Bermuda Triangle cruise passengers to receive FULL REFUND if ship goes ‘missing’

‘The excursion has a 100 percent return rate, and your money will be repaid in the unlikely event you disappear,’ according to the cruise line’s website.

If the ship goes’missing,’ participants on the Bermuda Triangle voyage will receive a FULL REFUND

Passengers on a cruise to the Bermuda Triangle were advised that if the ship went missing, they would get a full refund. (Royal Princess & Princess Cruises via Getty Images/Photo by Phill Jackson/Royal Princess & Princess Cruises) )
Holidaymakers who have booked a trip to the Bermuda Triangle have been advised that they would receive a full refund if the ship goes missing. Passengers on the Norwegian Prima liner’s two-day cruise from New York to Bermuda, which departs in March, can pay up to £1,450 for a berth.

If the massive ship vanishes in the triangle where hundreds of ships and planes have purportedly vanished, the cruise line has also offered passengers a “full refund.” The jovial offer reflects the peculiar history of the Bermuda Triangle. On their website, they state: “On this Bermuda Triangle tour, you won’t have to worry about going missing. The tour boasts a 100% return record, and your money will be refunded in the unlikely event that you do not enjoy it “”It appears.”

Passengers are horrified after the Norwegian Breakaway cruise sails directly into an East Coast winter storm.

300 feet below the Bermuda Triangle, a treasure hunter claims to have uncovered a “alien spaceship.”

The tour, which is popular among conspiracy theorists, includes a twilight Bermuda Triangle cruise on a glass bottom boat, as well as debates and Q&As with a number of guest speakers, including former UK Ministry of Defense employee Nick Pope and author Nick Redfern. Pope served for the Ministry of Defense’s Airstaff 2a, also known as the “UFO desk,” from 1991 to 1994. Other speakers include Peter Robbins, Micah Hanks, and Jim Harold.

In other news, Karl Kruszelnicki, an Australian physicist and Sydney University researcher, claimed to have solved the Bermuda Triangle mystery. In 2017, he declared that no supernatural forces are at work, and that flights and boats going missing are the product of bad weather and human error. Many planes and ships have gone without a trace near the North Atlantic region, which encompasses 700,000 kilometers of ocean between Miami, Puerto Rico, and Bermuda and is located between Miami, Puerto Rico, and Bermuda. According to Kruszelnicki, disappearances in the Bermuda Triangle are prevalent because to its proximity to the United States, which makes it a bustling stretch of sea.

“Because it is near the Equator and a wealthy section of the world – America – there is a lot of traffic,” Kruszelnicki told news.com.au in 2017. “According to Lloyd’s of London and the US Coastguard, the percentage of people who go missing in the Bermuda Triangle is the same as it is anyplace else in the globe.” Meanwhile, scientists at the University of Southampton found that the missing ships and planes in 2018 were victims of ‘rogue waves’ up to 100 feet high. As part of a Channel 5 series called ‘The Bermuda Triangle Enigma,’ the team built a replica of the USS Cyclops, a ship that went missing in 1918 while on its way to Baltimore from Bahia, Salvador.

When the 542 ft vessel unexpectedly vanished, the debris was never discovered, and the 306 passengers and crew were never found. When the scientists replicated the gigantic waves, they discovered that the model was swiftly overrun by them because to its flat foundation and sheer magnitude.

Leave a Comment

error: Content is protected !!