Spitsbergen: A Polar Wilderness

Thursday 8th July - Monday 19th July 2010 (12 Days)

Leaders: Mark Beaman and the Quark Expeditions staff

Ship: Akademik Shokalskiy

Group Size Limit: 20 or more

The remote archipelago of Spitsbergen, Europe's only large High Arctic territory, extends from over 76°N to nearly 81°N latitude, its northernmost point being only about 1000 kilometres (about 600 miles) from the North Pole! Situated at the same extremely high latitudes as northern Greenland, unlike that area it can be explored by ship during the summer months, for the warming effects of the Gulf Stream extend even this far north and melt the pack ice to such an extent that the archipelago can be circumnavigated in high summer. Spitsbergen may have been discovered by the Vikings, but there is insufficient evidence and so its formal discoverer is William Barents who reached the west coast in 1596 while trying to find a Northeast Passage to China and the Pacific. Barents failed in the attempt, being turned back by the ice yet again, but the news of huge numbers of whales and Walruses resulted in further exploration and then, in the early 17th century, the establishment of commercial whaling bases by the English, Dutch, Basques and others, while in the 18th and early 19th centuries hunting of Arctic Foxes, Polar Bears and Reindeer for pelts became important. Eventually coal mining was established by a variety of nations at the beginning of the 20th century, although only a limited amount of mining continues to this day. In 1925 an international treaty granted Norway sovereignty over Spitsbergen, which they refer to as Svalbard (or ‘northern frontier'), although the treaty powers, which include Russia, Germany and Britain, retain equal economic rights. In the 19th and early 20th centuries, Spitsbergen became the focus of polar exploration and science. Starting with the expeditions of Scoresby, Franklin and Sabine between 1806-1823, numerous expeditions either explored the Spitsbergen archipelago itself or used the islands as a forward base for attempts on the North Pole. Nansen's famous ice-strengthened ship Fram emerged from the ice near Spitsbergen after being trapped for nearly three years and drifting to within a few hundred kilometres of the pole, while the doomed balloon expedition of Andrée left from the northwestern tip of the archipelago, as did Wellman's unsuccessful attempts by airship, and Amundsen's by seaplane. Finally, in 1926, Byrd (who was later also to be the first to fly to the South Pole) flew from Ny Ålesund to the North Pole and back.

 

Today Spitsbergen is an environmental showcase, having the highest proportion of national parks and nature reserves of any equivalent land mass on earth (the great majority of the archipelago is now protected), and it is the absolutely stunning Arctic scenery and rich Arctic wildlife and plantlife that draw visitors intent on more peaceful appreciation of the islands. Here are fantastic pointed mountains draped in snow (the same mountains that gave Spitsbergen its name), enormous interior ice caps, vast glaciers that carve their way down to spectacular fjords, immense areas of sea ice and impossibly blue icebergs carved into weird shapes by the action of wind and sea. Here too are teeming seabird colonies (notably Brünnich's Guillemot and the delightful Little Auk or Dovekie), beautiful Arctic shorebirds (including the stunning Red Phalarope), the ice-loving Ivory Gull, Pomarine, Arctic and sometimes Long-tailed Skuas (or Pomarine, Parasitic and Long-tailed Jaegers), nesting Barnacle, Pale-bellied Brent and Pink-footed Geese, and King Eiders, and a host of beautiful Arctic wildflowers ranging from Svalbard Poppy, Purple Saxifrage and Moss Campion to Mountain Avens and arctic buttercups. The star attraction is of course the huge and powerful Polar Bear, and on this round Spitsbergen itinerary it would be hard to imagine missing this creature that surely epitomizes the threats to the Arctic from global warming. On this extended cruise we even have a very good chance of multiple sightings (perhaps 10 or more individuals, with some up close from the ship or zodiacs) as the east of the archipelago is the prime area for the species! The bizarre Walrus is another favourite with visitors and we can also expect the pretty little Arctic Fox, Reindeer (of the distinctive Svalbard form), a series of northern seals and, if we are really in luck, some Belugas (or White Whales). It is important to stress that one travels to Spitsbergen for the awesome Arctic experience (many people find the entire cruise such an uplifting experience that it ranks as one of the best things they ever did) rather than simply for seeing birds and other wildlife. The species diversity this far north is naturally limited, so you have to be motivated primarily with the idea of seeing a spectacular part of the High Arctic and its natural history – and what an experience it is!

 

We shall be sailing on the Akademik Shokalskiy (capacity 48 passengers), a ship operated by the well-respected Quark Expeditions . Ships of this class are great favourites with travellers due to their relatively small size, their ability to go almost anywhere and their friendly, almost ‘family' atmosphere. Finnish-built vessels under Russian registry, they were built in the 1980s and commissioned by the Academy of Sciences in Moscow. They were originally intended for oceanographic research, but were subsequently adapted for expedition-style cruising following the financial cutbacks that later affected all formerly Soviet research programmes. These ships are, of course, not ‘cruise ships' in the traditional manner, and will appeal most to those for whom exploring wild places and enjoying wild nature, rather than enjoying luxurious surroundings and ‘black-tie' dinners with the officers, is the prime attraction. This type of vessel is remarkably suited for the Arctic and Antarctic environment: with their specially hardened hulls they have earned the highest possible ice-ratings for a passenger vessel and with their shallow draught and bow thruster they can travel safely in ice-choked areas inaccessible to conventional cruise ships. Cabins are furnished with two or three berths and have some storage space and an outside view (many having en-suite bathroom facilities). Public facilities include restaurant, lounge/bar, lecture facilities, library, small shop and sauna. Food is plentiful, of good quality, waiter-served and prepared by European, North American or Australasian chefs. The ship carries a small complement of expedition staff who, as well as guiding zodiac cruises and excursions ashore, double up as guest lecturers and give informal talks on the environment, wildlife and history of the areas visited. The bridge is normally open to all (except when the ship is docking) and the big ‘picture' windows provide a great viewpoint whenever it is too breezy to stand comfortably at the bow. As much of the sailing as possible is done during the period that passes for night at these latitudes (of course it is light 24 hours a day!), thus maximizing opportunities for going ashore and enjoying the beautiful arctic landscape to the full. Landings are carried out by means of a fleet of zodiacs, the rugged, fast-moving inflatables developed by Jacques Cousteau for expedition work which allow safe landings on remote coastlines in all types of conditions. The sheer speed and efficiency with which the crew and expedition staff carry out these landings, coupled with the small complement of passengers, allows everyone plenty of time ashore, a key factor when considering any cruise of this type. Further information about the cruise, including photographs and details of the ship layout, including cabin layouts, are available on the Ocean Adventures (at Birdquest) website (www.oceanadventures.co.uk). The great advantage of taking this particular cruise, if you are especially interested in seeing Arctic wildlife in all its glory, is that the itinerary and day to day schedule are strongly wildlife-orientated, and the group will also benefit by having an experienced ornithologist guide.

 

Birdquest started tours to Spitsbergen in 2004.



Itinerary

Day 1   Afternoon flight from London to Oslo for an overnight stay.

 

Day 2   This morning we will catch a flight to Longyearbyen via Tromsø in Arctic Norway. If the weather is good it will be a spectacular flight as we first cross the mountains, lakes and fjords of Norway and then the even more impressive mountains of Spitsbergen, which stretch away far into the distance. Drift ice can be seen speckling the Arctic Ocean far below and will be just a foretaste of the magic to come. In the afternoon, while the ship is being readied, we will have a chance to visit Longyearbyen, the only place on Spitsbergen that qualifies for the term ‘town', although it is very small. Originally established to serve the Norwegian coal mines, which still exist but are unused, the town now serves as the administrative centre for the islands and has a growing tourist business, as well as a university. The gaily painted wooden houses and the small but modern shopping centre look strangely out of place amidst the looming, snow covered fells and the waters of the Isfjorden. We should have enough time today (or on our return next week) to walk out of town to admire one of the world's most unusual and charismatic road signs – a red triangular warning sign with a Polar Bear silhouette and the wording ‘applies to all Spitsbergen!' Although Polar Bears are usually wary of humans, there have been exceptions over the years and even hikers and kayakers here are expected to carry flares and a rifle – just in case! We should see our first Snow Buntings in the town itself, and during the walk out we can expect to come across cooing Common Eiders, Long-tailed Ducks in their beautiful summer plumage, Common Ringed Plover, Dunlin and some very tame Purple Sandpipers, while Arctic Terns will be constant companions. Glaucous Gulls are the common large gulls here, but occasionally they are joined by a vagrant Iceland Gull or one of Spitsbergen's few resident Greater Black-backed Gulls. The town's husky kennels are situated nearby and we can go up and see these interesting wolf-like animals at close quarters: perhaps they will start howling in unison, making that wolf-like impression all the stronger. Sometimes an Ivory Gull or two lingers here into early summer. After we board our ship and settle in to our cabins there will be a briefing and then we will set sail towards the mouth of the magnificent Isfjorden and the open sea, accompanied by the first of many Northern Fulmars (most of the dark morph, characteristic of these high latitudes).

 

Days 3-11   Our itinerary will be determined by the present position of the heavy drift ice, for although our ship can safely penetrate the ice, progress is just too slow to spend much time there. The general intention is to circumnavigate Spitsbergen, should ice conditions permit. Every cruise in Spitsbergen is different: the locations mentioned below are just some of the places that are visited and there are many others which are undescribed, but equally wonderful.

 

To the north of the long island known as Prins Karl Forland are Krossfjorden and Kongsfjorden, two spectacular fjords full of glaciers and snowy mountains.

 

Blomstrandhalvøya makes for a fascinating landing site in Kongsfjorden. Here a rather roguish English entrepreneur started up marble-mining operations in the early years of the 20th century, only to discover, once the ice thawed after shipping the slabs south, that the marble was cracked and so of poor quality! The owner's hut and various rusting pieces of machinery still bear testimony to this financial disaster. Behind the shoreline the stony tundra rises towards a high, partly snow-covered range of hills. The only accessible pair of Long-tailed Skuas in Spitsbergen usually nests here, so we may be able to enjoy watching one of these elegant birds guarding its nest while the off-duty partner patrols past, keeping a wary eye on us. Further into the interior, Rock Ptarmigans haunt the scree slopes. At this time of year the male ptarmigan are still white, or just showing a few dark feathers, and so they are relatively easy to spot as they survey their territories from the tops of large boulders or rocky crags. The females, however, have already moulted into their amazingly cryptic summer plumage. The curious Svalbard form of the Reindeer, which has short legs that make it appear almost wild goat-like, can also be found here.

 

Across the fjord is the scientific research base of Ny Ålesund, the most northerly settlement on Earth. Once the site of a coal mine, Ny Ålesund was the jumping off point, or arrival point, for a series of polar expeditions by air, including Amundsen's almost-successful flight of 1910, Byrd's successful flight and Amundsen and Nobile's successful airship voyage on the Norge in 1926, and finally Nobile's doomed voyage on the airship Italia in 1928. The tall anchor mast for the airships stands to this day. This historic spot is also excellent for wildlife. King Eiders often frequent the shoreline, while inland the husky kennels are a reliable spot for Ivory Gull and unusually tolerant Arctic Terns nest all around the bust of Amundsen. The small lakes and grassy areas on the edge of the settlement attract Barnacle Geese and sometimes straggling wildfowl from the European mainland, while not far from the small souvenir shop Arctic Foxes have their den underneath a wooden house and we may even be able to watch the utterly delightful greyish pups playing together while their piebald mother keeps watch.

 

We may land at the Tinayrebreen, one of the huge glaciers in Krossfjorden, where the rocky slopes hold Rock Ptarmigan and nesting Pink-footed and Barnacle Geese, as well as Arctic Skuas (or Parasitic Jaegers). Arctic plants are numerous and diverse, with Purple Saxifrage, Arctic Bell Heather, Moss Campion and several species of arctic buttercups amongst others. Spitsbergen's only widespread ‘tree', the mat-like Polar Willow, is everywhere. As we walk on the ridge here we will be able to look down on the surface of the glacier, seeing the dirty marks where rocks and debris lie on the surface. From time to time a large chunk of ice from the glacier front calves into the bay, floating away as a small iceberg. At the 14th of July glacier (named by a French expedition) near the junction of the fjords we will take to our zodiacs to explore the seabird cliffs where huge numbers of Brünnich's Guillemots (or Thick-billed Murres) and Atlantic Puffins nest, occasionally joined by a lone pair of Razorbills at the northern extremity of their distribution. Later we will use the zodiacs to explore the face of the glacier, admiring the extraordinary pattern of cracks, crevices and recesses in the ice and of course the deep blue colour of the dense glacier ice. We should come across one or more weirdly sculpted blue icebergs in the bay, getting up close to take yet more photographs and see the almost unbelievable colours and ice carvings.

 

At the northwest corner of Spitsbergen are the small islands of Amsterdamøya, Danskøya, Fuglesangen (or Fuglesongen) with its enormous Little Auk (or Dovekie) colony and Ytre Norskøya.

 

Amsterdamøya was the site of the most famous Dutch (and Danish) whaling settlement of the 17th century, Smeerenburg (‘Blubbertown'). Some of the blubber ovens and the bases of the whalers' huts still remain, as do some of the graves of those who died here (including, notably, a party of seven who were left to overwinter but died of scurvy). Situated on a bleak spit dominated by a nearby mountain, one can imagine all the activity here at the time when Bowhead (or Greenland Right) Whales were being captured and butchered all through the summer months, but it must have been a very hard life indeed. For those who enjoy birds as well as history there are Red-throated Divers (or Red-throated Loons), beautifully-plumaged Ruddy Turnstones and the occasional Great Skua. Across the narrow sound is Danskøya and a landing at Virgohamna gives an interesting insight into the expedition period of Spitsbergen's history. Here are the remains of the hanger that housed Andrée's balloon prior to his ill-fated attempt on the pole in 1897 (the balloon came down after only three days, due to excessive icing, and the three crew members walked over the ice to Kvitøya in far northeast Spitsbergen but died there, their fate remaining a mystery until their bodies, log and film were discovered in 1930!). There are also the much larger remains of the hanger dating from Wellman's airship attempts of 1906-1909.

 

The island of Fuglesangen is a bleak, snow-streaked mountain rising from the sea at the most northwesterly point of the Spitsbergen archipelago. Here the many boulder slopes provide countless crevices for nesting Little Auks (or Dovekies) and once we have made our way slowly along the foreshore from the landing place we will be able to work our way cautiously to the edge of just one section of this enormous colony (tens of thousands strong!). At this time of year it is still early in the breeding cycle and huge numbers of birds are visiting their burrows to lay eggs and gathering to socialize. As we gaze across the slopes we will be able to see thousands of little white and black birds clustered on the boulders and by carefully creeping up on these splendid little alcids we should be able to get stunning views from just three or four metres range. Flocks of birds are constantly coming and going at the colony and just hearing the maniacal cackling of the birds is something special in itself. Every so often a Glaucous Gull (or more rarely a Great Skua) patrols the slopes, creating a frenzy of activity as many thousands of birds take to the air with a deafening roar, the flocks curving across the sky like winter flocks of Common Starlings before gradually settling again. As these fast-flying flocks sweep low over one's head the sound of their wings and their loud cries fill the air. Indeed, the whole experience here is absolutely awe-inspiring for anyone who loves birds, and is of course unique to the High Arctic. A very different experience all round from seeing a solitary Little Auk in winter bobbing distantly on the water off some headland, or whirring past at extreme range! Not far away from Fuglesangen is Ytre Norskøya, site of another whaling settlement and complete with the remains of blubber ovens and many graves of whalers who never made it home from this wild place at the ‘edge of the world'.

 

As long as ice conditions permit we will visit remote Moffen, a low-lying, rather atoll-like island with a central lagoon (making it decidedly atypical in mountainous Spitsbergen). This is a haul out area for male Walruses and we are likely to observe several groups resting on the beach, perhaps amounting to 100 or more. The island is also one of the few places in Spitsbergen where the small but beautiful Sabine's Gull nests, so we will naturally be hoping to get up to Moffen, not least because the island is situated at over 80°N and so seems almost within striking distance of the pole! Unfortunately, as the island is a strict nature reserve and approaching closer than 300m is forbidden, it is hard to get more than a distant view of the gulls from the ship (and a personal telescope is essential). Sometimes Polar Bears come ashore here as the ice melts, but Moffen offers little in the way of food for them (adult male Walruses are just too big, even for this mega-predator!).

 

To the south of Moffen are spectacular Woodfjorden and Liefdefjorden. Here we may go ashore at Reinsdyrflya, a huge plain that holds, as its Norwegian name implies, a large population of the short-legged Spitsbergen race of the Reindeer. This is a great area for Polar Bears, which in this area survive the lean summer months by hunting seals on the remaining ice in the more protected bays. We have an excellent chance of seeing several while in this area and we will be hoping that one or two will allow a close approach by zodiac or by the ship. Seeing one of these huge beasts close up as it walks along the shoreline or across the ice is an awesome experience: those cold black eyes, the inquisitive facial expression and the fearless behaviour suggest bear thoughts along the line ‘is this food I see approaching?'! Alternatively, we might come across one swimming between the islands or areas of fjord ice. If we are lucky we will also encounter Northern Minke Whale in this area. We may also visit some small islands where Red (or Grey) Phalaropes nest in some numbers, enjoying some fantastic, close-up views of these beautifully-plumaged and very confiding little birds as they swim along in the shallows right in front of us, stopping frequently to pick insects from the water's surface. We will soon learn to distinguish the deep red females from the more pastel-shaded males. Pink-footed and Pale-bellied Brent Geese nest in the area too, as do Long-tailed Ducks, Common Eiders, the beautiful King Eider, Purple Sandpipers, Great Skua and Arctic Skua (or Parasitic Jaeger). Ivory Gulls are regular here and probably breed in the stark mountains nearby. Watching one flying over the equally white ice, with the blue-black and white peaks behind, is a highly evocative Arctic experience. Further from the sea, at the head of Liefdefjorden, is the huge Monacobreen (Monaco Glacier). If ice conditions permit, we will sail through the broken floes until we are quite close to the spectacular front of this immense glacier and its smaller but equally impressive neighbour the Idabreen. Wild, snow-covered peaks line the glaciers and the fjord sides, adding to the majesty of this extraordinary place.

 

Walruses generally feed in shallow water and we may encounter one or two hauled out on slabs of ice amongst the fjords of Spitsbergen, particularly if there is too much ice onshore for them to haul out easily on a beach. Often it is possible to take the ship close, or even get right up to one in the zodiacs. Seeing a large male Walrus at close range is truly impressive, especially when one can count every bristle on that amazing face! We may also see these bizarre creatures in the water, watching them roll around or rear their heads up to see what is happening, squinting along those huge tusks. If the ice on the beaches has melted we may be able to find a large gathering to visit, looking for all the world like a heap of gigantic brown slugs as they sleep away the ‘heat' of a summer's day while wallowing in decomposing kelp! If a new arrival turns up there may be a brief kafuffle as the newcomer shuffles its way into the midst of the heap, causing some rearing up and tusk stabbing, not to mention some outraged bellowing!

 

Exploring the sea ice is one of the joys of a polar voyage and so we will all be looking forward to the moment we find ourselves amongst the drift ice (a likely event in all but very low ice years). As we approach the ice front it seems like a fortified white wall in our path, but as we get nearer we will see that this is just an illusion created by the low perspective – the floes lie jumbled at random across the surface of the sea, sometimes widely spaced, with just small pieces of ice in between, and sometimes crammed together. Our skilful Russian captain, an expert in polar navigation, will take our boat far into the ice, sometimes sailing down open leads, at others bumping and crushing the floes out of the way. We will soon be used to the grinding sound as another floe disappears below the bows, huge fragments breaking off and jostling each other in a swirl of water as we head ever onwards. Being amongst the ice is one of the very best times of any Spitsbergen journey, and as we gaze out across floes of every shape and size, ranging from brilliant white to an incredibly deep blue, we will be reminded that it is truly good to be alive when one can experience such extraordinary wonders! What is more, in order to experience ‘the ice' at its most intense, we may take to our zodiacs and zigzag amongst the floes to get right up close. And it is not just the ice which is fascinating, but the wildlife that survives and prospers here. Bearded Seals haul themselves up on the floes and can often be approached closely by the ship. If the ice is suitable we have a fair chance of coming across a Polar Bear trying its luck with Bearded Seals, and we should at least see footprints leading across the floes. Black-legged Kittiwakes dip down to feed on small Arctic Cod and shrimps as the ship disturbs the ice and Little Auks (or Dovekies), Brünnich's Guillemots (or Thick-billed Murres) and smart Black Guillemots fish in the leads or haul themselves up onto the ice floes. Non-breeding Pomarine Skuas (or Pomarine Jaegers) with spectacular ‘spoon-ended' tail projections sometimes gather here to harry the kittiwakes in the hope they will disgorge their last meal. Here, while amongst the drift ice, we have another chance to see the superb Ivory Gull and we can even entertain thoughts of another of those special birds of the Arctic, Ross's Gull, although, as this elegant little gull mainly frequents the icy waters far to the east of Spitsbergen (as a non-breeding visitor) and so is only seen on about one cruise in ten or less, you should not get your hopes up too much!

 

Eventually we will penetrate as far as the Hinlopen Strait, which separates the main island of Svalbard (which is called Spitsbergen) from the largely ice-covered Nordaustlandet (or Northeast Land). Here we can visit the stark, sheer and dramatic cliffs at Alkefjellet (‘Auk Fell'). Even as we approach the cliffs, which are surrounded (indeed almost overwhelmed) by a huge icefield, the sheer numbers of auks (or alcids) will have become apparent and once we embark on a zodiac cruise the noise and characteristic smell of a vast seabird colony will soon surround us. Somewhere of the order of 30,000-50,000 pairs of Brünnich's Guillemots (or Thick-billed Murres) nest here, alongside much smaller numbers of Black-legged Kittiwakes. As we sail underneath the cliffs thousands and thousands of guillemots can be seen cramming every snow-free ledge, while thousands more wheel overhead or swim on the waters below the cliffs. Pieces of drift ice provide platforms for guillemots to haul themselves out on, where they look for all the world like penguins in the Antarctic!

 

As we head southwards we come to the wild landscapes of Barentsøya and Edgeøya (‘Edge Island, named after an English whaler), one of the most remote and rarely visited parts of Spitsbergen and another fantastic area for Polar Bear sightings. Our expedition team will be doing their best to amass an impressive total, although numbers vary greatly from year to year.

 

The stunning Hornsund is situated close to the southern tip of Spitsbergen. Here landings are often made at the little Polish research station at Isbjørnhamna, close to some impressively rugged and partly snow-covered mountains and a huge glacier that calves icebergs into the fjord. Arctic Terns nest noisily along the shore and we may see a diminutive grey-brown Arctic Fox carefully searching for eggs. Reindeer and Barnacle Geese feed on the boggy lower slopes, the latter placing their nests on cliff edges or rocky pinnacles where they are safe from foxes, or at least better able to defend themselves. The area at the foot of the mountains has been enriched by seabird droppings and as we head further inland we can enjoy the extraordinary greens, buffs and browns of the tundra mosses and the greys of the rocks, spattered with red, green and whitish lichens. Purple Saxifrage is everywhere, sometimes forming carpets of colour, and we can also expect to find many other arctic wildflowers including Mountain Avens and the delightful little Svalbard Poppy. As we reach the slopes we will find Pink-footed Geese, Arctic Skuas (or Parasitic Jaegers) and Purple Sandpipers nesting (the latter visiting the shore to feed), but the big attraction here is a spectacular Little Auk (or Dovekie) colony, perhaps numbering into the hundreds of thousands!

 

Later we will cruise up to the head of the Hornsund, enjoying a thrilling journey past some of the most amazing scenery on earth: great icy mountain ridges rising from the icy waters of the fjord, themselves spattered with ice floes and small icebergs, and a series of huge and awesome glaciers carving their way down broad valleys from the interior ice caps until they crack and calve as they reach the sea. Fjord ice will probably still extend far out in front of some of the glaciers and here our ship will cut its way as deep as it can as we try to get better looks at the many Ringed Seals hauled out on the ice, but close enough to their breathing holes to escape quickly if danger threatens, while we may also see some ivory-coloured Belugas, or White Whales, patrolling the ice edge. Ringed Seals are the Polar Bear's staple diet in Spitsbergen, so we shall be keeping a close watch for these marvellous animals. They can be hard to spot, especially when swimming in the open leads in the ice, or hiding amongst the boulders and stranded ice floes on the shore, but we have a very good chance of finding one or more in the area. If we are really lucky we will have one come ambling across the ice close to the ship out of sheer curiosity. Mothers with small cubs are more wary, however, and usually head in the opposite direction.

 

Further north, at Ahlstrandodden in fabulous Bellsund, is an old Beluga hunting base from the 18th century. Here, on a remote shingle spit surrounded by beautiful bays and magnificent snowy peaks (the scenery just goes on and on in Spitsbergen, until it becomes hard to remember which area was the most spectacular of all!), two old wooden boats from the period have been almost miraculously preserved by Spitsbergen's arctic climate and heaps of Beluga bones still lie nearby. Tundra pools provide nesting sites for the stunning Red (or Grey) Phalarope and the birds can often be found feeding along the shoreline. As always with phalaropes, a bit of patience should allow a very close approach, allowing the birds to show off their gorgeous summer plumage to its best advantage. This is also a good area for King Eider and we may find a collection of different plumage types ranging from females to immature males and striking adult males with their extraordinary orange bill shields.

 

Day 12   Today we will disembark and fly back from Longyearbyen to London via Oslo, arriving in the late morning or in the evening, depending on which flight out of Longyearbyen the cruise operators have selected.

 

Accommodation & Road Transport: The hotel at Oslo airport is of normal Birdquest standard. For details of the ship, see the introductory section. Not much road transport on this one! Transfers in Longyearbyen are by coach.

 

Walking etc: The walking is mostly easy (walks tend to be short distance), although there are uphill, boggy or stony areas at times. Some optional harder walks may be offered by the expedition leader, but these are for the wilderness experience rather than for seeing wildlife not available on the shorter walks. Zodiac embarkation and disembarkation are superbly handled by the crew and expedition staff, making shore excursions straightforward for even very elderly or unfit participants.

 

Climate: Surprisingly mild for so far north, due to the warming effects of the Gulf Stream. Temperatures average around 5-6°C at all times (there is no night of course), although it can feel much warmer on still, sunny days ashore and correspondingly colder on overcast, breezy days on the ship. There is usually little rainfall and sunny periods are interspersed with overcast weather. Some fog is likely.

 

Bird/Mammal Photography: Opportunities are quite good overall.

 

Important: You need to bear in mind that circumstances may be encountered during the voyage which will make it necessary or desirable to deviate from the planned itinerary. These circumstances include poor weather conditions and unexpectedly heavy drift ice. The expedition leader will provide more information at the start of the voyage and keep you fully informed throughout. You should not be concerned that such changes will prevent you from experiencing Spitsbergen at its best: there are always alternative areas with excellent scenery and wildlife to visit if the ship is thwarted getting to a particular place.

 

 


 


Photograph by Pete Morris/Birdquest

A fabulous King Eider.


Photograph Pete Morris/Birdquest

Polar Bear - the true symbol of the Arctic!

Click here to see large images of Polar Bears from our tours to Spitsbergen


TOUR PRICES

 

PLEASE NOTE THAT THESE 2010 PRICES ARE PROVISIONAL

£3519, €4575, $6686 London/London (or £2895, €3764, $5501 Longyearbyen/Longyearbyen) in a triple-berth cabin without private bathroom.

Supplement for a twin-berth cabin without private bathroom: £547, €711, $1039.

Supplement for a twin-berth cabin with private bathroom: £1040, €1352, $1976.

Supplement for a superior cabin: £1697, €2206, $3224.

Supplement for a suite: £2354, €3060, $4473.


(Past Quark Expeditions travellers are entitled to a 5% discount on the Longyearbyen/Longyearbyen price.)

Based on 10 or more participants.

Oslo/Oslo arrangements are also possible: please contact us.

Additional Exclusions: Dinner in Oslo, lunch on arrival day in Longyearbyen and gratuities for the expedition staff and crew (most passengers give between $110-165 in total) are not included in the tour price. For the usual exclusions, please see the Booking Information.

 

Single Cabin/Room Supplement: Single occupancy of twin-berth cabins without private bathrooms or twin-berth cabins with private bathrooms can be obtained in return for an 70% supplement on top of the Longyearbyen/Longyearbyen price (superiors and suites are available for single occupancy for a 100% supplement). Please note that if you are willing to share but no cabin-mate is available you will not have to pay the single occupancy supplement. The single room supplement in Oslo is: £51, €66, $97. (Please note that if you are sharing a cabin on board ship and your cabin mate is not overnighting with you in Oslo, or if you are the third person to book in a triple cabin, then you will have to pay the supplement for a single room in Oslo.)

 

Basic Deposit: 20% of the London/London price (rounded down to the nearest £, € or $).

 

Supplementary Deposit (for those arranging international air travel through us, due 12 months prior to departure): £550, €715, $1045.

 

Final Payment & Cancellation Charges: The balance due for the holiday will be invoiced approximately five months prior to departure, for payment within 21 days. For cancellations made 91 days or more before departure a cancellation charge of 10% of the cruise-only price (plus any airline cancellation charges) will apply. For cancellations made 1-90 days before departure, or on the day of departure or later, the cancellation charge will be 100% of the holiday price.


email: crew@oceanadventures.co.uk | tel: 01254 826116 (international: +44 1254 826116) | Contact Us
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