Abandoned Russian Cruise Ship Drifting
Johns Newfoundland Canada for two years.
Abandoned russian cruise ship drifting. The reason that this was more scary than normal is that it was believed that this ship was filled with hundreds of cannibalistic rats that survived by eating each other. MV Lyubov Orlova was a 1976 Yugoslavia-built ice-strengthened Maria Yermolova-class cruise ship which was primarily used for Antarctic cruises. An abandoned russian cruise ship drifting in the sea with no crew or warning lights has turned up off the west coast of ireland.
With no crew or warning lights the ship Lyubov Orlova has been adrift for two months and maritime authorities had been uncertain of its precise location. The abandoned russian cruise ship thats roaming international waters spooky legends about mysterious vessels that roam the seas with no one aboard have been told and retold by sailors. This ship could have drifted anywhere from the Norwegian Arctic to western Africa.
The rodents are obviously disease-ridden starving and we have to assume ready to take on any source. A Russian cruise ship has been adrift in the North Atlantic since January after breaking free from a towing. The ship MV Lyubov Orlova that had been used by the Soviet Union for polar cruises and expeditions and was being towed from Canada to a scrapyard in the Caribbean in January when a cable snapped setting it adrift in international waters.
After being taken out of service in 2010 she sat in St. The MV Lyubov Orlova once used by the Soviet Union for polar. After the ship was abandoned it was spotted in various parts of the Atlantic Ocean.
AFP - A Russian cruise ship abandoned and adrift in the North Atlantic has been located about 2400 kilometers off the west coast of Ireland according to a US intelligence agency. A Russian cruise ship has been adrift in the North Atlantic since January after breaking free from a towing line as it was being delivered from Canada to a scrapyard in the. This vessel allegedly filled with cannibalistic rats has been drifting across the North Atlantic for quite some time after breaking loose from a tugboat back in January 2013.
The Lyubov Orlova a 328-foot-long 100 meters vessel named after a Russian screen siren from the 1930s was built in 1976 and chartered for expeditions to polar waters. Decommissioning was fraught with problems and the ship eventually became a floating derelict in the North Atlantic Ocean in. Until someone stumbles upon the Russian ship Lyubov Orlova the fateof this ghost ship will remain a total mystery.
