an end to their hellish cruise.
The laborious slog through the Gulf of Mexico tested not only the senses of the thousands on board, but their patience as well.
Rough weather overnight
slowed the Triumph and the tugboats leading it to Mobile, Alabama. The
ship, now accompanied by four tugboats, is expected to arrive at the
port between 8 and 11 p.m. (9 p.m. to midnight ET), according to the
latest guidance. At one point it had been expected as early as 3 p.m.
It's been a nightmare
five days for the 3,143 passengers and 1,086 crew members on board the
900-foot, 14-story Triumph, where a fire broke out in the engine room
early Sunday.
'Everyone will need psychological help'
Carnival's history of cruise nightmares
Cruise passenger: There is raw sewage
No hot water, air conditioning on Triumph
Much of the ship's
electrical power went down in the fire, causing widespread malfunctions,
including taking out sanitary systems.
On Wednesday, a U.S.
Coast Guard helicopter from Mobile transferred 3,000 pounds of
equipment, including a generator to help provide power on the Triumph.
Passengers have reported sewage sloshing around in hallways, flooded rooms and trouble getting enough to eat.
"It's disgusting. It's the worst thing ever," passenger Ann Barlow said.
A 'floating petri dish'
Jorge Rodriguez, a doctor of internal medicine, said the sordid conditions on board make the Triumph a "floating petri dish."
"So far, there hasn't
been an outbreak of anything, but ... it's in the Gulf. It's warm," he
said. "You don't have sanitary conditions, so hopefully they'll get back
to shore ... before anything breaks out."
Raw sewage is a major
health risk, Rodriguez said, but respiratory infections could also
spread quickly. Spoiling food could unleash E. coli bacteria, salmonella
and other types of food poisoning.
"People on that cruise
need to be careful for the next day to couple of weeks," he said. "They
may have contracted something that's just sort of festering under the
surface and won't come to full-blown infectious status for the next
couple of weeks."
Carnival promises an army of about 200 employees will take care of its passengers once they clear customs.
Passengers can board buses to Galveston or Houston, Texas, or spend the night in a hotel in New Orleans.
Carnival said it has
reserved and arranged approximately 100 motor coaches, more than 1,500
New Orleans hotel rooms, multiple charter flights from New Orleans to
Houston on Friday and transportation from Houston to the Port of
Galveston so that guests may retrieve their cars if they drove to the
port.
Compensation for travelers
The cruise line said it
would give each passenger $500, a free flight home, a full refund for
their trip and for most expenses on board, as well as a credit for
another cruise.
Brent Nutt, whose wife, Bethany, is on the ship, said it's not worth it.
"First of all, we only
paid $350 for her to go on this cruise. Her safety and her well-being
are worth a whole lot more than $350," he said.
And the free stuff?
"I promise you, none of my family members that are on there will probably ever, ever take another cruise," he said.
The Coast Guard and the
National Transportation Safety Board launched an investigation into the
cause of the engine room fire. Because the Carnival Triumph is a
Bahamian-flagged vessel, the Bahamas Maritime Authority is the primary
investigative agency.
Passenger rights
Travelers have few
options for compensation in these cases, other than what the cruise line
is already offering, according to travel expert Jason Clampet of Skift.com, a travel website.
"The passengers on the
ship aren't going to have a great deal of recourse when they get home,"
he said. Travel "insurance really doesn't cover this sort of thing.
Their trip wasn't interrupted and they aren't incurring extra expenses
... so they can't be compensated that way."
Still, there's no denying that the fire and resulting bad PR will hurt Carnival.
"It's a terrible sight,
thinking of people trapped on a ship with limited food and filthy
conditions, so I think people will think twice about taking a cruise,"
Clampet said.
The tension grows
Nerves are frayed on
board, where passengers have waited in food lines for as long as four
hours, said Nick Ware, whose mother is on the ship with her boyfriend.
Ware said arguments are breaking out after people at the front of lines
grab as many provisions as they can.
"The person in the front
of the line is allowed to take however much he wants, so people see the
person in front of them taking too much, (and) they start to get
concerned they're not going to get any," Ware said.
People at the rear of the line ended up with buns and condiments -- no burger patties, he said.
Meanwhile, on shore, Kim McKerreghan waited at the Port of Mobile, worried about her 10-year-old daughter and her ex-husband.
Her daughter called her in a panic Sunday after the fire broke out.
McKerreghan said the call was absolutely "gut-wrenching."
"Momma, please just come
get me, just come get me. It's so hot. I don't want to be here, Momma.
Come get me, please," the scared daughter told her, McKerreghan said.
"Your heart stops, your stomach knots up and you just want to fall to
the ground."
Bad luck before
The fire is at least the
second problem for the ship since late January, when it had an issue
with its propulsion system, according to a notice posted on the website
of Carnival senior cruise director John Heald.
And it's not the first fire to disable one of the cruise line's ships.
In 2010, the Carnival
cruise ship Splendor lost power after an engine room fire, leaving it
drifting off the Pacific coast of Mexico. The USS Ronald Reagan ferried
60,000 pounds of supplies for the ship's passengers and crew as the ship
was towed to San Diego.
Anxious family members
McKerreghan drove from Texas with a friend, Mary Poret, whose preteen daughter is on board, with Poret's ex-husband.
Poret also received a frightening call from her daughter, about 30 hours after the fire.
"She was hysterical, crying hysterically. She was scared. She don't know what was going to happen next," Poret said.
"And what broke my heart
the very most was her saying, 'Mommy, I don't know if I'll ever see you
again,' and that's really hard to hear from your 12-year-old daughter."
After this ill-fated
cruise, the Triumph won't host vacationing passengers until at least
mid-April. Carnival has canceled a dozen voyages scheduled between
February 21 and April 13. That makes a total of 14 scratched trips. The
cruise line already had eliminated voyages slated for February 11 and
February 16.
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