I have been on one. Overall it was fantastic. The experience was a gift to me from my mother-in-law, a retired teacher/librarian who spent her healthy retirement years traveling the globe. We'd routinely get small presents as souvenirs of the places she'd been, like carved ebony from a trip to Africa, tiny baskets woven from pine needles from a visit to the Copper Canyon, small framed needlework from China from a trip including a visit to the Great Wall. As a retired teacher she had access to group travel discounts, and was blessed with fairly good health until extreme old age.
One of her trips was a combination cruise/land trip in Alaska. She had planned to share the experience with a friend but that woman became ill and had to cancel. She invited me to accompany her instead. I actually had to think about it! At the time I was divorced from her son, working a low paying job, not getting child support for three kids, and couldn't figure out how to afford it even with her paying all my trip expenses. My parents stepped up in taking care of the kids, I scheduled the vacation, and wound up with the experience of my life! We flew into Fairbanks, and did land activities as a large group from there to Seward, boarded a cruise ship, and enjoyed some kind of off-ship expedition at every port stop until Vancouver, when a bus took us across the border to the Seattle airport to fly home.
I had little in the way of properly thanking her, until I got my pictures developed. Yes, digital cameras were newly available but I had a Pentax K1000, budgeted buying 36 rolls of 36 exposure film, somehow managed to afford developing them all before Christmas that year. I divided them into two piles of nearly identical photos, split each half into a photo album, and gave her one for Christmas to enjoy our trip over again as many times as she wished.
That is my one experience with a cruise. The cruise line was Holland America, the ships were enormous, and the only illness we heard about was when a couple members of our group became a bit seasick after a couple days when winds created barely perceptible motion on the ship. Mostly the route was along the inside passage, so it was actually quite sheltered from waves. Knowing I had gotten seasick as a young teen on a family trip along the west coast including being out on a small fishing boat (caught a small shark instead of the wanted tuna), I'd started the ocean part of the trip with medication to prevent a repeat of that misery, and had my sea legs by the time any waves kicked up. I was fine.
This was long before anybody heard about the norovirus. Years later when my best friend and her husband took a cruise west coast to east via the Panama Canal their trip was made miserable by that, a combination of cabin quarantining and sick guts for days. It became common in the news, and even if I could afford such a trip, I decided it was not my choice to go on any cruise again. Occasionally one hears about it again, often enough to confirm my choice.
When covid made the news, keeping ships offshore until somebody decided passengers could finally leave, I was simply confirmed in the wisdom of my decision. As a snowbird, travel was limited to automobile and either motels or family visits. The first year vaccinations were available, national parks were all but deserted and photography opportunities were exceptional. Covid is still with us, but so is norovirus, occasionally making the news for plaguing cruise ships. I still treasure the experience, but with no plans or wish to repeat it.
Now there's hanta virus reported on cruise ships. Everybody acts shocked by such an unlikely thing.
Unlikely? Seriously?
We all heard about hanta long ago, spread by rodents in the dry desert southwest. It wasn't reported in rainy climates, or if it was, no longer made headlines. We knew how to treat it... most times. It could still be a killer. But it was "over there," not "around here." True, cruise ships are in wet areas, if that is the only consideration. But rodents? On the ocean?
Apparently everybody has forgotten our history. From the time humans set sail their ships were plagued with rodents, aka rats. I use "plagued" advisedly, since they literally spread plague from port to port, carrying fleas everywhere they went. I also have a friend whose ancestors came to America long ago in a rat-filled ship and "lost" all their children to rats. They managed to restart their family once on land and were able to work their farm in central Minnesota. We want to believe we've "fixed" that rat problem. But we happen to be a pretty arrogant species. Perhaps it's time to start keeping cats on board ships again, eh? Not the spoiled ones overfed on special kibbble, but the proven hunters.
Or at least until somebody comes up with a hanta vaccine and people aren't too stupid to take it.
