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Best luxury expedition ship to Antarctica?

Best luxury expedition ship to Antarctica?

Old May 15, 2017, 7:11 am
  #16  
 
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We're considering one of the Silversea Antarctic Peninsula trips (no Falklands or S. Georgia stops). Can we expect penguins on the peninsula?
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Old May 18, 2017, 1:31 pm
  #17  
 
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Originally Posted by Out of my Element
We're considering one of the Silversea Antarctic Peninsula trips (no Falklands or S. Georgia stops). Can we expect penguins on the peninsula?
Seeing Penguins on the Peninsula is a pretty safe bet
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Old May 18, 2017, 1:32 pm
  #18  
 
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I'm counting on that, but I know they are more numerous on the islands mentioned that we are not visiting.
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Old May 19, 2017, 1:12 pm
  #19  
 
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I think it also depends on the type of penguins. I went down past the Antarctic Circle and up the peninsula and never saw an emporer penguin.

Thousands of Adelies, Gentoos, Chinstraps though :P
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Old May 19, 2017, 1:20 pm
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Looking forward to that! Were hoping for a December trip, to see chicks, but looks like we'll be going in February instead
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Old May 20, 2017, 9:54 pm
  #21  
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if booking high level suite could also take a look at White Desert

re thread, there are also cruises which fly both ways across drake
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Old Sep 4, 2017, 11:17 am
  #22  
 
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Originally Posted by Larkin
We are leaving for Chile in 2 weeks and then onto the ship to Antartica! So glad to hear you had a good experience with Quest! I will certainly report back on our experience. Everything we have read has been very positive so we are very much looking forward to the adventure! Thank you for the great feedback on Quest!
We are going in a few months. Any advice based on your experience?
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Old Sep 5, 2017, 8:19 am
  #23  
 
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Originally Posted by 747FC
We are going in a few months. Any advice based on your experience?
Are you interested in hearing about Chile by land, or the trip to Antarctica on Seabourn Quest which included some stops along the Chilean coast, went to Antarctica from Ushuaia, Argentina for 6 days, then in our case to South Georgia and back to Buenos Aires via Montevideo. We spent time by land in Chile first and a few days in Buenos Aires at the end ( both of which we had visited several times before for business and for pleasure). Let me know your areas of interest and I'm happy to help! We loved everything on this trip, but the Antarctica and South Georgia experience on Seabourn could not have been better. It was truly a trip of a lifetime!
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Old Sep 5, 2017, 11:52 am
  #24  
 
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Originally Posted by Larkin
Are you interested in hearing about Chile by land, or the trip to Antarctica on Seabourn Quest which included some stops along the Chilean coast, went to Antarctica from Ushuaia, Argentina for 6 days, then in our case to South Georgia and back to Buenos Aires via Montevideo. We spent time by land in Chile first and a few days in Buenos Aires at the end ( both of which we had visited several times before for business and for pleasure). Let me know your areas of interest and I'm happy to help! We loved everything on this trip, but the Antarctica and South Georgia experience on Seabourn could not have been better. It was truly a trip of a lifetime!
Many thanks for your offer of your insights!

We will be taking the Quest EZE-SCL, so would really appreciate any advice you might have for that trip. We will be in BA for three nights before our departure. We will not be going to S. Georgia on this itinerary. We will be taking a full-day tour of the SCL area between docking and late-night return home.

Not sure what shore excursions you found worthwhile, but one that we are considering is a flight from Punta Arenas to Puerto Natales to (briefly) visit the Torres del Paine National Park. Might you have a recommendation for this very expensive excursion?

This will be our first trip to adventure to this part of the world, so if you have any suggestions for making it a wonderful trip, they would be appreciated.
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Old Sep 6, 2017, 11:24 pm
  #25  
 
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Cool

You will love this trip! It is fantastic. In BA 3 days makes sense. There is a lot to see and do. Great restaurants too. I have been a number of times and I think 3 days very worthwhile. Santiago one day ok unless you want to do wine tasting, etc. I highly recommend the expensive trip to Torres Del Paine. We did it and we're very happy we did. Sign up soon as it will sell out as only a limited number of people can go. The weather could be iffy, but we lucked out and has a nice day. Beautiful scenery.

If you can I suggest for the way you are going a room on the starboard side would be good for going through the Chilean fjords. If you are on the other side no problem but for that one part of the trip it makes sense. We went the other way and we're on the port side and did not have to leave our room to see many things but it's only for a short time.

Antarctica itself was really amazing. We lucked out on the weather. Seabourn dies an amazing job organizationally. Only 80'people can go ashore at once. You have a colored wristband and go at different times each day. It ran like a clock. They help you get into your boots, into the zodiacs, have a fantastic expedition team that goes ashore ahead of time and maos everything out for you. It is first class all the way. Lectures are every day but you can go in person, watch from the tv in your room, or they record them so you can watch on your own time. Be sure to rent the boots. If your boots don't fit they have a " boot exchange" and things worked out for everyone. We also rented the walking sticks. Some days they were helpful, but some nit necessary. Good to have depending on the depth of the snow.
We bought most of the recommended clothes, but fir us the weather was warmer than expected. Not warm, but nit as cold as exoected is probably a better way to describe! If you are taking iphne photos get glove liners that work with iPhones. Look online as otherwise you have to take the gloves and liners off. Especially if you have a screen cover protecting the glass. I also had a thing to hook it around my neck so did not have to worry about dropping. My husband carried the serious camera gear. Drakes Passage was rough but not as bad as I expected. Once in Antarctica it was very calm and well protected. The crew and expedition staff go out of their way to make it a great trip. All expeditions in Antarctica are included except kayaking which I suggest you try once or twice if so inclined. It also sells out so plan in advance. Ifctgecweather bad they will cancel. MDR was open for breakfast and lunch every day on our cruise. But they had heaters and blankets on the pool deck so lots of people ate outside in Antarctica too. Feel free to PM me if you have specific questions. I'm happy to answer!
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Old Sep 7, 2017, 1:00 am
  #26  
 
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Originally Posted by Larkin
Feel free to PM me if you have specific questions. I'm happy to answer!
Thanks for your very helpful comments. PM to follow!
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Old Sep 9, 2017, 7:40 am
  #27  
 
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Larkin - I am on the Quest trip on 20 Dec, sailing Santiago-Antarctica-South Georgia etc. Your reports and an almost daily blog posted up on Cruise Critic were big factors in my decision to take the Seabourn cruise rather than one on an expedition ship.
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Old Sep 13, 2017, 12:34 pm
  #28  
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thanks Larkin!

Pausanias, did it seem like excursions are comparable?
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Old Oct 3, 2017, 5:32 pm
  #29  
 
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La Cabrera in BA gave me the best steak I've ever had in my life. $35 US for two of us (steak, fries, salad, no alcohol).

Prebooking is pretty much required.
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Old Feb 6, 2018, 9:24 am
  #30  
 
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Originally Posted by Larkin
You will love this trip! It is fantastic. In BA 3 days makes sense. There is a lot to see and do. Great restaurants too. I have been a number of times and I think 3 days very worthwhile. Santiago one day ok unless you want to do wine tasting, etc. I highly recommend the expensive trip to Torres Del Paine. We did it and we're very happy we did. Sign up soon as it will sell out as only a limited number of people can go. The weather could be iffy, but we lucked out and has a nice day. Beautiful scenery.

If you can I suggest for the way you are going a room on the starboard side would be good for going through the Chilean fjords. If you are on the other side no problem but for that one part of the trip it makes sense. We went the other way and we're on the port side and did not have to leave our room to see many things but it's only for a short time.

Antarctica itself was really amazing. We lucked out on the weather. Seabourn dies an amazing job organizationally. Only 80'people can go ashore at once. You have a colored wristband and go at different times each day. It ran like a clock. They help you get into your boots, into the zodiacs, have a fantastic expedition team that goes ashore ahead of time and maos everything out for you. It is first class all the way. Lectures are every day but you can go in person, watch from the tv in your room, or they record them so you can watch on your own time. Be sure to rent the boots. If your boots don't fit they have a " boot exchange" and things worked out for everyone. We also rented the walking sticks. Some days they were helpful, but some nit necessary. Good to have depending on the depth of the snow.
We bought most of the recommended clothes, but fir us the weather was warmer than expected. Not warm, but nit as cold as exoected is probably a better way to describe! If you are taking iphne photos get glove liners that work with iPhones. Look online as otherwise you have to take the gloves and liners off. Especially if you have a screen cover protecting the glass. I also had a thing to hook it around my neck so did not have to worry about dropping. My husband carried the serious camera gear. Drakes Passage was rough but not as bad as I expected. Once in Antarctica it was very calm and well protected. The crew and expedition staff go out of their way to make it a great trip. All expeditions in Antarctica are included except kayaking which I suggest you try once or twice if so inclined. It also sells out so plan in advance. Ifctgecweather bad they will cancel. MDR was open for breakfast and lunch every day on our cruise. But they had heaters and blankets on the pool deck so lots of people ate outside in Antarctica too. Feel free to PM me if you have specific questions. I'm happy to answer!

Our Seabourn trip, just completed, was fantastic. We found that having one landing per day in Antarctica was sufficient for us. We were able to stay on land for longer than the "advertised" time, and got as many pics of penguins and ice as we desired. Seabourn gave us a great balance between luxury and expedition sailing, and we would highly recommend it to those who like both.

After we left Antarctica, I talked to a bunch of the expedition staff (all contractors, not employees) about what we might gain by taking a true expedition ship next time we traveled to Antarctica. The consensus view is that we would be able to get into different landing sites, but that these sites were not necessarily "better," just "different." The big trade-offs would be extra landings a day on a smaller ship, versus the stability/comfort a bigger ship provides, especially on a rough Drake crossing.

The kayak expedition was well worth it as a one-off experience. Had fun trading pictures of each other that we took during the expedition.

Second the recommendation of renting the boots: I needed to downsize my boots, so glad I did not purchase. Also, one lady had her purchased boots go missing, for some reason.

Unfortunately, we had to cancel the TDP flight as my wife got sick. We were lucky that there was a long waiting list, so our payment was refunded.

I purchased a premium camera system before this trip, and after reading your post and learning that my dentist actually lost his camera to Antarctic waters, I also found a fail-safe system to keep the camera from sinking into the deep in case I dropped it.

Thanks, Larkin, for all your great advice!
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