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| Type | Balcony | Suite |
|---|---|---|
| Cruise Only | Call | £23,749 |
| Cabin | Cruise Only From |
|---|---|
| Penthouse Suite | £35,239 |
Includes extra savings of up to £1,250pp
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Voyage Code: V834A
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Arrive: Thu 15 June 2028 / Depart: Thu 15 June 2028 at 21:00
St. John's is the most easterly point in North America and closest point of land to Europe. Due to it strategic location, St. John's has been vitally important for centuries to explorers, adventurers, merchants, soldiers, pirates, and all manner of seafarers, who provided the foundation for this thriving modern day city. Explore this, one of the oldest cities in North America, and a city unlike any other. This "City of Legends" is cradled in a harbor carved from granite, and surrounded by hills running down to the ocean. Quaint side streets of a thousand colors are home to friendly faces that wait to greet you.
Arrive: Sat 17 June 2028 at 07:00 / Depart: Sat 17 June 2028 at 17:00
Red Bay is a National Historic Site of Canada, and has been nominated by Canada for inclusion as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. One of the reasons is the importance of the Basque whaling activity that thrived here in the 16th and early 17th centuries. Sunken Basque galleons and smaller boats from the period have been discovered just offshore. Although the whale population is much diminished today, it is still a popular activity to watch them, as well as the icebergs that float down from the seas further north.
Arrive: Sun 18 June 2028 at 07:00 / Depart: Sun 18 June 2028 at 17:00
Arrive: Tue 20 June 2028 at 07:00 / Depart: Tue 20 June 2028 at 16:00
Arrive: Fri 23 June 2028 at 13:00 / Depart: Fri 23 June 2028 at 18:00
Arrive: Sat 24 June 2028 at 07:00 / Depart: Sat 24 June 2028 at 12:00
In 1845, British explorer Sir John Franklin, on the period’s most technologically advanced expedition, vanished in search of the fabled Northwest Passage. Monumental Island was named by fellow Arctic explorer Charles Francis Hall in memory of Franklin. Located in Davis Strait south of Baffin Island, it is known as Oomienwa in the local Inuktitut language. This barren, rocky and windswept island is home to a variety of wildlife. Nesting black guillemots are the most prolific seabird. The Island is a favorite resting spot for walrus and they may be viewed at numerous haul-outs around the island. The elusive polar bears patrol the ice-floes in search of seals while whales feed offshore. This is also an excellent location for viewing elaborately sculpted icebergs of all sizes and shapes. Numerous glaciers descend from the island’s high peaks, their crevasses appearing almost to glow an iridescent blue against a landscape of stark white
Arrive: Sat 24 June 2028 at 13:00 / Depart: Sat 24 June 2028 at 18:00
Lady Franklin Island, is an uninhabited Baffin Island offshore island located in the Canadian Arctic Archipelago in the territory of Nunavut. The island lies in Davis Strait, 25 mi from Hall Peninsula. There are at least seven smaller, unnamed islands off its northwest shore.
Arrive: Thu 29 June 2028 at 07:00 / Depart: Thu 29 June 2028 at 17:00
Sisimiut is Greenland’s second-largest town, and large by Greenland standards, housing some 6,000 people. It is located just north of the Arctic Circle, and is a popular base for visitors seeking adventurous pastimes in the surrounding country. Although there are no shore excursions planned for Sisimiut, guests may wish to investigate the local market, where the products of the country are sold, including meat from whales, reindeer, musk oxen and many kinds of fish. Watch for the stocky little Icelandic horses trotting along the highways, and keep an eye out for sea eagles often seen perched on the surrounding mountains. Whales are also often seen in the sea nearby. On the hill above the harbor, there is an artisan’s workshop where they create and sell Inuit crafts, and nearby is the town museum, which has examples of colonial period houses, peat houses and other early buildings.
Arrive: Fri 30 June 2028 at 07:00 / Depart: Fri 30 June 2028 at 20:00
In October, 1941 the United States Army Air Force constructed an airbase at the site of Kangerlussuaq. It served as a refuelling stop for single-engine military aircraft being flown to Britain during World War II. Form their last port of call, Goose Bay, Labrador, it was 1,600 kilometers (1,000 miles) to Kangerlussuaq until they could refuel. Kangerlussuaq fjord (‘Big Fjord’), is 170 kilometers (105 miles) long and was often shrouded in fog, providing a serious navigation problem for those aircrews. Today, with the use of modern technology, navigation is no longer an issue. The landscape was ideal for the site of an airport. A large alluvial plain, deposited by the nearby glacial-outflow river, provided a perfectly flat environment for an airport. Kangerlussuaq is the largest commercial airport in Greenland and supports a population of 500. A little known fact, from 1971 to 1987, 33 missiles from various countries, were fired from Kangerlussuaq for upper atmospheric scientific research.
Arrive: Sat 01 July 2028 at 08:00 / Depart: Sat 01 July 2028 at 17:00
Sisimiut is Greenland’s second-largest town, and large by Greenland standards, housing some 6,000 people. It is located just north of the Arctic Circle, and is a popular base for visitors seeking adventurous pastimes in the surrounding country. Although there are no shore excursions planned for Sisimiut, guests may wish to investigate the local market, where the products of the country are sold, including meat from whales, reindeer, musk oxen and many kinds of fish. Watch for the stocky little Icelandic horses trotting along the highways, and keep an eye out for sea eagles often seen perched on the surrounding mountains. Whales are also often seen in the sea nearby. On the hill above the harbor, there is an artisan’s workshop where they create and sell Inuit crafts, and nearby is the town museum, which has examples of colonial period houses, peat houses and other early buildings.
Arrive: Sun 02 July 2028 at 07:00 / Depart: Sun 02 July 2028 at 12:00
Arrive: Mon 03 July 2028 at 07:00 / Depart: Mon 03 July 2028 at 19:00
Greenland’s capital boasts some 16,000 inhabitants. Although the town does not offer us any shore excursions, there are several attractions which guests may wish to visit. One is the roofed town market, where the products of the nearby sea and wilderness are for sale, including the meat of whales, seals, birds and fish. The Katuaq Cultural Center offers changing exhibitions. Especially worth a visit is the National Museum, which besides many historic objects, contains the quite famous 500-year old mummies recovered from Qilakitsoq. The nearby Museum of Art has works by both Inuit and Nordic artists. There is also an artisan’s center where guests may purchase locally produced works, and a collection of traditional houses.
Arrive: Wed 05 July 2028 at 07:00 / Depart: Wed 05 July 2028 at 14:00
Arrive: Thu 06 July 2028 at 07:00 / Depart: Thu 06 July 2028 at 14:00
The largest town in South Greenland with over 3,500 citizens, Qaqortoq was founded in 1775 and still reveals some examples of colonial-period architecture. There is not infrastructure to support shore excursions here, but guests can explore the town and its museum, or possibly arrange a visit to a nearby hot springs. Like other towns in Greenland, there are also possibilities to buy examples of traditional Inuit arts and crafts, including items crafted of bone, soapstone and wild-harvested furs.
Arrive: Thu 06 July 2028 at 15:00 / Depart: Thu 06 July 2028 at 20:00
Twelve miles by Zodiac up the Hvalseyjarfjord from Qaqortoq, the largest community in South Greenland, lies the most prominent Norse archaeological site in Greenland. The so-called Eastern Settlement lasted from the 10th until the mid-15th century. Your expedition team archaeologist can interpret for you the ruins of the great halls and church at Hvalsey that hint of a prospering medieval farmstead. The site evokes an era when the Norse were trading with the indigenous Thule people of the area for furs and ivory, which were a prized commodities in Europe. A wedding held in the church in 1408 comprises the last written record of the Norse adventure in Greenland. Within a few years, Hvalsey and the rest of other Norse communities of Greenland withered as immigrants returned to the more established communities in Iceland and Norway. The site’s meadows of wildflowers sloping up from the fjord give a sense of the peaceful community that existed here in that long-ago summer.
Arrive: Fri 07 July 2028 at 07:00 / Depart: Fri 07 July 2028 at 17:00
The immense scale of the peaks around this village dwarfs anything built there. Still, the tall white steeple of the church juts up with a spirit of endurance and perseverance that matches the character of those who make this arctic outpost their home. It also echoes the shape of icebergs floating in the surrounding seas, shed from the immense icefields that cover much of the island.
Arrive: Sat 08 July 2028 at 13:00
Depart: Sun 09 July 2028 at 13:00
Arrive: Mon 10 July 2028 at 08:00 / Depart: Mon 10 July 2028 at 18:00
Umivik Bay, also known as Umiivik and Umerik, is a bay in King Frederick VI Coast, southeastern Greenland. It is part of the Sermersooq municipality. Unlike the jagged and forbidding appearance of most fjord systems in East Greenland, the Umivik area has a relatively gentle shape
Arrive: Tue 11 July 2028 at 07:00 / Depart: Tue 11 July 2028 at 17:00
Tasiilaq, formerly Ammassalik and Angmagssalik, is a town in the Sermersooq municipality in southeastern Greenland. With 1,985 inhabitants as of 2020, it is the most populous community on the eastern coast, and the seventh-largest town in Greenland.
Arrive: Fri 14 July 2028 at 07:00 / Depart: Fri 14 July 2028 at 17:00
The charming small fishing village of Grundarfjörður is located in the middle of the Snæfellsnes Peninsula and thus provides easy access to Stykkishólmur, Snæfellsbær and the Snæfellsnes National Park. Its best-known landmark is undoubtedly the peak of Mt. Kirkjufell. Translated as ‘church mountain,’ Kirkjufell is the most easily recognizable peak, and one of the most photographed mountains in Iceland. During summer months a Viking Village is built in the center of town where Viking re-enactments occur quite regularly. During the Á góðri stund town festival in July, the town’s 900 residents decorate their houses in red, blue, yellow, and green, transforming the town into a spinning kaleidoscope of color. The town first began trade in 1786, and around 1800, French merchants came to Iceland and settled in Grundarfjörður, where they constructed a church and a hospital. The town has prospered through the fishing industry for a long time. The surrounding sea is rich with birdlife & marine life throughout the year.
Arrive: Sat 15 July 2028 at 07:00 / Depart: Sat 15 July 2028
Warmed by the Gulf Stream as well as by highly active thermal hot springs and volcanoes, Iceland is somewhat misnamed. While it is a stark and barren country with three huge areas of glaciers, one theory is that early Norsemen sought to mislead other potential settlers by giving a pleasant name to fierce, inhospitable Greenland, and a forbidding name to the imminently habitable Iceland. Irish monks and hermits established themselves here in the 8th century, but left a century later when the pagan Norsemen arrived. Europe's first Parliament of General Assembly, the Althing, was established in the year 930 and still functions as the legislative body, although it was suspended by the Danes at the end of the 18th century and not reconvened until 1843. Reykjavik was the site picked by the island's first permanent resident, Ingolfur Arnarson in 874, and is home to more than half of the island's total population. The world's northernmost capital, Reykjavik is proud of its virtual lack of air pollution. Both electrical power and home heating are derived from the geothermal activity on the island. The city's large swimming pools are always warm, and in the countryside exotic fruits such as grapes and bananas are cultivated in greenhouses made cozy with the help of underground hot springs.
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Seabourn Venture 05 May 2026 9 nights
Itinerary: Rome - Amalfi - Lipari Islands - Taormina - Palermo - Cagliari - Bonifacio - Calvi - Mahon - Barcelona
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Seabourn Venture 11 June 2026 13 nights
Itinerary: Barcelona - Malaga - Seville - Gijon - St Malo - Poole - Dunkirk (for Lille) - London
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Seabourn Venture 06 July 2026 10 nights
Itinerary: Dublin - Calf of Man - Douglas - Rothesay - Tobermory - Isle of Eigg - Stornoway (Isle of Lewis) - St. Kilda - Lerwick - Isle of Noss...
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Seabourn Venture 06 July 2026 20 nights
Itinerary: Dublin - Calf of Man - Douglas - Rothesay - Tobermory - Isle of Eigg - Stornoway (Isle of Lewis) - St. Kilda - Lerwick - Isle of Noss...
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Seabourn Venture 16 July 2026 10 nights
Itinerary: Reykjavik - Grundarfjordur - Patreksfjordur - Dynjandi - Saudarkrokur - Scorsbysund - Heimaey - Reykjavik
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Seabourn Venture 26 July 2026 12 nights
Itinerary: Reykjavik - Umivik - Skjoldungen Island - Prince Christian Sound - Qaqortoq - Hvalsey - Qassiarsuq (Brattalihd) - Nuuk Godthaab - Evighedsfjorden - Sisimiut...
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Seabourn Venture 26 July 2026 34 nights
Itinerary: Reykjavik - Umivik - Skjoldungen Island - Prince Christian Sound - Qaqortoq - Hvalsey - Qassiarsuq (Brattalihd) - Nuuk Godthaab - Evighedsfjorden - Sisimiut...
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Seabourn Venture 05 August 2026 24 nights
Itinerary: Kangerlussuaq - Ilulissat - Sisimiut - Pond Inlet - Dundas Harbour - Nunavut Canada - Herschel Island - Nome - Anchorage
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Seabourn Venture 29 August 2026 24 nights
Itinerary: Anchorage - Nome - Herschel Island - Nunavut Canada - Dundas Harbour - Pond Inlet - Ilulissat - Sisimiut - Nuuk Godthaab - Kangerlussuaq...
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Seabourn Venture 29 August 2026 37 nights
Itinerary: Anchorage - Nome - Herschel Island - Nunavut Canada - Dundas Harbour - Pond Inlet - Ilulissat - Sisimiut - Nuuk Godthaab - Kangerlussuaq...
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Includes extra savings of up to £1,975pp
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