
Rough weather hit a Carnival Cruise Line ship during a Mexican Riviera cruise, causing the ship to tilt.
Matt Lupoli, a spokesperson for the cruise line, told USA TODAY that the ship “encountered wind and rain that led to a listing” – or leaning to one side – on Aug. 20. Passenger video footage from the Carnival Panorama appears to show broken dishes in the dining room, items strewn on the floor in an onboard shop and water spilling from an elevator, amid lightning strikes outside.
The ship was sailing an eight-day cruise from Los Angeles to Mexico at the time, according to CruiseMapper.
“The incident was over quickly and as the captain maneuvered to calmer seas, crew members quickly turned their attention to assisting guests and clean up,” Lupoli said in an email. “A small number of guests were checked by our medical team on board. There were no serious injuries and no significant impact to the ship’s systems and features. The ship's itinerary was not affected and it's now sailing its next voyage.”
Listing is caused by a shift in weight and balance, according to Joanna Kuther, a travel agent and owner of Port Side Travel Consultants. “In the case of a cruise ship that does not carry cargo, it is usually weather-induced,” she told USA TODAY in an email.
While there have been other similar incidents in recent years, including on Carnival Sunshine in 2023, Kuther said they are “very rare” and crew members are well-trained on how to keep vessels stable during storms.
“While with all of the weather forecasting available, ships will do all they can to avoid bad weather (but) sometimes it is simply unavoidable,” she said. “The ships are prepared from the way they are built and engineered to be able to handle these types of situations.”
Contributing: Kathleen Wong, USA TODAY
Nathan Diller is a consumer travel reporter for USA TODAY based in Nashville. You can reach him at [email protected].
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Rough weather causes Carnival cruise ship to tilt
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