Cruise ship steered into 'worst quadrant' of Post-Tropical Cyclone Hermine
Passengers on Royal Caribbean's Anthem of the Seas ship endured a choppy, stomach-churning ride this weekend as the Bermuda-bound cruise liner steered into Post-Tropical Cyclone Hermine. The 16-deck Anthem is the same ship that suffered damage in February after sailing into hurricane-force winds and 30-foot waves off the coast of North Carolina. SEE ALSO: Live blog: Post-Tropical Cyclone Hermine moves up East Coast The cruise liner's latest battle with stormy seas began Sunday afternoon, shortly after the Anthem departed from Bayonne, New Jersey. As the ship got caught in whipping winds and thrashing waves, passengers took to Twitter to complain of seasickness, constant swaying and flying dishes in the ship's restaurants. Omar Torres, a spokesman for Royal Caribbean, said the Anthem's crew changed its course days before departure in an effort to avoid Post-Tropical Cyclone Hermine, figuring the storm would be west of where it wound up tracking. Anthem of the Seas typically takes a southeast route to Bermuda. But with Hermine spinning up the Atlantic Coast, the crew opted to take a northeast route, and then turn south toward Bermuda, Torres told Mashable. "Our plan was to stay 240 nautical miles away from the storm," he said by phone. However, over time the forecast was revised, and the ship wound up in the worst possible place: the right front quadrant of the storm, where winds are strongest. Torres said the Anthem of the Seas crew The Anthem arrived in Bermuda as scheduled on Monday morning, Royal Caribbean said. Mashable science editor Andrew Freedman contributed to this story.