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Earthworm Jim

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  1. I have no idea if this is a significant issue. It may be an easily resolved, no big deal type concern. But Carnival has to suddenly arrange for all the food and other supplies that they were going to get in Baltimore to now be supplied in Norfolk on short notice. Maybe it's just run the trucks necessary to bring the Baltimore supplies down to Norfolk, rather than arrange a local supply in Norfolk. All in all, there are going to be a bunch of people in Norfolk who thought they had Easter Sunday off working instead.
  2. Agree to disagree there. It's not exactly the same, but it's similar in that you aren't getting the same thing as you booked.
  3. That's absolutely correct. They don't HAVE to offer anything. That said, cruise lines have often offered compensation for events beyond their control, such as weather. For example, the MSC Meraviglia was supposed to go on a Bahamas cruise from NY last December when weather forced them to change it to a New England and Canada itinerary. They gave the option of a full refund instead. But that was clearly a bigger disruption than the Baltimore to Norfolk switch. A west coast Carnival Miracle cruise had to radically change their itinerary last October due to a hurricane (San Diego and Catalina Island instead of Cabo) and Carnival gave $200 compensation there. That may be a more comparable situation. But in the current case didn't Carnival offer some compensation for flight changes?
  4. Yeah, but on the other hand how many of us have routinely spent 4+ hours in airports and on planes at the end of a cruise? Though here the trip to Baltimore is not the final destination for many people. They still need to get home from Baltimore.
  5. Well, you'd be going on that 4 hour ride either way. The difference is it's someone else's problem to do it, but also someone else has control. In your case you'd also benefit from not having to pay for parking if you could get someone to drive you to the port. All hypothetical anyway it seems.
  6. In fairness, we had a car when we got those $200-$250 hotels recently so we were able to look outside the immediate Port Everglades area. That's not likely a viable option for most people flying in.
  7. If they did state that, I missed it. All I saw was them saying there would be buses from Norfolk to Baltimore, without any "one way, one time" definitive statement. Still, unless they say they're going to do something, they presumably aren't doing it. Regardless, the point was it may not have been worth offering the bus to Norfolk anyway because I doubt many would take it. Carnival probably came to the same conclusion.
  8. Assuming a $200-$250 hotel room price in Florida, which is what we normally pay for a mainstream chain hotel, you're finding Baltimore hotels for one fifth that cost, $40-$50 a night? Flight costs may be the case wherever you're flying from, but randomly picking a Friday to the following Saturday round trip in May out of my airport (Albany, NY) on Southwest shows from $134 RT Baltimore and from $154 RT Ft. Lauderdale. Minimal difference. And Baltimore is a major SW hub too.
  9. If they did offer such a bus, I wonder what the take rate would be? Assuming Baltimore cruises are mostly driven to, if you're coming from anywhere south or west of Baltimore it would be quicker to drive directly to Norfolk than to go to Baltimore first. Even drivers coming from north of Baltimore might just do the extra driving to Norfolk or switch to flying. Driving yourself has extra costs and potentially traffic aggravations, but it also gains you control over timing and stops. But if they offer a bus to Norfolk, then they have to offer a bus back from Norfolk at the end of the cruise too. And then we have the same question as to whether to offer a bus to Norfolk the next week. At some piont they'll want to get out of the busing business.
  10. That's about a 4 hour ride. Good thing there's never any traffic on I-95 between DC and Richmond.
  11. Your comment went over my head. I looked it up and answer is apparently China by a wide margin. (10x the US) But I'm not clear on why that is cause for optimism. Or pessimism, if the comment was intended as sarcastic.
  12. Well, yeah. But since this is a cruising site, of course we're going to talk about the cruising angle.
  13. I don't know the percentages, but my guess is northeast ports such as Baltimore probably have a lot higher percentage of drivers than warm weather ports. If you're going to fly to your cruise, you'll probably fly to Florida, New Orleans, etc.and spend your whole cruise in the warmth. The main advantage of Baltimore in chilly seasons is if you can avoid flights by driving there.
  14. It can be done. I was on a cruise out of Tampa once when they couldn't return to Tampa because they were worried about a hurricane. (Katrina, which ended up hitting N.O. of course) We instead returned to Miami, and they bused us back the 4 hours to Tampa in time for us to make our afternoon flight home. It was actually impressively well organized for something done on short notice.
  15. The Left Coast Lifter (Largest barge crane ever used on the U.S. West Coast. Used during construction of the SF-Oak Bay Bridge and NY's Tappan Zee Bridge.) is currently for sale and based in Wilmington, Delaware. (Which is close by land but would require looping around the DelMarVa peninsula by sea) I would think that would have great value both removing the wreckage and eventually building the new bridge. My guess is their phone has been ringing this morning.
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