We were on the Disney Magic in 2004 when she sailed out of Port Canaveral as Hurricane Frances was heading toward the states. We were supposed to do Key West, Grand Cayman, Cozumel and CC. They made the decision to sail to CC first, and skip Key West so they could head west and avoid the hurricane. However, she hit pretty hard and, as a result, our 7-day became a 10-day (their first I might add). Disney was beyond amazing -- they kept us informed with several announcements, both around the ship and in our staterooms, almost every couple of hours. They stopped in Galveston to refuel, pick up supplies and had pre-arranged for additional entertainment to fly in from L.A. They gave passengers the option to get off the ship in Galveson and Disney would bus them to Houston, but then they would be on their own. We chose to remain and be taken care of by Disney. For the next 3 nights we had no worries. We could not return to Port Canaveral because of damage, so we docked at Port Everglades in Fort Lauderdale, and Disney had taken care of everyones air arrangements (even if you didn't book with them). They bused us from Fort Lauderdale to the airport, where Disney reps were there to meet us and take us to a free room at a Disney resort. The next day they took us to the airport. My daughter missed the first two days of school, but we never felt in danger or uncomfortable. As a side note, my daughter's teacher was on a
Royal Caribbean ship and they did not stop anywhere to restock and were not only running out of clean linens, but food and water!
Unfortunately, the people who were able to get to Florida for their cruise following ours were only given a 4-night cruise and compensated.
We sailed through Hurricane Hillary in 2005, again on the Magic, along the California coast on our way to meet our gate time in the Panama Canal. That one was a bumpy one and many were sleeping in the hallways, waves were reaching our deck 6 verandah, and I slept through the whole thing LOL. They cancelled one port, but added another at last minute the next day. Of course, Disney is Disney and always go one step beyond.
At no point did we ever feel in danger!
We always sail between August and November, and take out
trip insurance, and never worry about it. In 10 cruises on Disney and 5 on other lines, we've only had two hurricane experiences and none of them put us in danger. It