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Wild Isles Of The North Atlantic, Greenland & Iceland
SeabournV741A

Wild Isles Of The North Atlantic, Greenland & Iceland

Date

2027-06-19

Duration

28 nights

Departure Port

Belfast

United Kingdom

Arrival Port

Reykjavik

Iceland

Rating

Expedition

Theme

—

Seabourn Venture 1
Seabourn Venture 2
Seabourn Venture 3
Seabourn Venture 4
Seabourn Venture 5
Seabourn Venture 6
Seabourn Venture 7
Seabourn Venture 8
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Seabourn

Seabourn Venture

Launched

2021

Refitted

—

Tonnage

23,000 GT

Passengers

264

Cabins

132

Crew

120

Length

558 m

Width

24 m

Speed

19 knots

Adults Only

No

View Details

Itinerary

Day 1

Day 1

Belfast

Northern Ireland
Belfast

Belfast, Northern Ireland’s capital, is a vibrant port city renowned for its rich shipbuilding heritage, highlighted by the Titanic Belfast museum. Must-do experiences include exploring the historic Cathedral Quarter and tasting traditional dishes like Irish stew and soda bread at St. George's Market. The best season to visit is during the spring and summer when the city comes alive with festivals and outdoor events.

Day 2

Day 2

At Sea

Day 3

Day 3

Kirkwall

Scotland
Kirkwall

Kirkwall, the Norse-founded capital of Scotland's Orkney Islands, is a sandstone harbour town framed by UNESCO-listed Neolithic monuments, a twelfth-century cathedral, and some of Britain's finest coastal landscapes. Visitors should not miss the five-thousand-year-old village of Skara Brae and a tasting of North Ronaldsay seaweed-fed lamb paired with Highland Park whisky. The prime cruising season runs from May through August, when Orkney enjoys up to nineteen hours of daylight and the wild coastal light is at its most luminous.

Day 4

Day 4

Lerwick

Scotland
Lerwick

Lerwick, capital of Scotland's Shetland Islands, is a captivating Norse-Scottish harbour town renowned for its seventeenth-century granite waterfront, Viking heritage, and pristine maritime larder of wind-dried reestit mutton and hand-dived scallops. Visitors should explore the lodberries along Commercial Street and the award-winning Shetland Museum at Hay's Dock. The optimal season is late May through August, when near-perpetual daylight — the famous "simmer dim" — bathes the islands in an ethereal golden glow and seabird colonies along the cliffs reach their spectacular peak.

Day 6

Day 6

Isle of Noss

Scotland

The Isle of Noss is a Shetland nature reserve hosting over 100,000 breeding seabirds on its spectacular 181-meter sandstone cliffs, including 12,000 pairs of gannets, guillemots, puffins, and dive-bombing great skuas. Must-do experiences include Zodiac cruising beneath the Noup of Noss cliff face, watching gannet colonies in action, and exploring Shetland's Viking heritage in Lerwick. June and July offer peak seabird activity and Shetland's magical simmer dim twilight.

Day 7

Day 7

Vigur Island

Iceland
Vigur Island

Vigur Island is a tiny, family-farmed island in Iceland's Westfjords where eider ducks nest in the farmyard, puffins burrow in the fields, and Iceland's only surviving windmill stands beside the oldest boat in the country. Visitors experience guided walks combining wildlife and farming heritage, with coffee and pancakes from the host family. Late June and July offer peak breeding season and near-continuous Arctic daylight.

Day 8

Day 8

Torshavn

Faroe Islands
Torshavn

Tórshavn is the Faroe Islands' tiny capital city, where a thousand-year-old Viking parliament site, turf-roofed timber houses, and two-Michelin-starred dining coexist in one of the North Atlantic's most atmospheric settings. Visit from May through September for extraordinary hiking, midnight twilight, and a cultural scene that defies the city's diminutive size.

Day 9

Day 9

Klaksvik

Faroe Islands

Klaksvík, the Faroe Islands' second town, is an authentic North Atlantic fishing community set between dramatic fjords and steep mountains on the island of Borðoy. Must-dos include hiking to the Klakkur summit for archipelago views, visiting the Christianskirkjan's Viking-age font, and tasting fermented ræst kjøt and fresh Faroese salmon. May through August provides the mildest weather and longest daylight for exploring this spectacularly rugged corner of the North Atlantic.

Day 10

Day 10

Oyndarfjørður

Arrive 07:00Depart 14:00
Faroe Islands

Oyndarfjørður, Faroe Islands is a distinctive port city where deep cultural heritage meets authentic local atmosphere, featured on itineraries by Seabourn. Must-do experiences include exploring the historic quarter to absorb centuries of architectural heritage, and sampling the distinctive northern cuisine that transforms local ingredients into refined dining experiences. The optimal time to visit is June through August, when summer months bring the warmest temperatures and longest days.

Day 11

Day 11

Djupivogur

Iceland
Djupivogur

Djúpivogur is an intimate Icelandic fishing village on the eastern coast where thirty-four stone egg sculptures line the harbor, Vatnajökull glacier dominates the horizon, and puffin colonies nest on nearby Papey island. Visit June through August via Seabourn or Viking for reindeer sightings, glacier views, and the quiet eastern Iceland that rewards travelers who venture beyond the Golden Circle.

Day 11

Day 11

Papey Island

Papey is a tiny uninhabited island off eastern Iceland, named after the Irish monks who may have been Iceland's first inhabitants, now home to one of the region's largest puffin colonies and an atmospheric abandoned farmstead with a wooden church from 1807. Visitors can observe puffins at close range during the June-July breeding peak and explore the stone-walled remnants of island life. Boat tours operate from Djúpivogur during summer, weather permitting.

Day 12

Day 12

Grimsey

Iceland
Grimsey

Grímsey is Iceland's only inhabited territory on the Arctic Circle, a tiny island of fifty residents surrounded by tens of thousands of nesting Atlantic puffins during summer. Must-dos include crossing the Arctic Circle marker, observing puffins at close range on the grassy cliffs, and experiencing the midnight sun during the summer solstice. June through August offers puffin breeding season and continuous daylight.

Day 13

Day 13

Siglufjørdur - høfn

Iceland

Siglufjordur is a dramatically situated fjord town on Iceland's northern coast, once the herring capital of the North Atlantic, now home to the award-winning Herring Era Museum and an annual Folk Music Festival. Visitors should explore the immersive museum, taste Arctic char and local craft beer, and hike the mountain trails enclosing the fjord. June and July bring near-continuous daylight and the music festival.

Day 14

Day 14

Dynjandi Waterfalls

Iceland
Dynjandi Waterfalls

Dynjandi is the Westfjords' most spectacular waterfall — a 100-meter bridal-veil cascade above a staircase of six smaller falls in a setting of extraordinary fjord scenery. Visitors should hike the wildflower-lined trail to the base of the main cascade, and explore the surrounding Arnarfjordur region with its traditional fishing villages. July and August offer the most reliable weather, though waterproof gear is essential in any season.

Day 15

Day 15

Reykjavik

Iceland
Reykjavik

Reykjavik, the world's northernmost capital, distils the entire improbable beauty of Iceland into one compact, creatively charged city. The soaring basalt columns of Hallgrímskirkja dominate a skyline of primary-coloured rooftops, while the Harpa Concert Hall shimmers beside the harbour like a captured aurora. Day trips from the city unlock the Golden Circle's geysers and Geysir hot spring, the black sand beaches of Vík, and the ethereal glacier lagoon at Jökulsárlón. Geothermal pools — from the legendary Blue Lagoon to intimate neighbourhood hot pots — offer warmth year-round. June and July bring the bewitching midnight sun.

Day 16

Day 16

Heimaey

Arrive 07:00Depart 11:00
Iceland
Heimaey

Heimaey is Iceland's volcanic island where the dramatic 1973 eruption story, the world's largest puffin colony of one million breeding pairs, and the children's annual puffling rescue create one of the North Atlantic's most extraordinary port experiences. Visit May through August via Lindblad or Windstar for Eldfell volcano hikes, the Eldheimar Museum's excavated homes, and the harbor approach through a channel literally reshaped by eruption.

Day 17

Day 17

At Sea

Day 18

Day 18

At Sea

Day 19

Day 19

Qaqortoq

Arrive 07:00Depart 12:01
Greenland
Qaqortoq

Qaqortoq is southern Greenland's largest town, where brightly painted houses climb above a fjord harbour amid open-air stone sculptures and Norse ruins. Must-do experiences include visiting the Hvalsey Norse church ruins, soaking in the Uunartoq hot springs surrounded by icebergs, and tasting Arctic char and musk ox. June through September offers the accessible season, with July and August warmest for fjord exploration.

Day 20

Day 20

Brattahlid (Qassiarsuk)

Arrive 07:00Depart 12:00
Greenland

Qassiarsuk (Brattahlíð) in southern Greenland is where Erik the Red founded the first European settlement in the Americas in 985 AD — today a tiny sheep-farming village preserving Norse ruins, a reconstructed Viking church, and a graveyard of 144 colonists. Must-dos include walking the archaeological remains with a local guide, visiting Hans Lynge's bronze Erik the Red, and absorbing the fjord-and-ice-cap setting. June through September provides snow-free access and wildflower-dotted ruins.

Day 20

Day 20

The Seabourn Southern Greenland

Arrive 14:00Depart 19:00

Day 21

Day 21

Nanortalik

Arrive 07:00Depart 12:01
Greenland
Nanortalik

Nanortalik, Greenland's southernmost town, sits amid fjords of staggering granite walls and drifting icebergs at the edge of the inhabitable Arctic. Must-dos include boat excursions to Tasermiut Fjord's 1,500-meter granite spires, visiting the open-air museum of Inuit heritage, and tasting traditional Greenlandic cuisine. July through September offers the only navigable window for visiting.

Day 22

Day 22

The Seabourn Southern Greenland

Arrive 07:00Depart 12:01

Day 22

Day 22

Aapilattoq

Arrive 13:00Depart 18:00

Aapilattoq is a tiny Inuit settlement of roughly one hundred people in southeastern Greenland, clinging to a fjord shore amid calving glaciers and towering mountains. Expedition cruise visitors can witness traditional Arctic subsistence life and transit the spectacular Prince Christian Sound. The visiting window is extremely narrow — July through early September — when ice conditions permit passage through these remote waters.

Day 23

Day 23

Prince Christian Sound

Arrive 09:00Depart 15:00
Greenland
Prince Christian Sound

Prince Christian Sound is Greenland's most dramatic navigable passage — a forty-kilometer corridor between thousand-meter cliffs and hanging glaciers that expedition ships from Seabourn to Silversea transit when ice conditions permit. Navigate July through September for humpback whale encounters, iceberg-studded waters, and the visceral Arctic experience that empties every cabin and fills every open deck regardless of weather.

Day 24

Day 24

Skjoldungen

Arrive 07:00Depart 17:00
Greenland
Skjoldungen

Skjoldungen, Greenland is a distinctive port city where deep cultural heritage meets authentic local atmosphere, featured on itineraries by Ponant. Must-do experiences include exploring the historic quarter to absorb centuries of architectural heritage, and sampling the distinctive northern cuisine that transforms local ingredients into refined dining experiences. The optimal time to visit is June through August, when summer months bring the warmest temperatures and longest days.

Day 25

Day 25

Tasiilaq

Arrive 07:00Depart 12:01
Greenland
Tasiilaq

Tasiilaq is the largest settlement in East Greenland with just 2,000 residents, one of the most remote inhabited communities on Earth, surrounded by the spectacular Sermilik Icefjord, massive glaciers, and tundra that blooms intensely during the brief Arctic summer. Must-dos include a boat trip through the iceberg-filled Sermilik Icefjord, hiking the Valley of Flowers, and watching traditional tupilak carving and drum dancing. Visit August for the warmest weather and best icefjord access.

Day 25

Day 25

The Seabourn Southern Greenland

Arrive 13:30Depart 18:30

Day 26

Day 26

At Sea

Day 27

Day 27

Patreksfjorour

Arrive 05:00Depart 17:00
Iceland
Patreksfjorour

Patreksfjörður is a fishing town in Iceland's remote Westfjords, gateway to Látrabjarg — Europe's westernmost point and home to millions of nesting seabirds including famously approachable puffins — and the surreal beauty of Rauðisandur beach. Must-do experiences include the Látrabjarg cliff walk among puffins, contemplating the vast red sands of Rauðisandur, and soaking in the town's geothermal pool. June through August offers continuous daylight and peak seabird activity.

Day 28

Day 28

Flatey Island

Arrive 07:00Depart 11:00
Iceland
Flatey Island

Flatey Island in Iceland offers dramatic Nordic landscapes where fjords, glaciers, and pristine wilderness create scenes of remarkable natural grandeur. The essential experience is immersion in the outdoor environment—hiking, wildlife watching, and savoring the region's exceptional seafood in settings of extraordinary beauty. Best visited June through August, when the midnight sun bathes the landscape in golden light for nearly twenty-four hours. Cruise lines including Lindblad Expeditions feature this port on their most compelling itineraries. Whether you have a few hours or a full day, the port rewards exploration at every pace and in every direction.

Day 29

Day 29

Reykjavik

Arrive 07:00
Iceland
Reykjavik

Reykjavik, the world's northernmost capital, distils the entire improbable beauty of Iceland into one compact, creatively charged city. The soaring basalt columns of Hallgrímskirkja dominate a skyline of primary-coloured rooftops, while the Harpa Concert Hall shimmers beside the harbour like a captured aurora. Day trips from the city unlock the Golden Circle's geysers and Geysir hot spring, the black sand beaches of Vík, and the ethereal glacier lagoon at Jökulsárlón. Geothermal pools — from the legendary Blue Lagoon to intimate neighbourhood hot pots — offer warmth year-round. June and July bring the bewitching midnight sun.

Day 1

Belfast

Northern Ireland
Belfast

Belfast, Northern Ireland’s capital, is a vibrant port city renowned for its rich shipbuilding heritage, highlighted by the Titanic Belfast museum. Must-do experiences include exploring the historic Cathedral Quarter and tasting traditional dishes like Irish stew and soda bread at St. George's Market. The best season to visit is during the spring and summer when the city comes alive with festivals and outdoor events.

Day 2

At Sea

Day 3

Kirkwall

Scotland
Kirkwall

Kirkwall, the Norse-founded capital of Scotland's Orkney Islands, is a sandstone harbour town framed by UNESCO-listed Neolithic monuments, a twelfth-century cathedral, and some of Britain's finest coastal landscapes. Visitors should not miss the five-thousand-year-old village of Skara Brae and a tasting of North Ronaldsay seaweed-fed lamb paired with Highland Park whisky. The prime cruising season runs from May through August, when Orkney enjoys up to nineteen hours of daylight and the wild coastal light is at its most luminous.

Day 4

Lerwick

Scotland
Lerwick

Lerwick, capital of Scotland's Shetland Islands, is a captivating Norse-Scottish harbour town renowned for its seventeenth-century granite waterfront, Viking heritage, and pristine maritime larder of wind-dried reestit mutton and hand-dived scallops. Visitors should explore the lodberries along Commercial Street and the award-winning Shetland Museum at Hay's Dock. The optimal season is late May through August, when near-perpetual daylight — the famous "simmer dim" — bathes the islands in an ethereal golden glow and seabird colonies along the cliffs reach their spectacular peak.

Day 6

Isle of Noss

Scotland

The Isle of Noss is a Shetland nature reserve hosting over 100,000 breeding seabirds on its spectacular 181-meter sandstone cliffs, including 12,000 pairs of gannets, guillemots, puffins, and dive-bombing great skuas. Must-do experiences include Zodiac cruising beneath the Noup of Noss cliff face, watching gannet colonies in action, and exploring Shetland's Viking heritage in Lerwick. June and July offer peak seabird activity and Shetland's magical simmer dim twilight.

Day 7

Vigur Island

Iceland
Vigur Island

Vigur Island is a tiny, family-farmed island in Iceland's Westfjords where eider ducks nest in the farmyard, puffins burrow in the fields, and Iceland's only surviving windmill stands beside the oldest boat in the country. Visitors experience guided walks combining wildlife and farming heritage, with coffee and pancakes from the host family. Late June and July offer peak breeding season and near-continuous Arctic daylight.

Day 8

Torshavn

Faroe Islands
Torshavn

Tórshavn is the Faroe Islands' tiny capital city, where a thousand-year-old Viking parliament site, turf-roofed timber houses, and two-Michelin-starred dining coexist in one of the North Atlantic's most atmospheric settings. Visit from May through September for extraordinary hiking, midnight twilight, and a cultural scene that defies the city's diminutive size.

Day 9

Klaksvik

Faroe Islands

Klaksvík, the Faroe Islands' second town, is an authentic North Atlantic fishing community set between dramatic fjords and steep mountains on the island of Borðoy. Must-dos include hiking to the Klakkur summit for archipelago views, visiting the Christianskirkjan's Viking-age font, and tasting fermented ræst kjøt and fresh Faroese salmon. May through August provides the mildest weather and longest daylight for exploring this spectacularly rugged corner of the North Atlantic.

Day 10

Oyndarfjørður

Arrive 07:00Depart 14:00
Faroe Islands

Oyndarfjørður, Faroe Islands is a distinctive port city where deep cultural heritage meets authentic local atmosphere, featured on itineraries by Seabourn. Must-do experiences include exploring the historic quarter to absorb centuries of architectural heritage, and sampling the distinctive northern cuisine that transforms local ingredients into refined dining experiences. The optimal time to visit is June through August, when summer months bring the warmest temperatures and longest days.

Day 11

Djupivogur

Iceland
Djupivogur

Djúpivogur is an intimate Icelandic fishing village on the eastern coast where thirty-four stone egg sculptures line the harbor, Vatnajökull glacier dominates the horizon, and puffin colonies nest on nearby Papey island. Visit June through August via Seabourn or Viking for reindeer sightings, glacier views, and the quiet eastern Iceland that rewards travelers who venture beyond the Golden Circle.

Papey Island

Papey is a tiny uninhabited island off eastern Iceland, named after the Irish monks who may have been Iceland's first inhabitants, now home to one of the region's largest puffin colonies and an atmospheric abandoned farmstead with a wooden church from 1807. Visitors can observe puffins at close range during the June-July breeding peak and explore the stone-walled remnants of island life. Boat tours operate from Djúpivogur during summer, weather permitting.

Day 12

Grimsey

Iceland
Grimsey

Grímsey is Iceland's only inhabited territory on the Arctic Circle, a tiny island of fifty residents surrounded by tens of thousands of nesting Atlantic puffins during summer. Must-dos include crossing the Arctic Circle marker, observing puffins at close range on the grassy cliffs, and experiencing the midnight sun during the summer solstice. June through August offers puffin breeding season and continuous daylight.

Day 13

Siglufjørdur - høfn

Iceland

Siglufjordur is a dramatically situated fjord town on Iceland's northern coast, once the herring capital of the North Atlantic, now home to the award-winning Herring Era Museum and an annual Folk Music Festival. Visitors should explore the immersive museum, taste Arctic char and local craft beer, and hike the mountain trails enclosing the fjord. June and July bring near-continuous daylight and the music festival.

Day 14

Dynjandi Waterfalls

Iceland
Dynjandi Waterfalls

Dynjandi is the Westfjords' most spectacular waterfall — a 100-meter bridal-veil cascade above a staircase of six smaller falls in a setting of extraordinary fjord scenery. Visitors should hike the wildflower-lined trail to the base of the main cascade, and explore the surrounding Arnarfjordur region with its traditional fishing villages. July and August offer the most reliable weather, though waterproof gear is essential in any season.

Day 15

Reykjavik

Iceland
Reykjavik

Reykjavik, the world's northernmost capital, distils the entire improbable beauty of Iceland into one compact, creatively charged city. The soaring basalt columns of Hallgrímskirkja dominate a skyline of primary-coloured rooftops, while the Harpa Concert Hall shimmers beside the harbour like a captured aurora. Day trips from the city unlock the Golden Circle's geysers and Geysir hot spring, the black sand beaches of Vík, and the ethereal glacier lagoon at Jökulsárlón. Geothermal pools — from the legendary Blue Lagoon to intimate neighbourhood hot pots — offer warmth year-round. June and July bring the bewitching midnight sun.

Day 16

Heimaey

Arrive 07:00Depart 11:00
Iceland
Heimaey

Heimaey is Iceland's volcanic island where the dramatic 1973 eruption story, the world's largest puffin colony of one million breeding pairs, and the children's annual puffling rescue create one of the North Atlantic's most extraordinary port experiences. Visit May through August via Lindblad or Windstar for Eldfell volcano hikes, the Eldheimar Museum's excavated homes, and the harbor approach through a channel literally reshaped by eruption.

Day 17

At Sea

Day 18

At Sea

Day 19

Qaqortoq

Arrive 07:00Depart 12:01
Greenland
Qaqortoq

Qaqortoq is southern Greenland's largest town, where brightly painted houses climb above a fjord harbour amid open-air stone sculptures and Norse ruins. Must-do experiences include visiting the Hvalsey Norse church ruins, soaking in the Uunartoq hot springs surrounded by icebergs, and tasting Arctic char and musk ox. June through September offers the accessible season, with July and August warmest for fjord exploration.

Day 20

Brattahlid (Qassiarsuk)

Arrive 07:00Depart 12:00
Greenland

Qassiarsuk (Brattahlíð) in southern Greenland is where Erik the Red founded the first European settlement in the Americas in 985 AD — today a tiny sheep-farming village preserving Norse ruins, a reconstructed Viking church, and a graveyard of 144 colonists. Must-dos include walking the archaeological remains with a local guide, visiting Hans Lynge's bronze Erik the Red, and absorbing the fjord-and-ice-cap setting. June through September provides snow-free access and wildflower-dotted ruins.

The Seabourn Southern Greenland

Arrive 14:00Depart 19:00

Day 21

Nanortalik

Arrive 07:00Depart 12:01
Greenland
Nanortalik

Nanortalik, Greenland's southernmost town, sits amid fjords of staggering granite walls and drifting icebergs at the edge of the inhabitable Arctic. Must-dos include boat excursions to Tasermiut Fjord's 1,500-meter granite spires, visiting the open-air museum of Inuit heritage, and tasting traditional Greenlandic cuisine. July through September offers the only navigable window for visiting.

Day 22

The Seabourn Southern Greenland

Arrive 07:00Depart 12:01

Aapilattoq

Arrive 13:00Depart 18:00

Aapilattoq is a tiny Inuit settlement of roughly one hundred people in southeastern Greenland, clinging to a fjord shore amid calving glaciers and towering mountains. Expedition cruise visitors can witness traditional Arctic subsistence life and transit the spectacular Prince Christian Sound. The visiting window is extremely narrow — July through early September — when ice conditions permit passage through these remote waters.

Day 23

Prince Christian Sound

Arrive 09:00Depart 15:00
Greenland
Prince Christian Sound

Prince Christian Sound is Greenland's most dramatic navigable passage — a forty-kilometer corridor between thousand-meter cliffs and hanging glaciers that expedition ships from Seabourn to Silversea transit when ice conditions permit. Navigate July through September for humpback whale encounters, iceberg-studded waters, and the visceral Arctic experience that empties every cabin and fills every open deck regardless of weather.

Day 24

Skjoldungen

Arrive 07:00Depart 17:00
Greenland
Skjoldungen

Skjoldungen, Greenland is a distinctive port city where deep cultural heritage meets authentic local atmosphere, featured on itineraries by Ponant. Must-do experiences include exploring the historic quarter to absorb centuries of architectural heritage, and sampling the distinctive northern cuisine that transforms local ingredients into refined dining experiences. The optimal time to visit is June through August, when summer months bring the warmest temperatures and longest days.

Day 25

Tasiilaq

Arrive 07:00Depart 12:01
Greenland
Tasiilaq

Tasiilaq is the largest settlement in East Greenland with just 2,000 residents, one of the most remote inhabited communities on Earth, surrounded by the spectacular Sermilik Icefjord, massive glaciers, and tundra that blooms intensely during the brief Arctic summer. Must-dos include a boat trip through the iceberg-filled Sermilik Icefjord, hiking the Valley of Flowers, and watching traditional tupilak carving and drum dancing. Visit August for the warmest weather and best icefjord access.

The Seabourn Southern Greenland

Arrive 13:30Depart 18:30

Day 26

At Sea

Day 27

Patreksfjorour

Arrive 05:00Depart 17:00
Iceland
Patreksfjorour

Patreksfjörður is a fishing town in Iceland's remote Westfjords, gateway to Látrabjarg — Europe's westernmost point and home to millions of nesting seabirds including famously approachable puffins — and the surreal beauty of Rauðisandur beach. Must-do experiences include the Látrabjarg cliff walk among puffins, contemplating the vast red sands of Rauðisandur, and soaking in the town's geothermal pool. June through August offers continuous daylight and peak seabird activity.

Day 28

Flatey Island

Arrive 07:00Depart 11:00
Iceland
Flatey Island

Flatey Island in Iceland offers dramatic Nordic landscapes where fjords, glaciers, and pristine wilderness create scenes of remarkable natural grandeur. The essential experience is immersion in the outdoor environment—hiking, wildlife watching, and savoring the region's exceptional seafood in settings of extraordinary beauty. Best visited June through August, when the midnight sun bathes the landscape in golden light for nearly twenty-four hours. Cruise lines including Lindblad Expeditions feature this port on their most compelling itineraries. Whether you have a few hours or a full day, the port rewards exploration at every pace and in every direction.

Day 29

Reykjavik

Arrive 07:00
Iceland
Reykjavik

Reykjavik, the world's northernmost capital, distils the entire improbable beauty of Iceland into one compact, creatively charged city. The soaring basalt columns of Hallgrímskirkja dominate a skyline of primary-coloured rooftops, while the Harpa Concert Hall shimmers beside the harbour like a captured aurora. Day trips from the city unlock the Golden Circle's geysers and Geysir hot spring, the black sand beaches of Vík, and the ethereal glacier lagoon at Jökulsárlón. Geothermal pools — from the legendary Blue Lagoon to intimate neighbourhood hot pots — offer warmth year-round. June and July bring the bewitching midnight sun.

Cabin Categories

Grand Wintergarden Suite 1
Grand Wintergarden Suite 2
Grand Wintergarden Suite 9

Grand Wintergarden Suite

Suite
1399 m²Max 4
GR

Deck 7 Combine mid-ship Suites 733 and 735 for Suite 7353, or Suites 734 and 736 for Suite 7364 Total space: 1,399 sq. ft. (130 sq. m.) including two verandas totaling 205 sq. ft. (19 sq. m.)

All Grand Wintergarden Suites onboard Seabourn Venture feature a comfortable living area; private veranda; queen-size bed or two twin beds; walk-in closet; personal safe; interactive TV with music and movies; fully stocked bar and refrigerator; writing desk with personalized stationery; makeup vanity; spacious bathroom, separate tub and shower, plush robes, slippers, luxury health and beauty products, hairdryer and 110/220V AC outlets.

Queen or Twin ConfigurationLounge AreaShowerToiletries ProvidedRoom Service AvailableSuite Benefits+13
View Details
Owners Suite 1
Owners Suite 2
Owners Suite 4

Owners Suite

Suite
1023 m²Max 2
OW

Deck 7 Suites 700, 701 Total space 1,023 sq. ft. (95 sq. m.) incl. veranda of 484 sq. ft. (45 sq. m.)

Owner's Suites on Seabourn Venture feature a comfortable living area; private veranda; queen-size bed or two twin beds; extra-large walk-in closet for expedition gear; personal safe; interactive flat-screen TV with music and movies; fully stocked bar and refrigerator; writing desk with personalized stationery; makeup vanity; spacious bathroom with double vanities, tub and shower, plush robes, slippers, hairdryer and 110/220V AC outlets.

Queen or Twin ConfigurationLounge AreaShowerToiletries ProvidedRoom Service AvailableTV+10
View Details
Penthouse Panorama Suite 1
Penthouse Panorama Suite 2
Penthouse Panorama Suite 3

Penthouse Panorama Suite

Suite
417 m²Max 2
PA

Suites 513-516, 611-614, 711-714, 802-805; Total space: 417 sq. ft. (39 sq. m.) incl. veranda of 85 sq. ft. (8 sq. m.) All Panorama Veranda Suites feature a comfortable living area; private veranda; queen-size bed or two twin beds; walk-in closet; personal safe; interactive TV with music and movies; fully stocked bar and refrigerator; writing desk with personalized stationery; makeup vanity; spacious bathroom, separate tub and shower, plush robes, slippers, luxury health and beauty products, hairdryer and 110/220V AC outlets. *Some veranda sizes vary.

BathQueen or Twin ConfigurationLounge AreaShowerToiletries ProvidedRoom Service Available+8
View Details
Penthouse Suite 1
Penthouse Suite 2
Penthouse Suite 3

Penthouse Suite

Suite
527 m²Max 2
PH

Deck 8 Suites 818-821; Approximate total space: 527 sq. ft. (49 sq. m.) including veranda of 97 sq. ft. (9 sq. m.)

All Penthouse Suites onboard Seabourn Venture feature a comfortable living area; private veranda; queen-size bed or two twin beds; walk-in closet; personal safe; interactive TV with music and movies; fully stocked bar and refrigerator; writing desk with personalized stationery; makeup vanity; spacious bathroom, separate tub and shower, plush robes, slippers, luxury health and beauty products, hairdryer and 110/220V AC outlets.

Queen or Twin ConfigurationLounge AreaShowerToiletries ProvidedRoom Service AvailableTV+9
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Signature Suite 1
Signature Suite 2
Signature Suite 5

Signature Suite

Suite
1377 m²Max 4
SS

All Signature Suites onboard Seabourn Venture feature a comfortable living area; private veranda; queen-size bed or two twin beds; walk-in closet, personal safe; interactive TV with music and movies; fully stocked bar and refrigerator; writing desk with personalized stationery; makeup vanity; spacious bathroom, separate tub and shower, plush robes, slippers, luxury health and beauty products, hairdryer and 110/220V AC outlets.

Queen or Twin ConfigurationLounge AreaShowerToiletries ProvidedRoom Service AvailableSuite Benefits+10
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Wintergraden Suite 1
Wintergraden Suite 2
Wintergraden Suite 9

Wintergraden Suite

Suite
1044 m²Max 4
WG

Deck 7 Suites 735, 736; Total space: 1,044 sq. ft. (97 sq. m.) including veranda of 129 sq. ft. (12 sq. m.)

All Wintergarden Suites onboard Seabourn Venture feature a comfortable living area; private veranda; queen-size bed or two twin beds; walk-in closet; personal safe; interactive TV with music and movies; fully stocked bar and refrigerator; writing desk with personalized stationery; makeup vanity; spacious bathroom, separate tub and shower, plush robes, slippers, luxury health and beauty products, hairdryer and 110/220V AC outlets.

Queen or Twin ConfigurationLounge AreaShowerFree Mini BarTVWi-Fi (Additional Cost)+11
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Veranda Suite  1
Veranda Suite  2
Veranda Suite  4

Veranda Suite

Suite

Veranda Suite

417 m²Max 2
V1V2V3V4

Decks 6, 7, 8; Approximate total space: 355 sq. ft. (33 sq. m.) including veranda of 75 sq. ft. (7 sq. m.)*

All Veranda Suites onboard Seabourn Venture feature a comfortable living area; private veranda; queen-size bed or two twin beds; walk-in closet; personal safe; interactive TV with music and movies; fully stocked bar and refrigerator; writing desk with personalized stationery; makeup vanity; spacious bathroom, separate tub and shower, plush robes, slippers, luxury health and beauty products, hairdryer and 110/220V AC outlets. *Some veranda sizes vary.

Queen or Twin ConfigurationLounge AreaShowerBathToiletries ProvidedRoom Service Available+8
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