NOT THEIR FAULT THEY MISSED THE CRUISE
Source: Our analysis of the creator's lived experience, based on what they said in this video.
Creator's Key Takeaways
It's always a risk, right? If you cut things too close to get on the ship, if you don't fly in the day before, if you're driving to a cruise port, you are now running the risk of something happening and you missing the cruise.
Trouble with this is it's not the cruise lines fault, it's the passengers's fault because they didn't leave themsel enough time for something to go wrong on the trip.
It's better to go a day early than to be late because unless you have cancel for any reason insurance or an insurance that may cover, you know, a traffic jam getting there, I don't know too many that do, but cancel for any reason insurance.
Had they left an hour earlier, they would have arrived in time. Had they arrived 2 hours earlier, they would have arrived on time. Had they left the day before and spent $200 on a hotel, they would not have lost the hundreds and hundreds or thousands of dollars of their cruise.
Creator's Tips & Advice
πNew to Cruising? This Creator Addresses:
Questions This Creator Answers
Topics Covered
Port Highlights
Scale: 0β5 strips in half-step increments. 0 = βmehβ, 5 = βbacon blissβ. Aggregated from creator-review sentiment, weighted by channel expertise.
About our Bacon Score methodologyYouTube Video Descriptionβ
NOT THEIR FAULT THEY MISSED THE CRUISE Hi everybody! This weekend, "carnival cruise line" issued a warning for passengers sailing from the "port of miami" due to potential highway tie-ups. The "carnival magic" and Sunshine have already set sail, with the "carnival celebration" scheduled next. This situation highlights potential travel "delays" for cruisers and is important "cruise news" for anyone planning a trip.