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Western Antarctica Semi-Circumnavigation

Western Antarctica Semi-Circumnavigation

From NZD $55,140

Description

Escape into another realm as you board our luxury boutique ice-class ship on this once-in-a-lifetime trip from South America to New Zealand. Our epic semi- circumnavigation cruise of Antarctica fulfils the ultimate bucket list, sailing on glassy seas, passing by monumental icebergs, unheralded landscapes and phenomenal wildlife. We explore icy waters to reach the world’s southernmost islands where only a handful of adventurers, explorers and scientists have been before. And as we cross the polar circle, you get to join an elite group of people who have been to some of the least-visited places on the planet.

Trip Name
Western Antarctica Semi-Circumnavigation
Days
32
Overview
Vessel Type: Expedition Ship Length: 115 meters Passenger Capacity: 152 Built: 2020-2021 Arriving in November 2021, our 5 star elegant Scandi-design boutique ship offers you an intimate setting from which you will be fully immersed in all the sights and scenery of your voyage. Introducing SH Minerva Our brand new ship has been designed to journey to off the beaten path destinations and remote polar regions in style and comfort. The ship incorporates a PC5 ice-strengthened hull combined with extra-large stabilisers to make your journey as smooth as possible. Sophisticated Elegance We know how important outdoor space is, so our spacious, relaxing public spaces provide wide open, unobstructed views throughout the ship. The destination will always be in view. Your Wellbeing  The safety & happiness of our guests is paramount to our 120-strong crew on board as well as our passionate expedition team who'll be serving up thrilling shore excursions and lasting memories. Cabin Types Our 76 cabins including 6 suites have all the amenities you will need to feel comfortable including dressing gowns, hairdryers, personal safes and minibars. Our stylish cabins all have desks, a dressing area and comfy seating. En suite bathrooms all feature glass-enclosed rain showers.

Itinerary



Day 1 - DAY 1 USHUAIA
Ushuaia is the gateway to the White Continent. Found at the southernmost tip of South America in Argentinian Patagonia, the city is often described as “the End of the World”. The city’s mountain backdrop rises above the harbour and entrance to the Beagle Channel. The town itself is walkable and has a few small museums as well as pubs, restaurants and cafes - a good place to try Patagonian lamb cooked over open fire pits.
Day 2 - DAY 2 AT SEA
You can spend your day at sea enjoying the many facilities available. Head to the sauna, get in a workout in the state-of-the-art gym or relax in the jacuzzi whilst taking in incredible views along the way. If you prefer to learn a little more about your surroundings, listen to an informative talk or have a chat with one of our knowledgeable on-board experts.
Day 3 - DAY 3-5 ANTARCTIC SOUND & WEDDELL SEA
As you sail quietly past house-sized, free-floating tabular icebergs and pancake ice, you may be able to hear the sounds of creaking and popping as huge chunks break off and crash into the sea. While Gerlache Strait is filled with ice, the Antarctic Sound takes it up a notch with even more impressive bergs and ice cliffs. Possible landing points where you will meet thousands of breeding Adélie penguins include Brown Bluff and Paulet Island.
Day 4 - DAY 6-7 ANTARCTIC PENINSULA
Among captivating glaciers, majestic icebergs and snowy islands, the Antarctic Peninsula is where most visitors to the White Continent will live out their Antarctica dream. The Antarctic Peninsula, the most accessible area of the continent, hosts several scientific bases and some of the most interesting wildlife scenery, such as the extremely photogenic Lemaire Channel. Shore excursions might include Petermann Island, where among Adelie penguins, blue-eyed shags and skuas, huge, lumbering elephant seals haul out.
Day 5 - DAY 8-11 BELINGHAUSEN SEA
Take in the magnitude of translucent bergs silently floating on crystal-clear seas, often broken up by the tail of a fluking whale and leopard seals resting on an ice floe, as we sail via two of the largest islands in the Antarctic - Alexander and Thurston Islands - past Peter I Island. Rarely visited by ships, Peter I is claimed by Norway. This ice-covered volcanic island is home to elephant seals, cape pigeons and southern fulmars.
Day 6 - DAY 12-14 AMUNDSEN SEA
One of the most remote areas of Antarctica, covered mostly by glacial ice from the Thwaites ice tongue, and part of the Southern Ocean, Amundsen Sea is named for legendary Norwegian explorer, Roald Amundsen who led the first team to reach the South Pole in 1911. Marie Byrd Land on Antarctica’s western coast is the largest single unclaimed territory on earth where chinstrap penguins and skuas have set up home on the ice-capped Shepard Island.
Day 7 - DAY 15 ROSS SEA
One of the last untouched salt-water wilderness regions, the Ross Sea region is home to an abundance of wildlife. Sailing through these remote waters, we’ll be on the lookout for southern right whales, orca, emperor penguins, parakeets and elephant seals, to name but a few. Antarctica’s largest Adelie penguin colony is located on the shores of the Ross Sea and is quite a sensory experience. This faraway place also exudes polar history - many of the expedition huts of past explorers are still perfectly preserved at the bottom of the world.
Day 8 - DAY 16-18 MC CURDO SOUND
The southernmost seaport in the world, McMurdo Sound is bordered by the Ross Sea, Ross Island the McMurdo Ice Shelf. As earth’s most southerly navigable body of water, this is about as off-the-beaten-track as it gets - an easy thing to forget with the relatively busy daily activity of the 1,000 or scientists who live and work here over the summer. However, human activity is nothing new. Discovered by Captain James Clark Ross in 1841, the sound has since served as a convenient strategic waterway for the explorers of the past as well as present-day researchers.
Day 9 - DAY 19-20 ROSS SEA & TERRA NOVA BAY
Terra Nova Bay is located near the coast of Victoria Land and is home to the Mario Zucchelli Station, an Italian research station dedicated to earth sciences. Inscriptions, drawings and signatures cover the interior walls of the base, left behind by the few visitors who stop in each year. If conditions are right and we can visit the bay, you can take your place in Mario Zucchelli Station history.
Day 10 - DAY 21-22 ROSS SEA
One of the last untouched salt-water wilderness regions, the Ross Sea region is home to an abundance of wildlife. Sailing through these remote waters, we’ll be on the lookout for southern right whales, orca, emperor penguins, parakeets and elephant seals, to name but a few. Antarctica’s largest Adelie penguin colony is located on the shores of the Ross Sea and is quite a sensory experience. This faraway place also exudes polar history - many of the expedition huts of past explorers are still perfectly preserved at the bottom of the world.
Day 11 - DAY 23 AT SEA
Days at sea are the perfect chance to relax, unwind and do whatever takes your fancy. So whether that is going to the gym, visiting the spa, trying to spot a whale from the deck, reading a chapter or two, or simply topping up your tan, these blue sea days are the perfect balance to the green days spent exploring on land.
Day 12 - DAY 24 BALLENY ISLANDS
The Balleny Islands lie over 2,000 kilometres south of New Zealand, only a couple of hundred kilometres off the coast of Antarctica. The heavily glaciated islands have had few human visitors since their discovery in 1839. The surrounding Ross Sea is one of the most biologically productive regions in the Southern Ocean, with research into the extent of this claim still ongoing. Weather and condition permitting, here we can explore the striking coastal environments in our Zodiacs. We’ll be hoping to spot humpback, fin and minke whales along with crabeater, Weddell, elephant and leopard seals. Some of the islands here are also home to large colonies of Adélie and chinstrap penguins.
Day 13 - DAY 25-26 AT SEA
Today as you sail, you’ll bask in the endless comforts of your ship. From the deck, marvel at the dramatic sea views. Relax with a nurturing facial treatment or massage in the spa or delve into the ship’s learning resources. Or, simply take refuge in your cabin and enjoy the opportunity to rest.
Day 14 - DAY 27 MACQUARIE ISLAND
Sealers discovered the tiny windswept Macquarie Island (or Macca) in 1810. The southernmost territory of Australia, it is the site for Macquarie Island Station, an Australian Antarctic base, and a Tasmanian natural reserve and world heritage site protecting a pesty tundra ecosystem. Colonies of loudly barking southern elephant seals breed here and you might spot giant petrels and albatross. Four species of penguin make the island home including royal penguins, king, gentoo and southern rockhoppers.
Day 15 - DAY 28 AT SEA
Spend your day at sea enjoying your boutique 5-star ship. Treat yourself to a spa day, attend an expert-led onboard lecture or enjoy the ocean views from the deck or the comfort of our Observation Lounge.
Day 16 - DAY 29 CAMPBELL ISLANDS
This archipelago is New Zealand’s southernmost island group, located 700km south of New Zealand’s South Island. A UNESCO World Heritage Site, the islands are home to a diverse range of bird species, including black-browed and grey-headed albatrosses, giant petrels, skuas, terns, endemic Campbell snipes and Campbell teals (the world’s rarest duck). Like the fauna, the flora here has also evolved in isolation with some interesting results. Endemic megaherbs crowd the islands, often standing taller than the visitors.
Day 17 - DAY 29 AUCKLAND ISLANDS
Renowned for their seafaring and whaling traditions, the principal Māori iwi, Ngāi Tahu considers Auckland Islands (Maungahuka) a place of great spiritual significance. Port Ross at the north end of the main Auckland Island - the largest of New Zealand’s subantarctic islands - is a breeding site for southern right whales. You might also get to spot New Zealand sea lions alongside some of the world’s rarest birds including yellow-eyed penguins, white-capped mollymawk and Gibson’s wandering albatross.
Day 18 - DAY 30 ENDERBY ISLAND
The smaller Enderby Island is a treat for birders including the Auckland Island snipe and teal, southern royal and light-mantled sooty albatrosses. The pocket-sized Auckland Island tomtit is a regular visitor and Hooker's sea lion haul out here. Growing on this remote archipelago 465 km south of South Island is an exceptionally rich flora of 200 native species such as pink gentiana, red rata blossoms, white tree daisies and megaherbs including the Campbell Island carrot.
Day 19 - DAY 31 AT SEA
When Ferdinand Magellan crossed the world’s largest body of water some 500 years ago, he dubbed it Mar Pacífico, meaning “peaceful sea.” Cruise the Pacific Ocean as you depart from the north coast of New Zealand’s North Island. Perhaps attend an onboard talk or simply take in the magnificent seascapes.
Day 20 - DAY 32 DUNEDIN
Your luxury expedition cruise sadly comes to an end in Dunedin, on the South Island, the principal city of the Otago region. Set in a pretty bay that serves as a port and surrounded by bush-covered hills, the town has quirky historic appeal. One of the best-preserved Victorian and Edwardian cities in the Southern Hemisphere, Dunedin is known as the Edinburgh of New Zealand, and it’s proud of its Celtic connections. Small and eminently walkable, see elaborate civic buildings, New Zealand’s only castles, funky alleyways filled with street art, and picturesque parks. The Toitu Otago Early Settlers Museum and Otago Museum come highly recommended, as well as a visit to the Dunedin Chinese Garden.
Day 21 - Please Note:
Itinerary changes and surprising experiences are part of expedition cruise life. The world has a habit of amazing us with incredible things when we yield to the unexpected. Join us with an open mind and a sense of adventure and you’ll find that this can pay off in the most rewarding ways.

Trip Dates

StartEndPrice FromRoom Type
16-02-202418-03-2024NZD $55,140Oceanview D4
16-02-202418-03-2024NZD $57,832Oceanview M4
16-02-202418-03-2024NZD $63,814Balcony D5
16-02-202418-03-2024NZD $66,963Balcony M5
16-02-202418-03-2024NZD $73,960Balcony D6
16-02-202418-03-2024NZD $86,308Suite
16-02-202418-03-2024NZD $100,834Premium Suite

Inclusions

    • Enjoy the unique experience of a sun that hardly sets as we cross the polar circle
    • Create unforgettable memories by reaching earth’s southernmost regions
    • Follow in the footsteps of the world’s most legendary explorers who reached the South Pole within weeks of each other
    • Marvel at the colours as they change from glassy white to turquoise green in this vast frozen wilderness
    • Discover rarely-visited islands where the world’s rarest birds live among exceptional flora

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