Spitsbergen Tours

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Spitsbergen Tours

DescriptionItineraryDates & RatesVesselMapPhoto Galleryavailabilitys

 

Please note: All itineraries are for guidance only. Programs may vary depending on local ice and weather conditions and in order to take advantage of opportunities to see wildlife. Flexibility is paramount for expedition cruises. 

Sample Itinerary (Around Spitsbergen)
Please note: The North Spitsbergen itinerary is three nights shorter than the Around Spitsbergen voyage, shown below, but otherwise follow a similar itinerary as the 10 night/11 day cruises. but otherwise follow a similar itinerary as the 10 night/11 day cruises.

Day 1:
Arrive Longyearbyen, the administrative capital of the Spitsbergen archipelago. Before embarking there is an opportunity to stroll around this former mining town, whose parish church and polar museum are well worth visiting. In the early evening the ship will sail out of Isfjorden.

Day 2: Heading north along the west coast, we arrive by morning in Krossfjorden, where we take to the Zodiacs for an exhilarating cruise along the sculpted front of the 14th of July Glacier. On the surprisingly green slopes near the glacier a colourful variety of flowers bloom, while large numbers of kittiwakes and Brünnich’s guillemots nest on the nearby cliffs. There is also a good chance of spotting opportunistic Arctic foxes, who patrol the base of the cliffs in case a hapless chick falls from its nest, and bearded seals, who cruise this scenic fjord.

In the afternoon we sail to Ny Ålesund, the world’s most northerly settlement. Once a mining village - served by the world’s most northerly railway, which can still be seen - Ny Ålesund is now a research centre. Close to the village is a breeding ground for barnacle geese, pink-footed geese and Arctic terns. Visitors interested in the history of Arctic exploration will want to walk to the anchoring mast used by Amundsen and Nobile in the airship Norge in 1926 and Nobile in the airship Italia in 1928 before their flights to the North Pole.

Day 3:
At Smeerenburg on Amsterdamøya, we visit the remains of a 17th century Dutch whaling station, the blubber pots now surrounded by hundreds of tree trunks washed ashore after floating from Siberia. Our voyage continues around the north coast of West Spitsbergen as we head for the Hinlopen Strait.

Day 4:  Before turning south into Hinlopen Strait (if the pack-ice allows us) we will have reached our most northerly position. On and around the ice at the entrance to the strait, which divides West Spitsbergen from ice-clad Nordaustlandet, there is a good chance of seeing bearded and ringed seals, polar bears and ivory gulls.

On the eastern side of Lomfjord-shalvøya we explore the bird cliffs of Alkefjellet, where thousands of Brünnich’s guillemots nest in a spectacular setting. The basalt pillars, rising hundreds of meters, and the overhanging ice cap with its waterfall are an awe-inspiring sight.

Finally, on the eastern side of Hinlopen Strait we intend to make an evening landing in Augustabukta on the island of Nordaustlandet, the most northerly of the major Spitsbergen islands. Spitsbergen reindeer graze the sparse vegetation of this largely ice-covered island, where pink-footed geese, walrus and a rare ivory gull colony are also found.

Day 5: Today we go ashore at Svartknausflya, a ‘polar desert’, an area of Nordaustlandet that gets so little precipitation that not even hardy tundra plants can survive. The bare, sandy hills are a strong contrast to the world’s third largest ice cap, which plunges into the sea not far away.

Day 6: Cruising southeast we pass just north of Svenskøya, the westernmost island in the totally protected Kong Karls Land, which is the most important denning area of polar bear in the Arctic. There may be patches of pack-ice and, if so, there is a good chances we will see polar bears, harp and ringed seals, ivory gulls and pomarine skuas. Sailing south-west through Olgastreet, we may encounter the rare Greenland whale, which was hunted to near extinction in the 19th century.

Day 7: In Freemansundet we plan to land at Sundneset on the island of Barentsøya to visit an old trappeŕs hut and then take a brisk walk across the tundra in search of the diminutive Spitsbergen reindeer and barnacle geese. Later we cruise south to Diskobukta on the west side of Edgeøya. After a Zodiac cruise through the shallow bay, we land on a beach littered with tree trunks, which have drifted here from Siberia, and whale bones. We also climb to the rim of a narrow gully which is inhabited by thousands of kitttiwakes,  black guillemots and piratical glaucous gulls. During the breeding season, the base of the cliffs is patrolled by Arctic foxes and polar bears, especially females with young cubs, searching for young birds that have fallen from the nesting ledges.

Day 8: In the morning we land on the attractive island of Bölscheøya, in the archipelago of Tusenøyane, to the south of Edgeøya. Here too we see the remains of walrus and Greenland whales, and we may also spot a variety of interesting birds, among them grey phalaropes, Arctic skuas, red-throated divers and, if we are lucky, a pale-bellied Brent goose, a sub-species found only on Spitsbergen, Franz Josef Land and, occasionally, in Greenland.

In the afternoon we hope to land on Aekongen where there is a complete Greenland Whale skeleton. There are also spectacular basalt rock-columns here, and we may also see common eiders with chicks. At night we sail to Sørkap, the southern tip of Spitsbergen.

Day 9: We start the day quietly cruising the side fjords of the spectacular Hornsund area of southern Spitsbergen, enjoying the scenery of towering mountain peaks. There are also 14 magnificent glaciers in the area and very good chances of encounters with seals basking on the ice floes and polar bears. We may visit the Polish research station where the friendly staff will give us an insight into their research projects. Behind the station the mountains are home to thousands of nesting little auks.

Day 10: Today we land on Ahlstrandhalvøya at the mouth of Van Keulenfjorden. Here are piles of beluga whale skeletons, the remains of 19th century slaughter. Fortunately, belugas were not hunted to the edge of extinction, and may still be seen locally. Cruising into Recherchefjorden, we can explore an area of tundra at the head of the fjord where many reindeer feed.

Day 11: Return to Longyearbyen and fly home.

Air from Oslo to Longyearbyen and return may be booked through our  office; cost is approximately $650 US (subject to change.  We are also happy to make hotel arrangements for you in Oslo or Longyearbyen if needed, contact our office for more information.

 

 

 

 

 

To book this cruise or talk to one of our cruise consultants please call
1-800-808-4IWA (4492) or (206) 463-1943