Arctic & Alaska

Out of 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 alongside Inuit cultural educators and guides on a journey that unites history, landscape, and living culture. From Nunavut’s western edge to Greenland’s glacial coast, Out of the Northwest Passage follows a route shaped by ice, memory, and the enduring presence of Inuit and their ancestors.

Begin in Kugluktuk and travel east through the Kitikmeot Region—lands filled with story and tradition. At Ikirahaq, where the currents of east and west converge, feel the Arctic’s pulse as sea and time meet. Pay respects at Beechey Island, where the Franklin Expedition’s traces lie within a landscape still speaking through wind and silence.

Sail through Tallurutiup Imanga, the life-filled heart of the North, where polar wildlife and Inuit stewardship define the rhythm of the sea. In Ausuittuq, Canada’s northernmost community, experience the warmth of welcome in a place shaped by endurance and adaptation. Cross Smith Sound toward Greenland, where light and ice merge in vast expanses. Walk the tundra at the edge of the ice cap and stand before the monumental icebergs of Ilulissat Icefjord. Continue south along the Sisimiut Coast, where colourful towns and quiet fjords mark the journey’s final stretch.

Ending in Kangerlussuaq, reflect on a voyage that moves beyond geography—a passage through story, knowledge, and connection. Here, among shifting light and ancient ice, travellers who have journeyed alongside Inuit cultural educators and guides find not only the Arctic’s grandeur but the shared humanity that endures within it.

Itinerary Highlights

  • Travel through Inuit Nunangat with Inuit cultural educators and guides
  • Sail the storied Northwest Passage and learn from Inuit knowledge holders
  • Visit Beechey Island, a poignant site of Arctic history
  • Explore Tallurutiup Imanga (Lancaster Sound), home to extraordinary wildlife
  • Witness the monumental icebergs of Ilulissat Icefjord, a UNESCO World Heritage Site
  • Experience Greenland’s dramatic western coast and glacial fjords

Itinerary in Brief

  • Day 1: Kugluktuk (Coppermine), NU, Canada
  • Day 2 to 4: Kitikmeot Region
  • Day 5: Ikirahaq (Bellot Strait)
  • Day 6: Beechey Island
  • Day 7 and 8: Tallurutiup Imanga (Lancaster Sound) and Devon Island
  • Day 9: Ausuittuq (Grise Fjord)
  • Day 10: Smith Sound
  • Day 11: At Sea
  • Day 12 and 13: Northwest Greenland
  • Day 14: Ilulissat
  • Day 15 and 16: Sisimiut Coast
  • Day 17: Kangerlussuaq, Greenland

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: Kugluktuk (Coppermine), NU, Canada

The Place of Moving Waters

Your journey begins at Kugluktuk—the westernmost community in Nunavut—where the Coppermine River meets the open sea. Its Inuinnaqtun name means “place of moving waters,” a fitting departure for a voyage defined by flow and connection.
Explore this welcoming community known for artistry and warmth. Local hosts share stories of life in the western Arctic, where tradition and modern life move together with the rhythm of tide and season. As you embark on your ice-class expedition vessel, the horizon opens before you—an expanse of muted blues and greys threaded with drifting ice. The ship turns east, tracing the first lines of the storied Northwest Passage.

Dinner included.

Day 2 to 4: Kitikmeot Region

Through the Heart of the Passage

The Kitikmeot Region stretches across the central Arctic, a landscape of tundra, island chains, and shifting sea ice. This is the heart of the Northwest Passage—a place where the stories of Inuit and explorers intertwine across centuries.
Visit a community where you are welcomed as a guest. Hear from Inuit hosts about local history, hunting traditions, and daily life. The scent of tundra moss, the laughter of children, and the steady thrum of a drum dance create a portrait of life deeply rooted in place. Zodiac excursions explore quiet bays where caribou and muskoxen graze beneath wide skies.

Breakfast, Lunch, and Dinner included.

Day 5: Ikirahaq (Bellot Strait)

Where Currents Meet

Reach Ikirahaq—known to many as Bellot Strait—a narrow channel where the tides of east and west converge. Threading between Somerset Island and the Boothia Peninsula, it marks the northernmost tip of continental North America.
Granite headlands rise close on either side, streaked with scree, snow, and time. The currents twist and surge beneath the hull, where seals, seabirds, and occasional belugas or narwhals forage for food. For Inuit, Ikirahaq has long been a place of movement and gathering—a reminder that the meeting of waters mirrors the meeting of stories.

Breakfast, Lunch, and Dinner included.

Day 6: Beechey Island

Echoes of the Franklin Expedition

At Beechey Island, history lies close to the surface. In 1845, Sir John Franklin set out from England with HMS Erebus and HMS Terror, attempting to sail through the Northwest Passage. His crew overwintered here, where three of his men died. Later, in 1854, Thomas Morgan of HMS Investigator was buried beside them—a solemn witness to the relentless search for Franklin’s lost expedition.
Beechey became a depot and landmark for numerous search parties that followed. Amundsen, Bernier, and Larsen all stopped here, leaving their traces among the ruins of Northumberland House. The landscape is stark and wind-scoured: gravel, ice, and the call of gulls echoing across still water. Inuit oral history preserved what records could not, guiding modern searchers to the resting places of the ships and the men who vanished with them. Standing here, you feel the continuity between ambition and endurance—held quietly in the land’s enduring silence.

Breakfast, Lunch, and Dinner included.

Day 7 and 8: Tallurutiup Imanga (Lancaster Sound) and Devon Island

Where Life Gathers in the North

Enter Tallurutiup Imanga, a great inlet where glaciers feed cold, life-rich waters. Designated as one of Canada’s largest National Marine Conservation Areas, it is a confluence of nature and culture. Inuit knowledge and stewardship sustain a balance as intricate as the migration of narwhal and bowhead.
Watch for polar bears on the ice, walrus on floes, and seabirds circling overhead. Devon Island rises to the north, vast and uninhabited—a landscape of stone and silence. Hike across tundra valleys where traces of ancient camps speak to the endurance of those who have travelled this coast for generations.

Breakfast, Lunch, and Dinner included.

Day 9: Ausuittuq (Grise Fjord)

The Northernmost Community

Arrive in Ausuittuq, a community established in the 1950s when families were relocated from Inukjuak, Québec, to this high Arctic environment—“the place that never thaws.” Surrounded by peaks and glaciers, it is Canada’s northernmost community.
Feel the welcome of residents who share stories of family, hunting, and adaptation. Listen to the cadence of Inuktitut and feel a quiet generosity amid the stark beauty of ice and stone. As you walk the shoreline, the balance between isolation and belonging becomes palpable—a living connection between people and the land that sustains them.

Breakfast, Lunch, and Dinner included.

Day 10: Smith Sound

Edge of the Known World

Sail into Smith Sound, a broad waterway marking the meeting place of Canada and Greenland—and, historically, the threshold to the North Pole. Icebergs drift south from Greenland’s glaciers, glowing with every hue of blue.
For centuries, Inuit hunters have crossed its frozen expanse, while European expeditions sought passage north through its icy corridors. Today, its silence is punctuated only by wind and the slow fracture of ice. As we continue eastward, the sense of scale deepens—water and sky expanding endlessly, carrying us forward through time and tide.

Breakfast, Lunch, and Dinner included.

Day 11: At Sea

Passage to Greenland

As we sail from Smith Sound toward northwest Greenland, the day invites relaxation and delight. Out on deck, guests linger over coffee, watching icebergs drift past under shifting light. Seabirds wheel overhead, and the fresh Arctic air feels both bracing and serene.
Inside, conversation and curiosity flow easily—perhaps a talk from the expedition team, a shared story, or quiet reading by the window. Between moments of learning and laughter, there’s time simply to enjoy the rhythm of the sea and the pleasure of being carried through one of the North’s most beautiful reaches.

Breakfast, Lunch, and Dinner included.

Day 12 and 13: Northwest Greenland

Where Ice Meets Sky

Crossing into Greenland, the coast reveals a world sculpted by ice. Glaciers descend from the inland cap, feeding fjords that stretch deep into the land. Scattered villages dot the shoreline, their bright homes vivid against the vastness of rock and snow.
Go ashore where conditions allow to explore bays fringed with bergs or hike along tundra scented with Arctic cotton and crowberry. Ice and light combine to create a palette of silvers and aquas. Each moment shows how landscape shapes life—and how people, in turn, shape their bond with it.

Breakfast, Lunch, and Dinner included.

Day 14: Ilulissat

The Icefjord’s Sculpted Power

Arrive at Ilulissat, a name that means “iceberg” in Greenlandic. The Sermeq Kujalleq glacier, among the world’s most active, sends vast icebergs into the UNESCO-listed Ilulissat Icefjord. From the boardwalk, watch as icy cathedrals drift through mirrored water, glowing blue beneath shifting light.
Listen to the thunder of calving ice, then the hush that follows. In town, explore a thriving community where Greenlandic culture, art, and daily life flow together with the rhythm of the ice.

Breakfast, Lunch, and Dinner included.

Day 15 and 16: Sisimiut Coast

Life Along the Greenlandic Shore

Sailing south along the west coast, encounter the Sisimiut region—a place of mountain silhouettes, fjords, and enduring story. Colourful houses cling to granite hillsides, reflected in still waters. This is Greenland’s second-largest town, marked by fishing boats and the warmth of community.
Go ashore to walk through town and meet local residents. Learn about the blend of ancient and contemporary traditions that define Greenlandic life. Hikers may climb to panoramic viewpoints where sea, ice, and sky converge.

Breakfast, Lunch, and Dinner included.

Day 17: Kangerlussuaq, Greenland

A Passage Completed

Your voyage concludes in Kangerlussuaq, where the vast fjord stretches nearly two hundred kilometres inland. Here, the ice cap appears and vanishes at the horizon—occasional glimpses of white above the fjord, close enough to feel its breath but never in full view.
As you disembark and prepare for your flight south, reflect on a journey completed—the communities visited, the stories shared, and the countless shades of light and ice that shaped the days. The Northwest Passage is not only a route through geography but through knowledge and kinship—a journey that continues long after you leave its waters.

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: 10 Sep 2027
DatesCabinFromAdditional
10 Sep 2027 - 26 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: $1,100 USD
Yellowknife, NT, Canada to Kugluktuk (Coppermine), NU, Canada. Early-morning departure.

Southbound Charter Flight: $1,650 USD
Kangerlussuaq, Greenland to Toronto, ON, 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: $1,100 USD
Yellowknife, NT, Canada to Kugluktuk (Coppermine), NU, Canada. Early-morning departure.

Southbound Charter Flight: $1,650 USD
Kangerlussuaq, Greenland to Toronto, ON, Canada. Evening arrival.

Price Assurance

At Eclipse Travel, our expert destination knowledge and decades of travel planning experience come at no extra cost to you. While many think booking through a tour operator is more expensive than planning a trip independently, that’s not the case. We’re paid by our travel partners—such as hotels, activity operators, and cruise providers—via commissions, not by our clients.

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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Out of the Northwest Passage (2027)

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