Arctic & Alaska

Into the Northwest Passage (2027)

17 Days aboard Ocean Victory. From AUD $29,680pp.
Small Ship Expeditions
Details

Overview

Sail through the storied heart of the Arctic on an expedition that weaves history, landscape, and living culture into one extraordinary journey. From Greenland’s glacial fjords to Nunavut’s rugged archipelago, Into the Northwest Passage traces a route shaped by ice, time, and the enduring presence of Inuit and their ancestors.

Begin in Kangerlussuaq, Greenland, where vast valleys and glacial tongues spill into turquoise waters. Cross the Arctic Circle and explore the Sisimiut Coast, a place where story and stone intertwine. At Ilulissat Icefjord, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, watch as icebergs drift from the Sermeq Kujalleq glacier—monuments to patience and power.

Sailing westward, cross Baffin Bay to Canada’s Arctic. Cruise through Tallurutiup Imanga, one of the most vital marine ecosystems on Earth, and walk the tundra of Devon Island, where stillness holds its own story. At Beechey Island, stand among the graves and ruins that mark the search for Franklin, and feel the meeting of Inuit knowing and European seeking. Transit Ikirahaq (Bellot Strait), where the currents of the western and eastern Arctic converge, before continuing through the Kitikmeot Region, heart of the Passage and home to vibrant Inuit communities.

Your journey ends at Kugluktuk, the place of moving waters, where the Arctic’s vastness gives way to reflection. This is a passage through place, knowledge, connection, and time itself.

Itinerary Highlights

  • Journey through Inuit Nunangat in partnership with Inuit guides and cultural educators
  • Cross the Arctic Circle, seeking polar bears, seabirds, and other Arctic wildlife in pristine natural environments
  • Cruise among icebergs at Ilulissat Icefjord, a UNESCO World Heritage Site
  • Spend time in one of Canada’s largest National Marine Conservation Areas, Tallurutiup Imanga, where marine life gathers in the cold, clear waters
  • Retrace the historic route of European explorers, who for centuries picked their way through ice in hopes of finding a sailing route through the passage
  • Transit Ikirahaq (Bellot Strait), the narrow and dramatic waterway at the very northern tip of continental North America

Itinerary in Brief

  • Day 1: Kangerlussuaq, Greenland
  • Day 2 and 3: Sisimiut Coast
  • Day 4: Ilulissat
  • Day 5: Western Greenland
  • Day 6: At Sea - Davis Strait
  • Day 7 to 9: Tallurutiup Imanga (Lancaster Sound) and Devon Island, NU, Canada
  • Day 10: Beechey Island
  • Day 11: Ikirahaq (Bellot Strait)
  • Day 12 to 15: Kitikmeot Region
  • Day 16: Iqaluktuuttiaq (Cambridge Bay)
  • Day 17: Kugluktuk (Coppermine), NU, Canada

This itinerary is a guide only and is subject to change due to weather, sea state and other conditions beyond control.

Ship Information

For more information on the Ocean Victory please view the ship page.

View Ocean Victory

Travelling with Eclipse

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Day 1: Kangerlussuaq, Greenland

Cross the Arctic Circle

Your journey begins in Kangerlussuaq, a broad glacial valley on Greenland’s western coast, once home to a U.S. Air Force base. After a charter flight from Toronto, Zodiacs carry you toward your ice-class expedition vessel—your floating home for the weeks ahead.

As we sail southwest through Kangerlussuaq Fjord, one of the longest fjords in the world, the scenery unfolds in layers of blue, white, and stone. Glacial tongues slide slowly down the valleys, their meltwater turning the shallows a milky turquoise. Mountains rise from still waters as we cross the Arctic Circle, marking the start of our passage toward the open sea.

Dinner included.

Day 2 and 3: Sisimiut Coast

The Meeting of Story and Stone

The Sisimiut coast reveals Greenland’s west in all its complexity: a weave of islands, fjords, and communities framed by mountain silhouettes. Zodiacs trace the shoreline; hikers climb for sweeping views. The air smells of salt and tundra moss, and the sea carries a low, constant murmur.

Here, layers of time overlap. The Saqqaq, Dorset, and Thule peoples lived and travelled these lands for more than 4,500 years—each leaving traces that speak of endurance and adaptation. Learn from local Inuit voices about how these histories remain alive within the fabric of modern life. The West Greenland Current brings relative warmth to these waters—a reminder that here, the sea and seasons do the teaching.

Breakfast, Lunch, and Dinner included.

Day 4: Ilulissat

Take a Cruise Around Towering Icebergs

At Ilulissat Icefjord, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, the world distills to ice and light. The vast Sermeq Kujalleq glacier sends its creations—crystalline cathedrals of blue and white—into Disko Bay, where they drift, groan, and fracture. Ilulissat means “iceberg,” and here the name feels earned.

Walk the boardwalk above the fjord as thunder echoes from the ice below. Visit the Icefjord Centre to trace the stories held within this landscape: scientific, cultural, and deeply human. In town, wander through museums, cafés, and craft shops alive with colour and conversation—a vibrant contrast to the hushed immensity of the ice itself.

Breakfast, Lunch, and Dinner included.

Day 5: Western Greenland

Hike the Tundra Between Sea and Sky

Along Greenland’s western coast, fjords open like mirrors between mountain and cloud. The tundra rises in gentle folds—moss, stone, and the bright trace of late-summer flowers. From the ship or by Zodiac, we explore sheltered bays and narrow inlets, watching as weather and light shape the day.

Where conditions allow, we step ashore to walk the tundra, guided by Inuit expedition team members who share stories of the plants, animals, and ancestral presence that knit this landscape together. Every encounter—whether with the quiet rhythm of waves on rock or the sudden lift of a seabird—becomes a lesson in attention.

As we sail westward, Greenland falls behind and Baffin Bay opens ahead. The sea stretches to the horizon, vast and still, carrying us toward the Canadian Arctic and the next chapter of the passage.

Breakfast, Lunch, and Dinner included.

Day 6: At Sea - Davis Strait

Learn From Inuit in Their Homeland

Between Greenland and Baffin Island lies Davis Strait, a vast expanse where ocean and ice mingle in a dance of shifting light. The ship glides through open water, the horizon moving gently with each breath of wind. This is a day for pleasure as much as discovery—for letting the rhythm of the sea relax the mind, for feeling joy in the quiet act of watching and listening. Here, learning unfolds not as effort, but as delight.

From the decks, scan for minke and humpback whales, their sleek backs cutting the surface before vanishing again. Fulmars and kittiwakes wheel above the ship, while murres and dovekies gather on the water in small, dark rafts, rising and dipping with the swell. Inside, join workshops and presentations that deepen understanding of the Arctic’s ecology, culture, and story.

Here, in the heart of Inuit Nunangat, learn directly from Inuit educators and cultural ambassadors. Through shared games, food, and conversation, they offer insight into daily life and the enduring relationship between people and place. Knowledge, like the sea itself, flows in every direction—connecting past and present, traveller and host.

Breakfast, Lunch, and Dinner included.

Day 7 to 9: Tallurutiup Imanga (Lancaster Sound) and Devon Island, NU, Canada

Where Life Gathers in the North

We enter Tallurutiup Imanga, the great inlet known to many as Lancaster Sound—a place where rare Arctic wildlife concentrates. Glaciers feed the cold, clear water; tides carry nutrients that sustain the region’s intricate web of life. Narwhal, beluga, and bowhead whales move through the channels, while fulmars, kittiwakes, and ivory gulls wheel above the cliffs.

Travelling by ship and Zodiac, we explore these protected waters, guided by naturalists and Inuit expedition team members who share how this vast marine environment has sustained Inuit and their ancestors for millennia. Their deep knowledge continues to shape how Tallurutiup Imanga is cared for today, ensuring the rhythms of the sea endure for generations to come.

To the north lies Devon Island, the largest uninhabited island on Earth—its tundra carved by ice, wind, and time. Hiking across gravel plains and glacial valleys, we find traces of ancient dwellings and the resilient plants that colour this austere landscape: purple saxifrage, Arctic willow, moss campion. Here, stillness is its own story.

Breakfast, Lunch, and Dinner included.

Day 10: Beechey Island

A Crossroads of Arctic History

At Beechey Island, history lies close to the surface. In 1845, Sir John Franklin set out from England aboard HMS Erebus and HMS Terror, seeking a navigable route through the Northwest Passage. His crew overwintered here, where three men died and were laid to rest on the stony shore.

In the years that followed, Beechey became a landmark for the searchers who came after—Amundsen, Bernier, Larsen, and many more. Supplies were cached, ships anchored, and in 1854 another grave was added: Thomas Morgan, of the HMS Investigator, buried beside Franklin’s men. The remains of Northumberland House, a rough stone depot, still stand as witness to those long years of searching and loss.

For Inuit, the story of Franklin has long been part of the living memory of the land. Their knowledge of routes, ice, and survival helped reveal the fate of the expedition—understanding carried not by charts, but by experience. To walk among these graves today is to feel that confluence of history and knowing, and the vastness that holds them both.

Breakfast, Lunch, and Dinner included.

Day 11: Ikirahaq (Bellot Strait)

At the Tip of North America

We reach Ikirahaq, known to many as Bellot Strait—a narrow, two-kilometre channel where the currents of the western and eastern Arctic converge. Threading between Somerset Island and the Boothia Peninsula, it marks the northernmost point of continental North America. The currents here are swift and precise, changing direction with the breathing of the tides.

From the deck, granite walls rise close on either side, streaked with snow and shadow. Beluga whales, narwhals, and seals might surface in the swirling water; seabirds flock to feed on the small creatures swept through by the currents.

For Inuit, Ikirahaq has long been a place of passage and gathering, known for its moving ice and the life that travels with it. In the 1850s, Joseph René Bellot, a French naval officer, joined the search for Franklin and lent his name to the strait—though its story runs far deeper than any map.

To pass through Ikirahaq is to feel that meeting of worlds: east and west, land and sea, past and present. The water quickens beneath the hull, and the voyage turns once more toward the heart of the Passage.

Breakfast, Lunch, and Dinner included.

Day 12 to 15: Kitikmeot Region

Sail Through the Heart of the Northwest Passage

We sail west into the Kitikmeot Region, the heart of the Northwest Passage. Sea ice drifts in quiet mosaics; the coastline unfolds in muted browns and silver blues. Though sparsely populated, these lands and waters hold life—muskoxen and caribou on the tundra, seals and whales in the shifting sea.

This is the setting of many historic journeys. Roald Amundsen overwintered nearby for two years while completing the first full transit of the Passage. His success rested on knowledge learned from Inuit—skills of survival and navigation born of generations living with ice and weather.

Each day brings new light and new waters. We move steadily westward, carried by the rhythm of the sea and the enduring presence of those who know it best.

Breakfast, Lunch, and Dinner included.

Day 16: Iqaluktuuttiaq (Cambridge Bay)

Discover Arctic Tradition and Research

We arrive at Iqaluktuuttiaq, or Cambridge Bay, a welcoming community on the southern coast of Victoria Island. Its name—“place of many fish”—speaks to the abundance that has long sustained life here.

Join a guided tour to learn about daily life in the Kitikmeot Region, where tradition and innovation meet. Visit the Canadian High Arctic Research Station (CHARS), a state-of-the-art facility operated by Polar Knowledge Canada, dedicated to studying Arctic ecosystems and climate through collaboration between science and Indigenous knowledge.

Explore local arts and crafts—carvings, prints, beadwork—each carrying stories of skill, connection, and endurance. As evening light settles over the tundra, the sea glows with the last warmth of summer, and the voyage begins to turn toward home.

Breakfast, Lunch, and Dinner included.

Day 17: Kugluktuk (Coppermine), NU, Canada

Farewell from the Place of Moving Waters

Our voyage ends at Kugluktuk, the westernmost community in Nunavut, where the Coppermine River meets the sea. Its Inuinnaqtun name means “place of moving waters,” a fitting farewell after weeks spent following the rhythms of ice and tide.

Step ashore to explore this warm and welcoming community, known for its artistry and deep connection to the surrounding land. Here, stories flow as steadily as the river itself—threads of history, language, and belonging carried forward through generations.

Depending on sea, ice, and weather conditions, Iqaluktuuttiaq (Cambridge Bay) may serve as an alternate disembarkation point. From either location, guests will board a charter flight to Yellowknife, Northwest Territories, marking the final leg of the journey south.

In the soft northern light, we say goodbye to shipmates and newfound friends, carrying with us the quiet understanding that the Arctic does not end—it continues to move, to teach, and to remind.

This itinerary is a guide only and is subject to change due to weather, sea state and other conditions beyond control.

Breakfast included.

Next Departure Date: 25 Aug 2027
DatesCabinFromAdditional
25 Aug 2027 - 10 Sep 2027 AUD$29680ppExpand to view prices
Triple Porthole Cabin (F)AUD$29680ppContact us
Albatros State Cabin (D)AUD$35148ppContact us
French Balcony Suite (E)AUD$37492ppContact us
Balcony State Cabin (C)AUD$39523ppContact us
C SP, Superior Balcony StateroomAUD$40930ppContact us
C XL, Grand Balcony StateroomAUD$43273ppContact us
Balcony Suite (B2)AUD$45617ppContact us
Balcony Suite (B1)AUD$45617ppContact us
Junior Suite (A)AUD$48586ppContact us
Premium Suite (PS)AUD$54836ppContact us
Single Porthole Cabin (G)AUD$54992ppContact us

Charter Flights:

Northbound Charter Flight: $1,650 USD
Toronto, ON, Canada to Kangerlussuaq, Greenland. Early-morning departure.

Southbound Charter Flight: $1,100 USD
Kugluktuk (Coppermine), NU, Canada to Yellowknife, NU, Canada. Evening arrival.

**Prices are per person based on twin / shared accommodation.
**Single supplements may apply

Cabin Details

Single Porthole Cabin (G)

18m2, 1 single bed, bathroom, desk, sitting area, TV. Located on Deck 3 close to the Mudroom which facilitates access to Zodiacs during embarkation and disembarkation.

Single Porthole Cabin (G)
Single Porthole Cabin (G)
Triple Porthole Cabin (F)

Solo guests of the same gender can share this stateroom to avoid paying single supplement.

22m2, 2 single beds or 1 double, 1 sofa bed, en-suite, desk, TV. Located on Deck 3 close to the mudroom and loading platforms.

Triple Porthole Cabin (F)
Triple Porthole Cabin (F)
French Balcony Suite (E)

16m2, 1 double bed or 2 single beds, en-suite, floor to ceiling windows, bathroom, french balcony. Located on deck 7.

French Balcony Suite (E)
French Balcony Suite (E)
Albatros State Cabin (D)

Solo guests of the same gender can share this stateroom to avoid paying single supplement.

22m2, 2 single beds or 1 double bed, bathroom, TV, desk, sitting area, convenient access to zodiac platform.

Albatros State Cabin (D)
Albatros State Cabin (D)
Balcony State Cabin (C)

Solo guests of the same gender can share this stateroom to avoid paying single supplement.

24m2, 1 double bed or 2 single beds, en-suite, sofa, located on decks 4 & 6, private balcony, TV. Sofa can be used for child travelling with adults. Interconnecting cabins are also possible.

Balcony State Cabin (C)
Balcony State Cabin (C)
Balcony Suite (B2)

28m2, 1 double bed or 2 single beds, located on decks 4 & 6, bathroom, private balcony, seating area, TV.

Balcony Suite (B2)
Balcony Suite (B2)
Balcony Suite (B1)

35m2, 1 double bed or 2 single beds, located on deck 4, bathroom, private balcony, seating area, TV.

Balcony Suite (B1)
Balcony Suite (B1)
Junior Suite (A)

This stateroom can be converted into a Triple stateroom with the third person sleeping on a sofa bed. Third person will have 50% discount.

42m2, 1 double bed or 2 single beds, sofa bed, seating area, spacious bathroom, private balcony, TV. Great views from the high location on Deck 7.

Junior Suite (A)
Junior Suite (A)
Premium Suite (PS)

45m2, 2 bedroom suite, 1 double bed or twin beds, 1 sofa bed, table and chairs, seating area, spacious bathroom, private balcony. Located on deck 4.

Premium Suite (PS)
Premium Suite (PS)
C SP, Superior Balcony Stateroom

This stateroom can be converted into a Triple stateroom with the third person sleeping on a sofa bed. Third person will have 50% discount.

Solo guests of the same gender can share this stateroom to avoid paying single supplement.

App. 24 smq, incl. Balcony. Featuring an additional seating area or sofa bed.

C SP, Superior Balcony Stateroom
C SP, Superior Balcony Stateroom
C XL, Grand Balcony Stateroom

Solo guests of the same gender can share this stateroom to avoid paying single supplement.

App. 30 smq, incl. Balcony. Extra-large cabins, now incorporating the two wheelchair-accessible cabins from the current Category B's.

C XL, Grand Balcony Stateroom
C XL, Grand Balcony Stateroom
Solo French Balcony (Cat E)

Solo French Balcony (Cat E)
Solo French Balcony (Cat E)

Ocean Victory Deckplan

deck plan

Specifications

  • Year Built: 2020
  • Passengers: 186
  • Crew: 100
  • Length: 104.4m
  • Breadth: 18.4m
  • Draft: 5.1m

What's included?

  • Passage aboard the Ocean Victory
  • Applicable taxes and credit card fees
  • Complimentary expedition jacket
  • Special access permits, entry, and park fees
  • Expert expedition team
  • Guided activities
  • Sightseeing and community visits
  • All Zodiac excursions
  • Port fees
  • Pre-departure materials
  • Educational program
  • Interactive workshops
  • Evening entertainment
  • All shipboard meals
  • Complimentary wine, beer, and soft drinks are served with dinner
  • Wi-Fi access (basic service included)

What's not?

  • Commercial and charter flights
  • Program enhancements/optional excursions
  • Gratuities
  • Personal expenses
  • Mandatory medical evacuation insurance
  • Additional expenses in the event of delays or itinerary changes
  • Possible fuel surcharges and administrative fees
  • Pre- and post-trip hotel accommodation
  • Kayak program
  • Premium internet access available at an additional cost

Important notes and additional information

Charter Flights:

Northbound Charter Flight: $1,650 USD
Toronto, ON, Canada to Kangerlussuaq, Greenland. Early-morning departure.

Southbound Charter Flight: $1,100 USD
Kugluktuk (Coppermine), NU, Canada to Yellowknife, NU, Canada. Evening arrival.

Price Assurance

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Our team negotiates the best rates for you and ensures you receive unbiased advice, with no preference for any particular supplier. In fact, where we secure higher commissions, we often pass the savings on to you, giving us a competitive price edge.

Additionally, we lock in exchange rates at the time of your deposit, ensuring no surprise costs when it’s time for final payment. You can rest easy knowing we’ll handle the details with our suppliers. The only exceptions are national park fee increases or fuel surcharges imposed after your booking, though these are rare.

Take advantage of our team’s expertise and let us help you plan the perfect holiday—hassle-free!

Destination: Arctic

Viking history, Inuit villages and an abundance of wildlife are just some of the wonders you’ll discover in the Arctic. You’ll be amazed by the natural beauty that surrounds you. Search for Polar Bears while cruising through breathtaking fjords or around the nature lovers dream, Spitsbergen.

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Into the Northwest Passage (2027)

17 Days aboard Ocean Victory. From AUD $29,680pp.