A customer of P&O Ferries who was left stranded after the firm sacked all of its crew was left without her false teeth after her return ferry didn't turn up.
It comes as the company brutally made 800 of its crew redundant via video-call and replaced them with cheaper agency workers.
The knock-on effect left customers stranded abroad and scrambling to get home after the company suspended some services for 10 days.
One TikTok user shared a video from Rotterdam, where her friend Heidi had been left without her false teeth, after travelling from Hull, only for their returning service not to turn up.
In a video, she said: "P&O haven't turned up and Heidi has left her teeth on the boat."
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She added in a caption: "This trip couldn't get any worse, she's left her teeth on the boat."
People were left in stitches, with one viewer writing: "Well at least you can't say that P&O are toothless."
Another outraged viewer wrote: "They should have left you to get your stuff since they have been made redundant."
A third added: "Good on you for turning a bad thing into a funny thing, I hope [she] gets her gnashers back."
Happily, Heidi was reunited with her teeth a day later - with a TikTok video capturing her jubilation at being reunited with her gnashers.
She can be heard exclaiming "Oh my god, my teeth. Flippin'eck, the panic about that was unbelievable."
It comes as a captain of a giant P&O ferry travelling between Rotterdam and Hull was hailed a hero after drawing up his gangplanks and refusing to allow police or new crewmen to board his vessel.
The captain of the Pride of Hull, understood to be Eugene Favier, sealed himself and his crew inside the ferry in the Port of Hull just hours after P&0 announced mass redundancies.
The ship normally carries a crew of 141 people aboard and is one of the biggest ferries in Europe - makes regular crossings between Hull and the Dutch port of Rotterdam.
The sit-in was resolved yesterday as the crew were photographed leaving the boat in the afternoon.
Gaz Jackson, a regional organiser for the National Union of Rail Maritime and Transport Workers, said negotiations had come to an end when the company agreed to provide paperwork requested by the union.
The shipping giant blamed mounting losses, saying: "We have made a £100million loss year on year which has been covered by our parent, DP World. This is not sustainable."
P&O cut around 1,000 staff during the pandemic, while claiming almost £15million in government grants in 2020, including furlough payments. Yet group revenues at owner DP World jumped to £8.1billion last year, while profits hit £2.9billion.