nancipants
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Nov 18, 2013
- Messages
- 4,149
The drydock dates were fully disclosed to those booking the cruise nearly 2 years ago? So you're saying Disney knowingly put a vessel into service and charged full rate while expecting to have mechanical issues. They also fully expected that all the passengers who were booking said cruise would visit DIS boards in order to learn about this expectation rather than disclosing the expectation to the passengers? It is naive to assume that every passenger should have "expected" to have mechanical issues and that because they were "naive" enough to book that particular cruise, that they should be fine with what happened.
This cruise didn't open up for booking until November of 2016. Once they figured out the specific dry dock dates, they added this short cruise rather than leave the ship empty in Port Canaveral for three days. I learned of this cruise from the DCL blog, and it was noted there (and here) that this cruise was unique because it was the first one after dry dock. I assumed they also wanted a shorter cruise in case any issues arose during the first sailing - and surprise surprise, that's exactly what happened.
http://disneycruiselineblog.com/201...ay-cay-double-dip-aboard-disney-fantasy-2017/