Coral Expeditions blots it's copybook

tgh

Established Member
Joined
Apr 23, 2006
Posts
3,730
Not a good look at all; crew seem to have failed return to ship head count and shore leader appears not to have noticed a challenged passenger missing.
Sounds like a very strong please explain will be in the maIL



 
Read our AFF credit card guides and start earning more points now.

AFF Supporters can remove this and all advertisements

more…
Sources have told The Australian that the woman was hiking the steep Cook’s Look walk with a group on Saturday when she needed to stop.

“The group continued on and boarded the vessel before realising she was not there,” a source said.

Another source said the woman fell down a cliff, and the search was delayed until Sunday, when her body was retrieved.Screenshot 2025-10-28 at 1.46.42 pm.png
 
I have a mate who is on this cruise. As well as the sad event posted up thread, the departure was delayed by a week as parts were required before departure- not sure the extra days in Cairns were appreciated & I haven't seen any discussion of a new itinerary/compensation yet
 
Still unclear to me when the boat realised when she was missing.

On 'failure to board' - each pax should be scanned off and scanned on again, and if one is unaccounted for after the last zodiac returns, the boat shouldn't go anywhere.

Or, the scanning in process was faulted and they thought they had everyone on board and only realised later.

But I have yet to be on an expedition cruise, with shore landings and excursions where one of the exped crew isn't 'tail end Charlie' and brings up the rear with whoever is slowest.
 
Last edited:
Very sad, and negligent of the cruise company not properly count passengers on and off at an excursion.

As someone who travels a lot solo, I admit with no travelling companion to miss you back on board the ship/bus, its always a worry you migth be left behind somewhere on a day tour/excursion. Always motivation to be back at departure point a little early.
 
But as a former expedition cruiser I would and did on one occasion stay back and watch the person who needed to rest.
And on my next to last expedition cruise I was the straggler and a crew member came back and made sure I made it back.

So. not just the crew but the other ones on the hike failed. In an elderly woman especially a heart attack may present as a sudden loss of energy. Maybe that was the problem.
 
Still unclear to me when the boat realised when she was missing.

On 'failure to board' - each pax should be scanned off and scanned on again, and if one is unaccounted for after the last zodiac returns, the boat shouldn't go anywhere.

Or, the scanning in process was faulted and they thought they had everyone on board and only realised later.

But I have yet to be on an expedition cruise, with shore landings and excursions where one of the exped crew isn't 'tail end Charlie' and brings up the rear with whoever is slowest.
It is an issue with stragglers but totally unacceptable
 
Or, the scanning in process was faulted and they thought they had everyone on board and only realised later.
I'm my experiences. When that may have happened then a senior crew member asks if passenger ABC could contact a crew member immediately.
It is an issue with stragglers but totally unacceptable
But every cruise we've been on there are always stragglers. Or even just people becoming unwell. There must be a plan.
 
I wonder if this will result in a tighter boarding and dis-boarding (unboarding?)process for at least some cruises?

On my recent two Ponant cruises I know when I was being scanned back in with others off zodiacs, there were at least a couple of occasions when the system said the pax was already on board ( ie hadn’t been scanned off the boat properly) or I saw the pax walk past and the screener didn’t get them. In the latter cases those around called the passenger back.

A two point scanning process would probably be more assured and not too difficult to set up.
 
Still unclear to me when the boat realised when she was missing.

On 'failure to board' - each pax should be scanned off and scanned on again, and if one is unaccounted for after the last zodiac returns, the boat shouldn't go anywhere.

Or, the scanning in process was faulted and they thought they had everyone on board and only realised later.

But I have yet to be on an expedition cruise, with shore landings and excursions where one of the exped crew isn't 'tail end Charlie' and brings up the rear with whoever is slowest.
This is what my mate onboard posted
We left Lizard Island 4pm on Saturday & by 10pm after crew knocking on everyone’s door to look for a missing passenger we were motoring back to Lizard Island with search lights franticly scanning the waters.
 

Become an AFF member!

Join Australian Frequent Flyer (AFF) for free and unlock insider tips, exclusive deals, and global meetups with 65,000+ frequent flyers.

AFF members can also access our Frequent Flyer Training courses, and upgrade to Fast-track your way to expert traveller status and unlock even more exclusive discounts!

AFF forum abbreviations

Wondering about Y, J or any of the other abbreviations used on our forum?

Check out our guide to common AFF acronyms & abbreviations.
Back
Top