Cruise West

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Cruise West is an independent, destination focused small-ship cruise operator based in Seattle, Washington, USA. The line is the largest operator of U.S. flagged cruise vessels (by number of vessels) with nine currently operating. They are best known for their Alaska cruises but their reach includes destinations all around the Pacific Ocean.

History

Founded in 1973 by Chuck West, Cruise West started out as an Alaska tour operator [1]. It wasn't until 1990 that the company purchased its first overnight vessel, the now retired 52-passenger Spirit of Glacier Bay. Through the 1990s the company increasingly focused on cruising and expanded its fleet and added new non-Alaskan destinations such as the Columbia & Snake Rivers, British Columbia, California's wine country, and into Mexico's Sea of Cortes.[2]

In 2001 the line acquired its first ocean going and foreign flagged vessel, the 114-passenger Spirit of Oceanus, a former Renaissance Cruises vessel. Cruise West expanded to Central America when they joined forces with Temptress Cruise Lines of Costa Rica to offer cruises on the 100-passenger M/V Pacific Explorer in Costa Rica and Panama.

In January 2006 Cruise West purchased the U.S. flagged half of Clipper Cruise Line's fleet, the 102-passenger Nantucket Clipper and the 138-passenger Yorktown Clipper. The line renamed the vessels "Spirit of Nantucket" and Spirit of Yorktown, respectively.[3] The Spirit of Nantucket operated on the U.S. east coast and the Great Lakes for two seasons before the line decided that it would join the rest of the fleet on the Pacific coast and be rechristened Spirit of Glacier Bay. Clipper Cruise lines has since sold off its remaining vessels and went out of business.

The line operates nine small vessels that range in guest capacites of 78-138 guests throughout in the Americas, South Pacific and Asia. Small-ship cruising allows for up-close and personal cruising not offered by the traditional larger cruise lines.

Safety Record

Cruise West had a spotted safety record in 2007 and 2008 highlighted by four groundings.

On August 19, 2007 the Spirit of Columbia ran aground in Latouche Passage in Prince William Sound. The Captain piloted the ship too close to shore while bear viewing. The US Coast Guard sent two HH-60 helicopters, a C-130 aircraft, and the Cutter Sycamore to assist the crew free the vessel. [4]

The second grounding of 2007 came on November 8 when the Spirit of Nantucket, now known as the Spirit of Glacier Bay, hit an uncharted object in the Intercoastal Waterway near Virginia Beach, VA. Coast Guard ships from Portsmouth, Virginia, and Elizabeth City, North Carolina, as well as police and fire units from Virginia Beach, arrived to help the distressed ship. [5]

Two additional groundings occurred in 2008 beginning with the Spirit of Alaska hitting a rock in Tracy Arm while cruising the Inside Passage of Alaska on June 4, 2008. Though the incident was minor, it did require a coast guard inspection and cancellation of the remainder of the cruise. [6]

The most recent grounding, and by far most dramatic, involved the Spirit of Glacier Bay, formerly known as the Spirit of Nantucket. On July 7, 2008 the ship was cruising Tarr Inlet in Glacier Bay National Park when it ran aground on a silt bar. The ship was stuck for over nine hours while awaiting the incoming tide. [7]

After the July 7th grounding, the US Coast Guard released a statement revealing that Cruise West was part of a special program designed to review the company's safety procedures and maintenance records due to their recent string of incidents at sea. [8]

Fleet

Destinations

Cruise West has announced that in 2009 they will be offering cruises in the Galapagos Islands and on the Danube River though Eastern Europe on chartered vessels.

See also

External links

References