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Wednesday 10 June 2026 03:53:41 GMT
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2026-06-10 05:36:34
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This is one of those cruise news stories that is hard to read, and even harder to look away from. 🐋 Royal Caribbean's Ovation of the Seas arrived in Seward, Alaska on June 19th with a 61-foot fin whale draped across its bulbous bow — the curved structure just beneath the waterline at the front of the ship. Investigators from the Alaska Sealife Center and NOAA are currently performing a necropsy to determine whether the ship struck and killed the whale or encountered the animal after it had already died. What makes this especially sobering is the species involved. Fin whales are the second largest animals on the planet, and this one — at 61 feet — may have been a juvenile. They are classified as vulnerable, which means every individual loss has a real impact on population health in these waters. This is also not an isolated incident. A nearly identical situation occurred in Seward in 2016 when Holland America's Zaandam arrived with a young fin whale on its bow in almost the same location. Cruise lines do implement measures to reduce underwater noise and minimize impact on marine ecosystems, but as ships grow larger, the question of how wildlife detects and responds to them becomes increasingly important. 🌊 The investigation is ongoing and no official cause of death has been released yet. What is clear is that people across the cruising community — passengers, crew, and industry watchers alike — are paying close attention to how this unfolds and what it might mean for how ships navigate through Alaska's marine wildlife corridors. What do you think — is there more the cruise industry should be doing to protect whale populations in high-traffic sailing routes? #AlaskaCruise #CruiseNews #OvationOfTheSeas #MarineWildlife #CruiseTipsNTricks
This is one of those cruise news stories that is hard to read, and even harder to look away from. 🐋 Royal Caribbean's Ovation of the Seas arrived in Seward, Alaska on June 19th with a 61-foot fin whale draped across its bulbous bow — the curved structure just beneath the waterline at the front of the ship. Investigators from the Alaska Sealife Center and NOAA are currently performing a necropsy to determine whether the ship struck and killed the whale or encountered the animal after it had already died. What makes this especially sobering is the species involved. Fin whales are the second largest animals on the planet, and this one — at 61 feet — may have been a juvenile. They are classified as vulnerable, which means every individual loss has a real impact on population health in these waters. This is also not an isolated incident. A nearly identical situation occurred in Seward in 2016 when Holland America's Zaandam arrived with a young fin whale on its bow in almost the same location. Cruise lines do implement measures to reduce underwater noise and minimize impact on marine ecosystems, but as ships grow larger, the question of how wildlife detects and responds to them becomes increasingly important. 🌊 The investigation is ongoing and no official cause of death has been released yet. What is clear is that people across the cruising community — passengers, crew, and industry watchers alike — are paying close attention to how this unfolds and what it might mean for how ships navigate through Alaska's marine wildlife corridors. What do you think — is there more the cruise industry should be doing to protect whale populations in high-traffic sailing routes? #AlaskaCruise #CruiseNews #OvationOfTheSeas #MarineWildlife #CruiseTipsNTricks

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