M/V Ushuaia Itinerary
13 nights
Priced from £7200 per person
Beginning in Buenos Aires and with an overnight in Ushuaia, this itinerary includes a 10 day cruise around Antarctica on the M/V Ushuaia.
As a guideline, the itinerary outlined below would cost approximately £7,200 per person based on two people travelling and includes all activities, private transfers, entrance fees, accommodation and taxes and meals where mentioned.
In addition, the cost of the internal flights will be approximately is £700 per person.
Please note that the itinerary does not include any international flights
Day 1 | Fly to Buenos Aires. Met on arrival and transferred to the Casasur hotel for the night in an executive room on a b&b basis https://www.latinodyssey.com/argentina/casa-sur-hotel |
Day 2 | Met and transferred to the airport for your internal flight to Ushuaia. Met on arrival and transferred to the Los Cauquenes hotel for the night in a standard room with a mountain view on a b&b basis. Afternoon free for personal exploration, we would recommend walking up to the Martial glacier for a superb view over Tierra del Fuengo https://www.latinodyssey.com/argentina/los-cauquenes |
Day 3 | Met and transfer to the port and the Ushuaia boat for your cruise in a twin B cabin on a full board basis. Embark the USHUAIA in the afternoon and meet your expedition and lecture staff. After you have settled into your cabins we sail along the famous Beagle Channel and the scenic Mackinlay Pass. https://www.latinodyssey.com/antarctica/the-ushuaia |
Day 4-5 | Named after the renowned explorer, Sir Francis Drake, who sailed these waters in 1578, the Drake Passage also marks the Antarctic Convergence, a biological barrier where cold polar water sinks beneath the warmer northern waters. This creates a great upwelling of nutrients, which sustains the biodiversity of this region. The Drake Passage also marks the northern limit of many Antarctic seabirds. As we sail across the passage, Antarpply Expeditions’ lecturers will be out with you on deck to help in the identification of an amazing variety of seabirds, including many albatrosses, which follow in our wake. TheUshuaia’s open bridge policy allows you to join our officers on the bridge and learn about navigation, watch for whales, and enjoy the view. A full program of lectures will be offered as well. The first sightings of icebergs and snow-capped mountains indicate that we have reached the South Shetland Islands, a group of twenty islands and islets first sighted in February 1819 by Capt. William Smith of the brigWilliams. With favourable conditions in the Drake Passage our lecturers and naturalists will accompany you ashore as you experience your first encounter with the penguins and seals on Day 3. |
Day 6-10 | The South Shetland Islands are a haven for wildlife. Vast penguin rookeries, beaches ruled by Antarctic fur seals and southern elephant seals make every day spent in this amazing island group unforgettable. Sailing through the narrow passage into the flooded caldera of Deception Island is truly amazing. King George Island, the largest of the South Shetland Islands, features colonies of nesting Adélie and Chinstrap Penguins, Kelp Gulls, Blue-eyed Cormorants, Antarctic Terns and Southern Giant Petrels and is home to scientific bases of many different countries. Macaroni, Chinstrap and Gentoo Penguins as well as elephant seals await you at Livingston Island.The Antarctic Peninsula’s remarkable history will provide you with a type of excitement often only associated with the early explorers. You will have plenty of time to explore its amazing scenery, a pristine wilderness of snow, ice, mountains and waterways, and an incredible wide variety of wildlife. Apart from penguins and seabirds you are very likely to see Weddell, crabeater and leopard seals as well as Minke, killer (orca) and humpback whales at close range.We hope to navigate some of the most beautiful waterways (depending on the ice conditions): the Gerlache Strait, the Neumayer Channel, and the Lemaire Channel, the latter are narrow passages between towering rock faces and spectacular glaciers. We plan to make at least two landings per day. Possible landing sites may include: Paradise Bay is perhaps the most aptly named place in the world and we attempt a landing on the continent proper. After negotiating the iceberg-strewn waters of the Antarctic Sound, we hope to visit the bustling Adélie Penguin (over 100,000 pairs breed here) and Blue-eyed Cormorant colonies on Paulet Island. The Nordenskjöld expedition built a stone survival hut here in 1903. Today its ruins have been taken over by nesting penguins.Further exploration may take you to Melchior Island, Cuverville Island, Portal Point, Neko Harbour, Pléneau Island and if ice conditions permit, to Petermann Island for a visit to the southernmost colony of Gentoo Penguins. |
Day 11-12 | We leave Antarctica and head north across the Drake Passage. Join our lecturers and naturalists on deck as we search for seabirds and whales and enjoy some final lectures. Take the chance to relax and reflect on the fascinating adventures of the past days on the way back to Ushuaia. |
Day 13 | Arrive Ushuaia and disembark – 09:00. Met on arrival and transferred to the airport for your internal flight to Buenos Aires. Met on arrival and transfer to the Casasur hotel for the night in an executive room on a b&b basis https://www.latinodyssey.com/argentina/casa-sur-hotel |
Day 14 | Met and transferred to the airport for your return international flight |
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