
Midnight sun, pack ice, and sharper route choices.
The Arctic is not one product. Svalbard, Greenland, and passage routes differ by wildlife odds, ship capability, timing, and expedition style.
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The case for the Arctic
A different patience, a different palette.
The Arctic does not announce itself. Antarctica is operatic — choirs of penguins, glacier faces the size of a hill town. The high Arctic is quieter, more austere, more patient. You sail under twenty-four-hour light through fjords cut by glaciers that have not changed in centuries, and the highlights arrive in their own time.
The choice of region matters more than people expect. Svalbard is the strongest first Arctic experience: dense wildlife in a small geography, reliable summer routes, and a ship culture that has rehearsed this trip for decades. Greenland adds settlement, history, and dramatic coast. The Northwest Passage is a longer commitment with a different reward — ice that has barely admitted travellers since Franklin.
Why Arctic
A different kind of polar decision.
Arctic expeditions depend heavily on ice, route permissions, wildlife patterns, and ship range. We help travellers choose based on what is realistic for their month and comfort level.
Midnight sun
Long light windows create flexible days, no rush to be back on board, and excellent photography conditions.
Pack ice logic
Routes shift with the ice every season. Ship capability and the judgment of the captain are more decisive than itinerary.
Wildlife patience
Polar bears, walrus, whales, and seabirds are searched for rather than scheduled. The trip rewards travellers who slow down.
Cultural texture
Settlements in Svalbard and Greenland add layers travellers do not get in Antarctica — coffee in Longyearbyen, kayaks in Ilulissat.
Three regions, three trips
Each Arctic geography asks a different question.
Where most first Arctic trips begin
Svalbard
An archipelago at 79°N where polar bears, walrus, glacier fronts, and bird cliffs are concentrated in a small geography. Reliable June through August. Excellent for first-time Arctic travellers.
Coast, culture, ice in colour
Greenland
Dramatic fjords, Inuit settlements, icebergs the size of buildings drifting south from Disko Bay. Best August through September when ice opens and light turns photographic.
The traveller's commitment
Northwest Passage
A longer, ice-conditional voyage through historic Franklin territory. For travellers who want one of the great rare polar journeys and can give it eighteen to twenty-two days.
The decisions inside the decision
Choosing the right Arctic voyage.
The Arctic season is short and the choices interact. These are the four conversations we have on every brief.
01 — Region
01 / 04Svalbard, Greenland, or further?
Most first-time Arctic travellers do best in Svalbard. Greenland is a strong second voyage. The Northwest Passage is for travellers who already know they want one of the rarer journeys and have the time for it.
02 — Timing
02 / 04Early summer or late summer?
June and early July hold the best polar bear odds in Svalbard. Mid-July to mid-August offers warmer landings, more open routes, and busier wildlife. Late August to early September favours Greenland photographers and quieter coves.
03 — Ship
03 / 04Range and ice-class quietly decide your trip.
Two ships in the same region can run almost different itineraries depending on hull rating and captain experience. We pick a ship for the route you want, not the brand that markets the loudest.
04 — Pace
04 / 04How much settlement, how much wilderness?
Some travellers want zero towns and pure expedition; some want a coffee in Longyearbyen and a museum in Ilulissat. Both are valid. We just need to know which you are before we shortlist.
FAQ
Arctic planning questions.
The questions we hear most often. If yours is not here, send it directly.
Pairing the Arctic with another journey
Norway, Iceland, or Scotland before the ice.
Many Arctic travellers extend on either end — a few days in Bergen or Oslo, a long weekend in Reykjavík, or a week of Highland fly-fishing. We design these gently, so the run-up to embarkation is as good as the voyage itself.
Add a land programmePlan your expedition
Compare Arctic routes before you choose a ship.
We will tell you honestly if a season, ship, or budget does not fit.
