Nope
The Engineering Tour is not cheap but you get to go into the engine room and they explain how the computerized ballast system works. I was fascinated by the technology.I know nothing about ships but....wow the center of gravity on cruise ships looks way too high.
Disease spread potential also looks too high: novovirus has spread through several of them like wildfire.
We were on one of the smaller boats for a quick 3 or 4 day cruise in February once. The Caribbean is windy during the winter. We felt the boat moving quite a bit. The bigger boats don’t have a problem in the wind.Addition to above post:
Out of all the cruised we have been on, we have never had really bad weather. Bad enough to really rock the ship.
We have a cruise scheduled this November and another one scheduled in February. Fingers crossed that never happens. Lol
I went on that my first cruise. Saw everything except the engine rooms (cruise ships work like locomotives: they have diesel run generators and the water jets are done with electric motors). One of the cool things (though the room stank lol) was that all the food left on plates is collected, ground up and put overboard as chum for the water life. Also, they have a machine that they feed wet sheets into and it not only dries, but folds the sheets in under 3 seconds.The Engineering Tour is not cheap but you get to go into the engine room and they explain how the computerized ballast system works. I was fascinated by the technology.
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