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Gogarty April 17th 05 11:37 AM

Giant wave
 
Anyone know anything more about the cruise ship struck by a giant wave
the other day? Flooded many cabins and caused some injuries but not much
more info available here.


Glenn Ashmore April 17th 05 03:04 PM

The Norwegian Dawn was hit by a rogue wave yesterday morning enroute between
Nassau and NYC. Crossed through a gale that is now NW of Bermuda. Stove in
2 portholes, flooded 62 cabins and slightly injured 4 passengers . They are
in Charleston, SC now making repairs.

--
Glenn Ashmore

I'm building a 45' cutter in strip/composite. Watch my progress (or lack
there of) at: http://www.rutuonline.com
Shameless Commercial Division: http://www.spade-anchor-us.com

"Gogarty" wrote in message
...
Anyone know anything more about the cruise ship struck by a giant wave
the other day? Flooded many cabins and caused some injuries but not much
more info available here.




Peter W. Meek April 17th 05 03:25 PM

On Sun, 17 Apr 2005 10:04:26 -0400, "Glenn Ashmore"
wrote:

The Norwegian Dawn was hit by a rogue wave yesterday morning enroute between
Nassau and NYC. Crossed through a gale that is now NW of Bermuda. Stove in
2 portholes, flooded 62 cabins and slightly injured 4 passengers . They are
in Charleston, SC now making repairs.


Finding news on this is severely hampered by the
existence of a Norwegian band called "Rogue Wave".
Also by Shipping News mis-spelling of rogue as rouge.


Rodney Myrvaagnes April 18th 05 04:09 AM

On Sun, 17 Apr 2005 10:04:26 -0400, "Glenn Ashmore"
wrote:

The Norwegian Dawn was hit by a rogue wave yesterday morning enroute between
Nassau and NYC. Crossed through a gale that is now NW of Bermuda. Stove in
2 portholes, flooded 62 cabins and slightly injured 4 passengers . They are
in Charleston, SC now making repairs.


I wouldn't call the windows on that, or any other modern cruise ship,
'portholes.' I am sure that was one of those we saw regularly coming
and going in the Hudson. Many of them look like glass-walled hotels.

I hope the passengers can enjoy having a good story to tell their
grandchildren, but I wouldn't blame them for being really ****ed right
now.




Rodney Myrvaagnes Opinionated old geezer J36 Gjøa


I wonder if the tourists following the wine-tasting
circuit in 'Sideways' start off by doing the NY Times
crossword in ink as they drive up I-5?

Padeen April 18th 05 06:00 PM

****ed at what? God?

This sounds awfully like, "Who do we blame/sue for this?" The tour company?
The weatherman? I can understand their disappointment, but most of those
cruise tickets are sold at "discount" prices, to people looking for a real
deal for their vacation. Don't they assume some responsibility for the
ships being constructed for the majority of expected weather patterns, not
the extremes? If one looks at statistics of how many vacations are altered
by adverse weather conditions, one might better understand the popularity of
trip insurance.


"Rodney Myrvaagnes" wrote in message
...
On Sun, 17 Apr 2005 10:04:26 -0400, "Glenn Ashmore"
wrote:

The Norwegian Dawn was hit by a rogue wave yesterday morning enroute

between
Nassau and NYC. Crossed through a gale that is now NW of Bermuda. Stove

in
2 portholes, flooded 62 cabins and slightly injured 4 passengers . They

are
in Charleston, SC now making repairs.


I wouldn't call the windows on that, or any other modern cruise ship,
'portholes.' I am sure that was one of those we saw regularly coming
and going in the Hudson. Many of them look like glass-walled hotels.

I hope the passengers can enjoy having a good story to tell their
grandchildren, but I wouldn't blame them for being really ****ed right
now.




Rodney Myrvaagnes Opinionated old geezer J36 Gjøa


I wonder if the tourists following the wine-tasting
circuit in 'Sideways' start off by doing the NY Times
crossword in ink as they drive up I-5?




[email protected] April 18th 05 08:15 PM

Anyone know anything more about the cruise ship struck by a giant wave
the other day? Flooded many cabins and caused some injuries but not
much more info available here. .


http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...2005Apr18.html

or

http://tinyurl.com/dbu9y


Gogarty April 18th 05 09:46 PM

In article ,
says...


Anyone know anything more about the cruise ship struck by a giant wave
the other day? Flooded many cabins and caused some injuries but not
much more info available here. .


"As the battered Norwegian Dawn began to steam home to New York in calmer
waters Sunday, the Coast Guard began investigating whether the ship's
captain sent a distress call during the rollicking storm."

Investigate? Well, did he or did he not?

Rollicking?


Gogarty April 18th 05 09:48 PM

In article ,
says...


Anyone know anything more about the cruise ship struck by a giant wave
the other day? Flooded many cabins and caused some injuries but not
much more info available here. .


http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...2005Apr18.html

or

http://tinyurl.com/dbu9y

Jeez! Who wrote that piece of purple prose? Somebody hoping to provide
fodder to lawyers?


engsol April 18th 05 10:33 PM

On Mon, 18 Apr 2005 16:48:29 -0400, Gogarty wrote:

In article ,
says...


Anyone know anything more about the cruise ship struck by a giant wave
the other day? Flooded many cabins and caused some injuries but not
much more info available here. .


http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...2005Apr18.html

or

http://tinyurl.com/dbu9y

Jeez! Who wrote that piece of purple prose? Somebody hoping to provide
fodder to lawyers?


I liked the "ill-fated ship" part...and the theme to "Titanic". The reporter must
write for the Nat Enquirer too.

Garuda April 19th 05 12:26 AM

My question would be, "where was the vessel?". If a Northeastern is blowing
into the gulf stream then the Captain should have changed course out of the
stream. Somewhat recently, a rather large naval cargo vessel was damaged in a
similar "rouge wave" incident.

"Gogarty" wrote in message
...
In article ,
says...


Anyone know anything more about the cruise ship struck by a giant wave
the other day? Flooded many cabins and caused some injuries but not
much more info available here. .


"As the battered Norwegian Dawn began to steam home to New York in calmer
waters Sunday, the Coast Guard began investigating whether the ship's
captain sent a distress call during the rollicking storm."

Investigate? Well, did he or did he not?

Rollicking?




Capt. Neal® April 19th 05 12:48 AM


"Garuda" wrote in message ...
My question would be, "where was the vessel?". If a Northeastern is blowing
into the gulf stream then the Captain should have changed course out of the
stream. Somewhat recently, a rather large naval cargo vessel was damaged in a
similar "rouge wave" incident.



Duh! In order to get back to port to disembark the passengers where
they boarded it was necessary to cross the Stream! And since when
has it come to pass that passengers feel they are entitled to encounter
no dangers at sea?

CN


Garuda April 19th 05 02:20 AM


"Capt. Neal®" attempted to write something meaningful in
message ...
Duh! In order to get back to port to disembark the passengers where
they boarded it was necessary to cross the Stream! And since when
has it come to pass that passengers feel they are entitled to encounter
no dangers at sea?

CN


Duh yourself, bozo! Charleston is somewhat west of the gulfstream and most
likely the nearest post. What's the point about passengers encounter no dangers
at sea?



Capt. Neal® April 19th 05 02:36 AM


"Garuda" wrote in message ...

"Capt. Neal®" attempted to write something meaningful in
message ...
Duh! In order to get back to port to disembark the passengers where
they boarded it was necessary to cross the Stream! And since when
has it come to pass that passengers feel they are entitled to encounter
no dangers at sea?

CN


Duh yourself, bozo! Charleston is somewhat west of the gulfstream and most
likely the nearest post. What's the point about passengers encounter no dangers
at sea?



You are both stupid and ignorant.
http://apnews.myway.com/article/20050418/D89HSR5O1.html

"The 965-foot white ocean liner was sailing back to New York from the Bahamas
when it was struck by a storm Saturday that pounded the vessel with heavy seas
and the rogue 70-foot wave."

You must cross the Gulf Stream sailing from the Bahamas to get to New York or
Charleston.

The point about passengers is they are ignorant *******s in your league if they
expect to go to sea and be guaranteed to be free from danger. The way some of
them whined and cried because they got tossed around a bit makes them out
to be total wimps in my humble opinion.

Now, go **** yourself!

CN


Garuda April 19th 05 03:16 AM


"Capt. Neal®" The oxymoron and meaningless data snipped
in message ...

Come on needledick, I'm surprised with your obvious education, experience and
background, that's the best you can write.



Jean Dufour April 19th 05 06:38 PM

Padeen wrote:

****ed at what? God?

This sounds awfully like, "Who do we blame/sue for this?" The tour company?
The weatherman? I can understand their disappointment, but most of those
cruise tickets are sold at "discount" prices, to people looking for a real
deal for their vacation. Don't they assume some responsibility for the
ships being constructed for the majority of expected weather patterns, not
the extremes? If one looks at statistics of how many vacations are altered
by adverse weather conditions, one might better understand the popularity of
trip insurance.


Indeed this is the same as hitting heavy turbulences in an airplane and the
last one I heard from had many more injured, some severely. Get trip insurance
and keep your seatbelt tighten for the whole duration of the trip in an
airplane.

Jean



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