Passengers slog home after 'horrible' Gulf cruise

MOBILE, Ala. (AP) - Passengers who finally escaped the disabled Carnival cruise ship Triumph were on the move early Friday, some checked into the comfort of hotels, others on buses or headed to charter flights home after five numbing days at sea on a ship paralyzed by an engine-room fire.
The vacation ship carrying some 4,200 people docked late Thursday in Mobile to raucous cheers from passengers weary of overflowing toilets, food shortages and foul odors.
"Sweet Home Alabama!" read one of the homemade signs passengers affixed alongside the 14-story ship as many celebrated at deck rails lining several levels of the stricken ship. The ship's horn loudly blasted several times as four tugboats pulled the crippled ship to shore at about 9:15 p.m. CST. Some gave a thumbs-up sign and flashes from cameras and cellphones lit the night.
"It was horrible, just horrible" said Maria Hernandez, 28, of Angleton, Texas, tears welling in her eyes as she talked about waking up to smoke in her lower-level room Sunday from the engine-room fire and the days of heat and stench that followed. She was on a "girls trip" with friends.
It took about four hours for all passengers to disembark.
Carnival spokesman Vance Gulliksen said passengers had three options: take a bus straight to Galveston, Texas, to retrieve cars parked at the ship's departure port, take a bus to New Orleans to stay at a hotel before a charter flight home or have family or friends pick them up in Mobile.
Gulliksen said up to 20 charter flights would leave New Orleans later Friday to take guests who stayed in hotels there to their final destinations.
Nearly 2,000 passengers arrived at a New Orleans Hilton in the wee hour of the morning, and by dawn many were headed out again to fly by chartered plane to Houston. They would then have to get a connecting flight home or take a chartered bus back to their cars in Galveston.
"It just feels so good to be on land again and to feel like I have options," said Tracey Farmer of Tulsa, Okla. "I'm just ready to see my family. It's been harder on them than us I think because they've been so worried about us. It's been extremely stressful for them."
Buses began arriving at the Port of Galveston on Friday morning after an eight-hour drive from Mobile. Port of Galveston police said as many as 800 people would arrive by bus to retrieve their vehicles or be shuttled onto other buses to reach home.
Elaine Roberts of Gainesville, Texas, and her family were among the first to arrive in Galveston. She told KHOU-TV the conditions on Triumph were a "cesspool."
For some, once they get to Galveston to their cars, they still face long drives getting home.
"It's going to be a very long day," said Dwayne McAbee, who says he'll drive from Galveston to his home in Fort Worth, Texas, a roughly six to seven hour drive.
Tugs began pulling the ship away from the dock Friday morning, moving it backward down a waterway in the direction of a shipyard where city officials said it will be repaired.
It wasn't long after the ship pulled into the Port of Mobile that passengers began streaming down the gang plank, some in wheelchairs and others pulling carry-on luggage. An ambulance pulled up to a gate and pulled away, lights flashing.
For 24-year-old Brittany Ferguson of Texas, not knowing how long passengers had to endure their time aboard was the worst part.
"I'm feeling awesome just to see land and buildings," said Ferguson, who was in a white robe given to her aboard to weather the cold nights. "The scariest part was just not knowing when we'd get back."
As the ship pulled up, some aboard shouted, "Hello, Mobile!" Some danced in celebration on one of the balconies. "Happy V-Day" read one of the homemade signs made for the Valentine's Day arrival and another, more starkly: "The ship's afloat, so is the sewage."
A few dozen relatives on the top floor of the parking deck of the terminal were waving lights at the ship as it carefully made its way alongside.
Taxis were lined up waiting for people, and motorists on Interstate 10 stopped to watch the exodus of passengers from the cruise ship.
Some still aboard chanted, "Let me off, let me off!"
It took six grueling hours navigating the 30-odd-mile ship channel to dock, guided by at least four towboats. Nearly 900 feet in length, it was the largest cruise ship ever to dock at Mobile.
In texts and flitting cellphone calls, the ship's passengers described miserable conditions while at sea.
Galveston is the home port of the ill-fated ship, which lost power in an engine-room fire Sunday some 150 miles off Mexico's Yucatan peninsula. It was the end of a cruise that wasn't anything like what a brochure might describe.
Carnival CEO Gerry Cahill apologized at a news conference and later on the public address system as people were disembarking.
"I appreciate the patience of our guests and their ability to cope with the situation. And I'd like to reiterate the apology I made earlier. I know the conditions on board were very poor," he said. "We pride ourselves on providing our guests with a great vacation experience, and clearly we failed in this particular case."
Passenger Ferguson said crew members tried to make the situation bearable.
"They did their best to keep our spirits up," she said.
Joseph and Cecilia Alvarez of San Antonio said some passengers passed the time by forming a Bible study group.
"It was awesome," he said. "It lifted up our souls and gave us hope that we would get back."
The company disputed the accounts of passengers who described the ship as filthy, saying employees were doing everything to ensure people were comfortable.
In a text message, Kalin Hill, of Houston, described deplorable conditions over the past few days.
"The lower floors had it the worst, the floors 'squish' when you walk and lots of the lower rooms have flooding from above floors," Hill wrote. "Half the bachelorette party was on two; the smell down there literally chokes you and hurts your eyes."
She said "there's poop and urine all along the floor. The floor is flooded with sewer water ... and we had to poop in bags."
While the passengers are headed home, the Triumph will head to a Mobile shipyard for assessment. Carnival has canceled a dozen more planned voyages aboard the Triumph and acknowledged the crippled ship had been plagued by other mechanical problems in the weeks before the engine-room blaze. The National Transportation Safety Board has opened an investigation.
Passengers were supposed to get a full refund and discounts on future cruises, and Carnival announced Wednesday they would each get an additional $500 in compensation.
"This is my first and last cruise. So if anyone wants my free cruise, look me up," said Kendall Jenkins, 24, of Houston. Bounding off the ship clad in bathrobes, she and her friend Brittany Ferguson immediately kissed the pavement at the Port of Mobile in Alabama.
The vacation ship carrying some 4,200 people docked late Thursday in Mobile to raucous cheers from passengers weary of overflowing toilets, food shortages and foul odors.
"Sweet Home Alabama!" read one of the homemade signs passengers affixed alongside the 14-story ship as many celebrated at deck rails lining several levels of the stricken ship. The ship's horn loudly blasted several times as four tugboats pulled the crippled ship to shore at about 9:15 p.m. CST. Some gave a thumbs-up sign and flashes from cameras and cellphones lit the night.
"It was horrible, just horrible" said Maria Hernandez, 28, of Angleton, Texas, tears welling in her eyes as she talked about waking up to smoke in her lower-level room Sunday from the engine-room fire and the days of heat and stench that followed. She was on a "girls trip" with friends.
It took about four hours for all passengers to disembark.
Carnival spokesman Vance Gulliksen said passengers had three options: take a bus straight to Galveston, Texas, to retrieve cars parked at the ship's departure port, take a bus to New Orleans to stay at a hotel before a charter flight home or have family or friends pick them up in Mobile.
Gulliksen said up to 20 charter flights would leave New Orleans later Friday to take guests who stayed in hotels there to their final destinations.
Nearly 2,000 passengers arrived at a New Orleans Hilton in the wee hour of the morning, and by dawn many were headed out again to fly by chartered plane to Houston. They would then have to get a connecting flight home or take a chartered bus back to their cars in Galveston.
"It just feels so good to be on land again and to feel like I have options," said Tracey Farmer of Tulsa, Okla. "I'm just ready to see my family. It's been harder on them than us I think because they've been so worried about us. It's been extremely stressful for them."
Buses began arriving at the Port of Galveston on Friday morning after an eight-hour drive from Mobile. Port of Galveston police said as many as 800 people would arrive by bus to retrieve their vehicles or be shuttled onto other buses to reach home.
Elaine Roberts of Gainesville, Texas, and her family were among the first to arrive in Galveston. She told KHOU-TV the conditions on Triumph were a "cesspool."
For some, once they get to Galveston to their cars, they still face long drives getting home.
"It's going to be a very long day," said Dwayne McAbee, who says he'll drive from Galveston to his home in Fort Worth, Texas, a roughly six to seven hour drive.
Tugs began pulling the ship away from the dock Friday morning, moving it backward down a waterway in the direction of a shipyard where city officials said it will be repaired.
It wasn't long after the ship pulled into the Port of Mobile that passengers began streaming down the gang plank, some in wheelchairs and others pulling carry-on luggage. An ambulance pulled up to a gate and pulled away, lights flashing.
For 24-year-old Brittany Ferguson of Texas, not knowing how long passengers had to endure their time aboard was the worst part.
"I'm feeling awesome just to see land and buildings," said Ferguson, who was in a white robe given to her aboard to weather the cold nights. "The scariest part was just not knowing when we'd get back."
As the ship pulled up, some aboard shouted, "Hello, Mobile!" Some danced in celebration on one of the balconies. "Happy V-Day" read one of the homemade signs made for the Valentine's Day arrival and another, more starkly: "The ship's afloat, so is the sewage."
A few dozen relatives on the top floor of the parking deck of the terminal were waving lights at the ship as it carefully made its way alongside.
Taxis were lined up waiting for people, and motorists on Interstate 10 stopped to watch the exodus of passengers from the cruise ship.
Some still aboard chanted, "Let me off, let me off!"
It took six grueling hours navigating the 30-odd-mile ship channel to dock, guided by at least four towboats. Nearly 900 feet in length, it was the largest cruise ship ever to dock at Mobile.
In texts and flitting cellphone calls, the ship's passengers described miserable conditions while at sea.
Galveston is the home port of the ill-fated ship, which lost power in an engine-room fire Sunday some 150 miles off Mexico's Yucatan peninsula. It was the end of a cruise that wasn't anything like what a brochure might describe.
Carnival CEO Gerry Cahill apologized at a news conference and later on the public address system as people were disembarking.
"I appreciate the patience of our guests and their ability to cope with the situation. And I'd like to reiterate the apology I made earlier. I know the conditions on board were very poor," he said. "We pride ourselves on providing our guests with a great vacation experience, and clearly we failed in this particular case."
Passenger Ferguson said crew members tried to make the situation bearable.
"They did their best to keep our spirits up," she said.
Joseph and Cecilia Alvarez of San Antonio said some passengers passed the time by forming a Bible study group.
"It was awesome," he said. "It lifted up our souls and gave us hope that we would get back."
The company disputed the accounts of passengers who described the ship as filthy, saying employees were doing everything to ensure people were comfortable.
In a text message, Kalin Hill, of Houston, described deplorable conditions over the past few days.
"The lower floors had it the worst, the floors 'squish' when you walk and lots of the lower rooms have flooding from above floors," Hill wrote. "Half the bachelorette party was on two; the smell down there literally chokes you and hurts your eyes."
She said "there's poop and urine all along the floor. The floor is flooded with sewer water ... and we had to poop in bags."
While the passengers are headed home, the Triumph will head to a Mobile shipyard for assessment. Carnival has canceled a dozen more planned voyages aboard the Triumph and acknowledged the crippled ship had been plagued by other mechanical problems in the weeks before the engine-room blaze. The National Transportation Safety Board has opened an investigation.
Passengers were supposed to get a full refund and discounts on future cruises, and Carnival announced Wednesday they would each get an additional $500 in compensation.
"This is my first and last cruise. So if anyone wants my free cruise, look me up," said Kendall Jenkins, 24, of Houston. Bounding off the ship clad in bathrobes, she and her friend Brittany Ferguson immediately kissed the pavement at the Port of Mobile in Alabama.
Why wouldn't a cruise company have an emergency preparedness plan for when this happens? Do they only plan provisions for the exact days scheduled for the crews? That seems off to me.
i have traveled around the world and still enjoy traveling, but i would never get aboard a cruise ship. this is one of the reasons...
First off, this will be an adventure they will remember all their life. Some people pay good money for hardship adventures. O.K. they did not plan for it to be this way and I am sure we are going to hear ten or fifteen horror stories. Any small boater who uses a West Marine catalog has seen the toilet seat and baggy method for a toilet. A lot of recreational boaters use the bucket and chuck it method for their toilet. The joke is that more men are found drowned with their fly open than any other way. As for people running out of medicine? What kind of idiot takes a vacation without enough pharmaceuticals? Yes they paid good money for this trip and I will bet there will be lawsuits. It was an accident idiots.
Why didn't the president order some aid for the people on the ship? I know he has a busy weekend planed but he could of ordered help for these people when they really needed it. Military food would of helped and would of been easy to provide. It is a good thing the weather wasn't bad because lives would of been lost if the ship had a stability problem.
@swan Couple of questions.  How is this a military mission?  How would you get the food to the ship?
@Cetus @swan I never said it was a military mission and the helicopters could of dropped supplies along with the stuff they supplied. Protecting US citizens is a part of governments job. Health and safety of US citizens should more important then going golfing.
@swan @Cetus If it's not a military mission, then who would you suggest perform this fanciful proposal.  Which civilian business has enough helicopters to do it?  How do you "drop supplies" onto a ship without a helo deck?  Where would they fly from?  You have no clue about the difficulty of what you're proposing.
The "health and safety" of the U.S. citizens aboard that ship is the responsibility of Carnival Cruises and they were sufficiently healthy and safe to get back to port.  And if anyone was golfing instead of paying  attention to the "health and safety" of the passengers, it was the management of Carnival Cruises.
The Carnival Triumph: Home of many Poop Decks.
@rockguy ha!  someone had to say it!  :-)
ha ha "discounts on future cruises"!!!
Sounds miserable!
A couple of questions here. Isn't this why we have those abandon boats on the deck of ship? Why couldn't we helicopter these people off? Why couldn't another cruise ship get out there??
@cm257n7Â Not sure why you'd abandon ship if it wasn't sinking. Â Most of the life boats don't have engines, so you'd be drifting just like you are on the ship, but without enough room to even stretch out.
Looking at pictures of the ship, I didn't see any place big enough to land a helo, and even if you did, depending on the size of the helo, you'd only get a few passengers per lift. Â And where would you take them, the ship is in the middle of the Gulf of Mexico.
A better plan would be to design sufficient backup electrical generation to maintain hotel services. Â You'd still be drifting, but you'd be a lot more comfortable.
@Cetus Oh ya, that was my other question. How come on something like this they don't have back up power generators or whatever?
@DarkRenegade @cm257n7 @Cetus Good point but maybe next time we could at least factor in the toilets...
@cm257n7Â @Cetus On another site, they reported that the backup power was used for emergency communications and some essential systems. It would not have been able to support all the passengers needs plus what the crew required.
Just imagine how much it cost the Pilgrims to sail to North America and how long it took them and what the conditions were! No waste plumbing, little clean water, poor food, tiny ship bobbing all over the ocean, sleeping next to your cows, pigs and chickens, no privacy etc etc etc. I still bet this ship had better conditions, not that I would wanted to have been in either situation.
I have never taken a cruise.I will never take a cruise. The ships are too damn big,if you want to be in a city you might as well stay home. . Over 4200 passengers,1000 in crew that is over 5000 . it is like living in a huge commune . To compact,to many sicknesses that can interact. Â . 5000 people .life boats,how long do you really thin kit would take to get these folks off. ?Â
@Maynard G Krebbs Yeah, cause cruise ships sink every day! I've been on two cruises, loved them both and would leave again tomorrow if it were in the budget. You can hide in your house all your life to be safe and end up perishing in a house fire. None of us are getting out of this world alive, and I'd rather have some fun first!
Funny, so there's an engine fire that is out of control and now Carnival is the devil and people think they should be REQUIRED to pay for EVERYTHING that happens to their passengers afterwards.
I'm sure bad things don't happen to all the companies that you people work for, right? Â Do you all live in a world where nothing bad ever happens?Â
Shit happens, Carnival is trying to fix it. Â It sucks for the passengers, but they should also know that they don't live in a perfect world. Not much more of a story than that.
NEVER will i ever book a cruise with Carnival .  I dont see how anybody would ever book a cruise on Carnival after seeing how you are treated during a shipboard calamity. Another Corporate entity that only cares about Your $$$$$$$$.
@sportbuff01Â Just capitalism working its magic.
@sportbuff01 Presumably you work at a corporate entity somewhere...do they not care about my $$$$$$? I'll bet more of my $$$$$$$ that they do. And I'll bet they wouldn't mind more of it.
@What-the-Heck - corporate entities only care about incoming $$'s, not outgoing $$'s as in employees. After all, we are a 'dime a dozen' - and they can get 'anybody on a street corner to work our jobs' - no matter how many degrees or how many hours we put in, they all think and say the same thing.Â
Just confirms my belief that Carnival is the Motel 6 of Cruise Lines - or is that an insult to Motel 6.  I wonder how many will take them up on the discount offer for a future cruise? No thanks! Â
@JusticeSeeker Hey I recently stayed in a Motel 6, and it was pretty nice for what I paid. I wasn't at all disappointed.Â
@JusticeSeeker And really, a discount?? Gee thanks.
Those poor people. After all that, they have to go to Alabama.Â
@lakeview You've been to Alabama?lol It does stink.
Law suites will be flying off the wall as soon as they dock.
@3rase I highly doubt any lawsuit would stick in this situation. Read any cruise company's fine print some time. The disclaimers by the company are a long list of "we won't be responsible for........."
The only thing Carnival can do now, is what they have put out in a PR statement. They are giving each passenger $500, a complete refund of what they spent on this cruise, a flight home for each passenger, and a voucher for a future cruise.
At least they are doing something......
I went on one cruise up to Alaska. Alaska is beautiful, but the whole idea of cruising really sort of repulses me on so many levels.
@countyclerk @3rase Even still, there probably will be at least one individual trying to sue the company for emotional distress or something along the line of that.
Floating petri dishes.
Really a questionable industry anymore.
Carnival Cruises should change their name to Poseidon Adventures
LOL Pretty funny. How long has these things been going on? Why would anyone take a cruise on the giant morgues?
@Blindman Because they are cheap and people like cheap things. But like most stuff, you get what you pay for in life.Â
At one point I thought I wanted to take a cruise......I'll pass now, thanks. The horror stories never seem to end with these cruise lines.
@dg54321 - don't base your information on Carnival - they are the worst of the worst. I have been on many cruises but not on Carnival as I understand from long ago they were bad and cheap crap. A cruise is the best vacation - your hotel travels with you and you can see a lot or just relax on board. And no, I don't work for a cruise line. or any tour industry :)
@dg54321Â my in-laws wanted us to take a cruise with them. After we sent them youtube videos of these ships being caught in storms, they agreed to stop pestering us but it hasn't stopped them from going on them.Â
I've been refering to it as the voyage of the damned.
I've never been on a cruise ship and never will. Cattle are treated better.
2013
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2278058/Carnival-Triumph-Cruise-ship-hell-continues-people-sick-smell-board-final-day-sailing-Mobile-Alabam.html
2010
http://poststar.com/news/article_f6466a34-20a0-11df-a179-001cc4c03286.html
2007
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/this-britain/hundreds-sick-with-virus-on-qe2-433602.html
2006
http://www.local8now.com/news/headlines/4664136.html
2003
http://archive.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2004/2/15/102357.shtml
Those staying in New Orleans will be flown Friday to Houston. Carnival said it will cover all the transportation costs.
How Generous of Carnival to do that...........(Sarcasm)