You fly into Longyearbyen on Spitsbergen Island, the main settlement of Svalbard. Dependant on your airline schedule, you may have some time to visit the museums and investigate the shops of this town of just over a thousand inhabitants.
On Day 1 you will be met at Longyearbyen Airport or the Peregrine meeting point, the Radisson SAS Polar Hotel and transferred to the pier, in time to board your ship, the Vavilov (Peregrine Voyager). Once on board, our expedition team will make introductions and provide an overview of our journey to come.
We’ll set sail from Longyearbyen in the evening, heading north from Adventfjorden. During the night the ship will pass the long island of Prins Karls Forland and then turn east into Kongsfjorden in the early hours.
These days are spent exploring the coast, moving generally in a clockwise direction. There will be ample time for shore excursions where we can simply sit on the beach and take it all in, or enjoy energetic hiking, wildlife spotting or stunning zodiac cruises.
Since our itinerary is difficult to predict due to ever-changing ice conditions, we’ve provided some samples of possible excursions we may undertake on Day 2 through Day 10. We won’t have time to visit all these spots, but no matter where we end up, it’s guaranteed that our explorations will be extraordinary. We may visit other locations should their beauty or interest warrant it.
This is an almost certain destination. Lying on the west coast of Spitsbergen, we’ll drop anchor before breakfast in the 14th of July Glacier. Following a briefing on landing procedures and polar bear precautions, we’ll board zodiacs and steer toward the glacier. We’ll spend some time cruising near the spectacular ice-cliff face.
After lunch, we’ll visit the settlement of Ny Ålesund, one of the northernmost communities in the world. Ny Ålesund serves as a base station for international Arctic research, with a population of approximately eighty scientists and support staff. Everyone will have a chance to visit the station shop where we can send mail from the most northerly mailbox in the world!
Bird-watchers should see Arctic terns, Arctic and long-tailed skuas, purple sandpipers and chicks, common eiders, barnacle geese, long-tailed ducks, kittiwakes, glaucous gulls and snow buntings. Several reindeer are often seen on the periphery of the community.
We’ll get a taste of some remarkable Arctic history as we stand near the mast used by the famous airships Norge and Italia. The Norwegian, Roald Amundsen used the Norge in 1926 to fly over the North Pole from Ny Ålesund to Alaska. A few days earlier an American named Richard Byrd had also undertaken the journey and later returned claiming to have reached the pole before Amundsen.
Next it was the Italian’s turn. Umberto Nobile decided to mount an airship expedition from Ny Ålesund with the Italia in 1928. However, this ended in disaster when the airship crashed on the pack-ice north of Spitsbergen. Many expeditions were sent out to find and rescue Nobile and his crew including Roald Amundsen, who disappeared during the search.
Another history lesson can be had in Smeerenburg, located on the north-west corner of Spitsbergen. Also known as Blubber Town, Smeerenburg was once a settlement of Dutch whalers in the first half of the 17th century. We’ll explain the whaling techniques that were used in the 1630’s when almost 200 whalers spent the summers here. Blubber ovens, whalebones and other remnants can be observed in the shadow of the mountain that Basque whalers used as a lookout-point for the bowhead whale.
It will get noticeably cooler as we near our northerly destination, Norskøya. After landing we’ll walk to a 17th century blubber-oven used by whalers to render the whales into valuable oil. Our guides will explain the history of whaling, methods employed, and the harsh life experienced by the early whalers, a point so clearly emphasised by the hundred whalers’ graves that stand nearby. Some of the group may wish to explore the lower area of the island, while others may climb to a cairn at the top.
Later on we’ll gather everyone on the bow as we cross 80° North, just 600 miles from the North Pole. Then after supper, we’ll visit a small atoll-like island further to the northeast called Moffen Island. This island is a protected walrus sanctuary, and there are often walrus seen hauled out on shore, and others usually come out to greet the ship. In the past we have been lucky in this area, spotting the Sabine gull and quite often polar bears on shore.
Sparreneset truly is a “polar desert” and our first landing here is on Svalbard’s second largest island, Nordaustlandet. Few plants or wildlife inhabit this barren site, but the scenery is nevertheless fantastic.
We’ll walk up to the top of a gorge, and then split up into different groups where you’ll have a choice of either beachcombing or enjoying a shorter walk, or a longer invigorating hike.
n the early hours, we approach our most northerly landing and drop anchor close to Phipps Island. This is directly beside “Small Blackboard Island”, the termination point for the British Trans-Arctic Expedition led by Sir Wally Herbert in 1969. This is a great place for hikes and a good spot to see bears and walrus. Here, we’ll also find a small hunters’ hut with large whale vertebrae and bones strewn about, as well as an old boat that adds to the overall sense of antiquity in the area.
Later on we may try to land on Martensøya. The geology is Precambrian, or five hundred million to one billion years old. As staggering as that fact is, the thing that’ll strike you most about this place is not it’s age, but rather the large accumulation of driftwood on the beach. Many of the logs have originated from Canada or Russia travelling through currents and ice floes.
In 1890, adventurer Fridtjof Nansen conjectured, if the polar drift could carry articles across the Polar Sea, this drift “might also be enlisted in the service of exploration”. Using a specially designed ship, he mounted an expedition intentionally beset in the ice. After spending three years travelling the currents of the Polar Sea, the ship finally exited via the north-west side of Spitsbergen in 1896. So it’s conceivable that some of those logs we see today travelled the same route as Nansen’s ship more than a hundred years ago.
Everyone should be on deck as we approach the breathtaking ice-domed island of Kvitøya. This remote outpost is actually closer to the Russian Arctic, being only 117 km away, than it is to Nordaustlandet.
Our staff will go on a scouting mission to investigate the rarely visited Kraemerpynten on the east side of Kvitøya. Since there are often polar bears in the area, we may not be able to land, but we’ll hope to look for wildlife via zodiac cruise. There are often large herds of walrus in the vicinity, and if conditions permit, we’ll hope to see these animals on ice floes or in the water.
The entire island is 700 square kilometres and the 410 metre ice dome covers everything except for three small spits of barren polar-desert. One of these spits, Andreeneset, is where the Andree expedition came to its tragic end. We’ll walk to the monument where our guides will explain the history and significance of the spot. Andree’s balloon was launched in July 1897 and was only airborne for about 60 hours before it crashed on the ice north of Svalbard.
If we encounter sea ice, we’ll undertake a zodiac cruise amongst the floes and attempt to land on one. We may drop anchor near the south-east corner of Nordaustlandet Island and go ashore at Isispynten.
A magnificent view of the ice shelf, that stretches 128 miles around Nordaustlandet, is just across the bay. This is a great place for a hike or contemplative stroll.
After exploring the “headland” we’ll make an important geographical discovery; Isispynten is an island! The nautical charts and topographical maps both define Isispynten as a point of the mainland, but we’ll prove them wrong.
After lunch, we’ll cruise the magnificent ice shelf, a fantastic platform for viewing the glacial face. Time permitting; we may try to land on a barren stretch of beach called Vibebukta. The area is known for its plethora of fossils as well as raised beaches and strands.
During the early hours we transit the Freemansundet. This sound is quite often clogged with ice, however, if we’re able to pass through, we’ll drop anchor on the south side of Barentsøya. We’ll break into small groups and experience the fantastic flora, fauna and scenery. It’s not unusual to have a close encounter with reindeer. There are often long-tailed ducks and red-throated divers on the ponds in the area as well as pink-footed geese, snow buntings and purple sandpipers. Very old whalebones are also found here, hundreds of metres inland, which help explain the theory of isostatic rebound (when land springs up after the weight of glaciation has disappeared).
After lunch we’ll land at Dolerittneset near Kapp Lee. After spending the last few days in the barren polar landscape of the north, you’ll see a noticeable change to the relatively lush vegetation “south of 79°”. This site has a large scattering of reindeer antlers, but the plethora of ancient whalebones makes the landing memorable. Some 400 years ago, whales were once slaughtered here having been hunted almost to extinction in the waters of Svalbard. Now nature has turned the decaying old bones into things of beauty. Time and the elements have altered their original shape and sculptured them into works of art. They are painted with luxuriant blankets of green mosses and grasses, spattered with blotches of black and orange lichen, and framed with purple saxifrage, yellow cinquefoil, and white sandwort. Now, even after death, the noble whale supports life by robustly protecting the delicate flora from the harsh winds and providing nutrients to ensure their survival.
We may drop anchor near the small island of Ækongen, Tusenøyane in the Thousand Islands. Once on shore, we’ll quietly approach a small pond inhabited by several pairs of red-throated divers. We’ll also see a bowhead whale skeleton that has been reconstructed on the beach giving us a sense of the mammal’s gigantic size. Other bones including walrus and polar bear skulls may also be found littering the lower part of the island.
We’ll land on a gravel beach near a small hut in Gåshamna and walk around the area admiring the old whalebones. Some may wish to hike up to the face of a glacier, to enjoy the fantastic views atop the moraines. After lunch, we’ll sail into Hornsund, a spectacular sound with several glacier-filled bays. Seabirds, bearded and ringed seals, as well as bears are often spotted here.
DAY 10: BOURBONHAMNA (AHLSTRANDHALVØYA)/ BARENTSBURG)
Beluga whales often transit the narrow sound near Bourbonhamna. The adults are pure white and the younger animals a mottled grey colour. They are the only whales that can articulate their heads to nod and turn sideways. It’s estimated that there are approximately five to ten thousand belugas in the Svalbard population. The beluga has no dorsal fin, which is a diagnostic feature of other whale species that live in the high Arctic, like the narwhal and bowhead. Since a dorsal fin could be damaged when the animal surfaces in areas with ice, it has been postulated that the lack of dorsal fin is an adaptation to living in waters that are frequently covered by ice.
We’ll search for the belugas, and then hope to go ashore to Bourbonhamna. A hunter’s cabin, grinding wheel and two overturned boats are points of interest a short walk away at Ingebrigstenbukta. However, it’s the massive piles of beluga whalebones that catch everybody’s attention. The bones and all the artefacts are protected by the Svalbard Government and can’t be removed. While wandering amongst these bone relics, we may also expect to glimpse dozens of reindeer in the area.
We conclude our journey, arriving back in Longbearbyen early this morning. After disembarking the ship after breakfast, you are transferred to either the Radisson Hotel or the airport.
Route Map
· Transfer on Day 1 of voyage from Longyearbyen Airport/Peregrine meeting point to pier and v/v on last day of voyage
· Shipboard accommodation
· All meals onboard, afternoon teas most days if not on shore
· Access to public viewing areas
· Shore excursions by zodiac boat, on-board lectures, videos, slide and film shows
· Highly experienced expedition leader, crew and lecturers
· Specialist polar photographer and artist on board
· Photography and art workshops and excursions
· Onboard medical officer
· Port taxes
· Meals: 14 Breakfasts; 13 Lunches; and 14 Dinners
· Arrival and departure flights
· Any visa, passport fees or airport taxes
· Any pre-trip or post-trip hotel accommodation
· Laundry, postage, telephone calls, drinks, medical expenses and gratuities to staff and crew
· Travel insurance and emergency evacuation charges
Itineraries may be subject to change.
|
Per Person USD
Rates Arctic 2012 |
Triple
Shared |
Twin
Shared |
Twin
Semi-Private |
Twin
Private |
Superior | Suite |
Cook
Suite |
||
|
Jun 09 - Jun 19, 2012
Spitsbergen Snowshoeing: Norway's Arctic Paradise Snowshoeing |
$4,590 | $5,990 | $6,790 | $7,290 | $7,890 | $8,590 | $8,990 | ||
|
Jul 01 - Jul 11, 2012
Spitsbergen Explorer: Wildlife Capital of the Arctic Kayaking |
$4,990 | $6,490 | $7,290 | $7,790 | $8,190 | $8,790 | $9,490 | ||
|
Jul 11 - Jul 23, 2012
Spitsbergen Circumnavigation: Big Island, Big Adventure Kayaking |
$5,990 | $7,790 | $8,790 | $9,390 | $9,790 | $10,590 | $11,490 | ||
|
Jul 23 - Aug 02, 2012
Spitsbergen Explorer: Wildlife Capital of the Arctic Kayaking |
$4,990 | $6,490 | $7,290 | $7,790 | $8,190 | $8,790 | $9,490 | ||
|
Aug 02 - Aug 09, 2012
Spitsbergen Family Adventure: Polar Bear Safari Kayaking |
$3,690 | $4,790 | $5,190 | $5,590 | $5,990 | $6,290 | $6,790 | ||
|
Aug 09 - Aug 22, 2012
Three Arctic Islands: Iceland, Greenland, Spitsbergen Longyearbyen / Reykjavik Kayaking |
$6,390 | $7,990 | $8,790 | $9,290 | $9,990 | $10,990 | $11,990 | ||
|
Aug 21 - Sep 04, 2012
Three Arctic Islands: Iceland, Greenland, Spitsbergen Reykjavik / Longyearbyen Kayaking Pre-Expedition Hotel Night! |
$6,390 | $7,990 | $8,790 | $9,290 | $9,990 | $10,990 | $11,990 | ||
|
Sep 16 - Sep 29, 2012
Greenland's Northern Lights: Fjords and Tundra Treks Pre-Expedition Hotel Night Included |
$5,890 | $7,390 | $7,990 | $8,590 | $9,190 | $10,290 | $10,990 | ||
| Rates are per person based on double occupancy. Single cabin prices are 1.7 times the cost of the appropriate twin-share prices listed above except for superior and above which are 2x the price listed above. All cabins are smoke-free. Smoking is only permitted in designated areas only. Airfare to/from destination is not included. Kayaking option available for $525 per person. Prices reflect Emergency Evacuation Insurance for all passengers to a maximum of $100,000 per person. | |||||||||

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