Zameera
From Isles to Ice
Glasgow to Longyearbyen

From Isles to Ice

A northern expedition cruise aboard Aqua Lares

14 nights aboard Aqua Lares, sailing from Scotland through Norway's northern coast and into the Arctic waters of Svalbard. Zameera guests stay in an Owner's Suite, with each day shaped around shore landings, tender excursions, seabird cliffs, ancient sites, fjords, wildlife watching, onboard dining, wellness and the slow drama of travelling north by sea. The experience carries the comfort of a refined yacht into a route that becomes more remote with every passing day.

Experience Overview

A Slow Passage Into the North

This is a 30 guest expedition cruise for travellers who want the north to reveal itself gradually, without the scale or anonymity of a conventional ship. It begins with Scotland's islands and ancient coastal history, then continues into Norway's fjords, fishing villages and Arctic edge before reaching the colder, more elemental world of Svalbard. Aqua Lares keeps the journey intimate and highly considered, with Owner's Suite privacy, guided shore landings, tender excursions, naturalist insight, refined dining, wellness and time on deck as the landscape becomes more remote each day.

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The Owner's Suite

The Owner's Suite

Zameera guests stay in an Owner's Suite, the most generous accommodation category aboard Aqua Lares. It gives the journey its private centre, with elegant space, sea views and room to retreat between landings, meals and time on deck.

The Expedition Rhythm

The Expedition Rhythm

Days are built around guided shore visits, tender excursions, naturalist interpretation, wildlife watching and time in small coastal places that larger ships can only pass. The experience is active, but never rushed.

Life on Board

Life on Board

Aqua Lares is part of the experience, not only the vessel carrying it. Guests dine, read, recover, work out in open air, take spa treatments, watch the coast from the sundeck, use the sauna and Jacuzzis, gather in the lounge and let the voyage unfold from the ship itself.

From Isles to Ice
Key Information

What You Need to Know

14 Nights • Glasgow to Longyearbyen

Couples, solo travellers, expedition travellers, cultural travellers, photographers, wildlife enthusiasts and guests who want a long northern cruise with real comfort, strong guiding and a sense of progression by sea.

Owner's Suite aboard Aqua Lares. Zameera guests are arranged only in this suite category, giving the cruise its highest level of space and privacy on board. Owner's Suites are designed for long journeys, with generous interiors, refined finishes and views out to the changing northern coastline.

Aqua Lares. An expedition yacht with 15 cabins for up to 30 guests, including three Owner's Suites. Onboard facilities include dining spaces, lounges, cinema, shaded al fresco dining, sundeck, sauna, massage room, indoor Jacuzzi, outdoor Jacuzzi and swim platform.

14 nights and 15 days.

Owner's Suite accommodation aboard Aqua Lares, meals according to the final programme, expedition team, guided landings where permitted, tender excursions, cultural visits, wildlife watching, naturalist interpretation, onboard wellness facilities, scheduled onboard service and Zameera coordination. Final inclusions are confirmed within the cruise proposal.

May departures for the 2026 and 2027 seasons. The route is planned for the transition north, beginning in Scotland and continuing toward the Arctic Circle and Svalbard.

Guests arrive in Glasgow for embarkation. The cruise ends in Longyearbyen, with onward flights usually routed through Oslo or Tromsø.

This is an expedition cruise. The planned route is the foundation of the journey, with landings and tender excursions confirmed according to safety, sea and local guidance.

From Isles to Ice — interior
In Detail

What Defines the Experience

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Owner's Suite Living

Owner's Suite Living

Zameera guests stay in an Owner's Suite, giving the voyage its most private and spacious onboard setting. It becomes the place to wake slowly, watch the coast from bed and return after days of salt air, walking and tender exploration.

Refined Dining at Sea

Refined Dining at Sea

Meals are a central part of the cruise. Breakfast may come before a shore landing, lunch after a tender excursion and dinner while the ship sits beneath northern cliffs or moves through pale evening light.

Sauna and Jacuzzis

Sauna and Jacuzzis

The wellness spaces matter on a route this physical. After cold wind, open decks and time ashore, guests can use the sauna, indoor Jacuzzi, outdoor Jacuzzi or massage room before returning to dinner or the lounge.

Lounges and Cinema

Lounges and Cinema

Aqua Lares has spaces for quiet time as well as gathering. Guests can read between excursions, take a drink in the lounge, attend briefings, watch films in the cinema or simply sit with the coastline passing outside.

Sundeck and Al Fresco Dining

Sundeck and Al Fresco Dining

The sundeck gives the journey its open-air centre. It is where guests watch fjords narrow, seabirds rise from cliffs, eagles move over the water and the northern light stretch late into the evening.

Tender Excursions

Tender Excursions

The tenders bring guests close to the route. They are used for shore access, fjord exploration, wildlife viewing, cliff approaches and small landings that make the cruise feel immediate rather than distant.

Expedition Guiding

Expedition Guiding

Naturalist guides add depth to each place without turning the cruise into a lecture. They lead shore walks, interpret wildlife, explain geology and bring context to ancient sites, fishing villages, seabird cliffs and Arctic history.

Ancient Atlantic Shores

Ancient Atlantic Shores

The Scottish opening gives the voyage its human depth. Guests step ashore at places shaped by abbeys, standing stones, sea caves, abandoned settlements and Atlantic communities that lived close to weather and water.

Norway's Living Coast

Norway's Living Coast

Norway brings a different kind of beauty, less ancient and more inhabited. Fishing villages, Art Nouveau streets, low islands, red harbour cabins, white-tailed eagles and steep fjords show a coastline still built around the sea.

Bear Island and Svalbard

Bear Island and Svalbard

The final section becomes fully Arctic. Bear Island brings seabird cliffs and exposed polar distance, while Svalbard adds glacier shores, trapper cabins, mining remains and the quiet tension of a place where polar bears are never far from the imagination.

What to Expect

A Journey That Keeps Moving North

The cruise begins gently, with the rhythm of the ship settling in as Scotland opens around it. Mornings might begin with breakfast in the dining room before stepping ashore at an abbey, walking among ancient stones or entering the strange geometry of a sea cave. By evening, the ship becomes the place of return, warm lounges, a proper dinner, time on deck and the feeling that the route has already started to pull north.

Norway changes the pace. Guests spend time in coastal towns, fishing villages and fjords, then return to Aqua Lares for spa treatments, sauna heat, cocktails in the lounge or quiet hours in the Owner's Suite. The best moments are often between the headline stops, watching eagles from the sundeck, listening to a guide explain the coast or sitting outside after dinner while the light refuses to leave.

The final days feel sharper and more remote. Tender excursions approach bird cliffs, shore landings reveal trapper cabins and old industrial remains, and the landscape begins to belong more to ice, sea and wildlife than to people. On board, the comfort feels more meaningful, because the world outside has become colder, wider and more serious.

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A Journey That Keeps Moving North
Sample Itinerary

From Isles to Ice Day by Day

This is a sample structure for the 14 night Aqua Lares cruise from Glasgow to Longyearbyen. Landings, tender excursions and wildlife encounters are confirmed according to safety, sea and local guidance.

Day 1
Day 1

Board Aqua Lares in Glasgow and settle into the Owner's Suite. The first evening is gentle, with dinner on board, time to explore the ship and a first sense of the route ahead. The city falls behind as the cruise begins its northern passage.

Day 2
Day 2

Arrive at Iona, a small island with a profound place in Scottish spiritual history. Visit the abbey and walk through landscapes that feel quiet even by island standards. After lunch, continue to Staffa, where basalt columns and Fingal's Cave bring drama to the first full day.

Day 3
Day 3

Land at St Kilda, a UNESCO World Heritage Site with towering cliffs, seabird colonies and the remains of a community once held together by isolation. Later, arrive at Luskentyre Beach on Harris, where white sand and turquoise water sit beneath the mountains of the Outer Hebrides. Dinner is back on board as the ship prepares to continue north.

Day 4
Day 4

Step ashore on the Isle of Lewis to visit the Callanish Stones. The circle stands on open moorland and dates back more than 5,000 years. The afternoon gives time to return to the ship, use the wellness areas or watch the islands slip past from the sundeck.

Day 5
Day 5

Sail into the Shetland Islands for Mousa Broch, a remarkably preserved Iron Age stone tower. The visit brings history, coastal walking and the chance to see seabirds or seals around the island. Back on board, the evening settles around dinner, the lounge and the open sea ahead.

Day 6
Day 6

Arrive in Ålesund, one of Norway's most distinctive coastal towns. Its Art Nouveau buildings, harbour setting and surrounding viewpoints bring a polished interlude after the wildness of the islands. The ship remains the base for lunch, rest and an evening at sea.

Day 7
Day 7

Wake to the low islands and open seascapes of Smøla. The area is known for birdlife, including white-tailed eagles, and for small fishing communities shaped by the sea. Guests can spend the day between coastal exploration, deck time and the quiet comfort of the ship.

Day 8
Day 8

Arrive at Brønnøysund, framed by mountains and islands along the Torget peninsula. Nearby landscapes include the Torghatten granite dome and the Vega Archipelago, both tied to geology and coastal heritage. The day brings Norway's maritime life into sharper focus before the route continues north.

Day 9
Day 9

Wake to Nusfjord in the Lofoten Islands, one of Norway's oldest and best preserved fishing villages. Traditional red rorbuer cabins line the harbour beneath steep mountains. After lunch, continue into Trollfjorden, where tender excursions bring guests close to cliffs, eagles and seals along the narrow water.

Day 10
Day 10

Arrive in Tromsø as the ship pauses before the next leg of the journey. Guests can unwind on board, use the social spaces, take a spa treatment, work out in the open air or simply rest in the Owner's Suite. The day is a natural reset before the voyage turns toward Arctic waters.

Day 11
Day 11

Step ashore at Bleik, a fishing village set along one of Norway's longest white sand beaches. Offshore, Bleiksøya is known for puffins and seabirds, while the surrounding waters can draw whales to rich feeding grounds. The evening returns to Aqua Lares for a slower night on board.

Day 12
Day 12

Arrive at Bear Island, remote, exposed and rich with birdlife. Tender excursions explore the island's cliffs, where puffins, guillemots and fulmars gather in large colonies. Naturalist guides bring the ecology of the island into focus as the cruise enters the space between Norway and Svalbard.

Day 13
Day 13

Reach Sørkapp, the southernmost point of Spitsbergen, where glaciers meet the sea and seabirds nest along Arctic cliffs. After lunch, explore Gnålodden, set beneath towering bird cliffs and known for one of Svalbard's best-known trapper's cabins. The day closes with the Arctic now fully around the ship.

Day 14
Day 14

Arrive in Bellsund to explore Calypsobyen, a former coal mining settlement and beluga hunting station from the early 20th century. Weathered structures and scattered ruins sit against raw Arctic scenery, giving the final full day a striking mix of industry, wilderness and silence. Dinner on board carries the mood of the voyage into its last night.

Day 15
Day 15

Arrive in Longyearbyen, the main settlement of Svalbard. There may be time to explore before departure, depending on the final programme. The cruise closes after lunch, with the route complete from Scottish stone and Atlantic cliffs to the glacier coast of Spitsbergen.

Day 1
Day 1

Board Aqua Lares in Glasgow and settle into the Owner's Suite. The first evening is gentle, with dinner on board, time to explore the ship and a first sense of the route ahead. The city falls behind as the cruise begins its northern passage.

Day 2
Day 2

Arrive at Iona, a small island with a profound place in Scottish spiritual history. Visit the abbey and walk through landscapes that feel quiet even by island standards. After lunch, continue to Staffa, where basalt columns and Fingal's Cave bring drama to the first full day.

Day 3
Day 3

Land at St Kilda, a UNESCO World Heritage Site with towering cliffs, seabird colonies and the remains of a community once held together by isolation. Later, arrive at Luskentyre Beach on Harris, where white sand and turquoise water sit beneath the mountains of the Outer Hebrides. Dinner is back on board as the ship prepares to continue north.

Day 4
Day 4

Step ashore on the Isle of Lewis to visit the Callanish Stones. The circle stands on open moorland and dates back more than 5,000 years. The afternoon gives time to return to the ship, use the wellness areas or watch the islands slip past from the sundeck.

Day 5
Day 5

Sail into the Shetland Islands for Mousa Broch, a remarkably preserved Iron Age stone tower. The visit brings history, coastal walking and the chance to see seabirds or seals around the island. Back on board, the evening settles around dinner, the lounge and the open sea ahead.

Day 6
Day 6

Arrive in Ålesund, one of Norway's most distinctive coastal towns. Its Art Nouveau buildings, harbour setting and surrounding viewpoints bring a polished interlude after the wildness of the islands. The ship remains the base for lunch, rest and an evening at sea.

Day 7
Day 7

Wake to the low islands and open seascapes of Smøla. The area is known for birdlife, including white-tailed eagles, and for small fishing communities shaped by the sea. Guests can spend the day between coastal exploration, deck time and the quiet comfort of the ship.

Day 8
Day 8

Arrive at Brønnøysund, framed by mountains and islands along the Torget peninsula. Nearby landscapes include the Torghatten granite dome and the Vega Archipelago, both tied to geology and coastal heritage. The day brings Norway's maritime life into sharper focus before the route continues north.

Day 9
Day 9

Wake to Nusfjord in the Lofoten Islands, one of Norway's oldest and best preserved fishing villages. Traditional red rorbuer cabins line the harbour beneath steep mountains. After lunch, continue into Trollfjorden, where tender excursions bring guests close to cliffs, eagles and seals along the narrow water.

Day 10
Day 10

Arrive in Tromsø as the ship pauses before the next leg of the journey. Guests can unwind on board, use the social spaces, take a spa treatment, work out in the open air or simply rest in the Owner's Suite. The day is a natural reset before the voyage turns toward Arctic waters.

Day 11
Day 11

Step ashore at Bleik, a fishing village set along one of Norway's longest white sand beaches. Offshore, Bleiksøya is known for puffins and seabirds, while the surrounding waters can draw whales to rich feeding grounds. The evening returns to Aqua Lares for a slower night on board.

Day 12
Day 12

Arrive at Bear Island, remote, exposed and rich with birdlife. Tender excursions explore the island's cliffs, where puffins, guillemots and fulmars gather in large colonies. Naturalist guides bring the ecology of the island into focus as the cruise enters the space between Norway and Svalbard.

Day 13
Day 13

Reach Sørkapp, the southernmost point of Spitsbergen, where glaciers meet the sea and seabirds nest along Arctic cliffs. After lunch, explore Gnålodden, set beneath towering bird cliffs and known for one of Svalbard's best-known trapper's cabins. The day closes with the Arctic now fully around the ship.

Day 14
Day 14

Arrive in Bellsund to explore Calypsobyen, a former coal mining settlement and beluga hunting station from the early 20th century. Weathered structures and scattered ruins sit against raw Arctic scenery, giving the final full day a striking mix of industry, wilderness and silence. Dinner on board carries the mood of the voyage into its last night.

Day 15
Day 15

Arrive in Longyearbyen, the main settlement of Svalbard. There may be time to explore before departure, depending on the final programme. The cruise closes after lunch, with the route complete from Scottish stone and Atlantic cliffs to the glacier coast of Spitsbergen.

Day 1
Day 1

Board Aqua Lares in Glasgow and settle into the Owner's Suite. The first evening is gentle, with dinner on board, time to explore the ship and a first sense of the route ahead. The city falls behind as the cruise begins its northern passage.

Day 2
Day 2

Arrive at Iona, a small island with a profound place in Scottish spiritual history. Visit the abbey and walk through landscapes that feel quiet even by island standards. After lunch, continue to Staffa, where basalt columns and Fingal's Cave bring drama to the first full day.

Day 3
Day 3

Land at St Kilda, a UNESCO World Heritage Site with towering cliffs, seabird colonies and the remains of a community once held together by isolation. Later, arrive at Luskentyre Beach on Harris, where white sand and turquoise water sit beneath the mountains of the Outer Hebrides. Dinner is back on board as the ship prepares to continue north.

Day 4
Day 4

Step ashore on the Isle of Lewis to visit the Callanish Stones. The circle stands on open moorland and dates back more than 5,000 years. The afternoon gives time to return to the ship, use the wellness areas or watch the islands slip past from the sundeck.

Day 5
Day 5

Sail into the Shetland Islands for Mousa Broch, a remarkably preserved Iron Age stone tower. The visit brings history, coastal walking and the chance to see seabirds or seals around the island. Back on board, the evening settles around dinner, the lounge and the open sea ahead.

Day 6
Day 6

Arrive in Ålesund, one of Norway's most distinctive coastal towns. Its Art Nouveau buildings, harbour setting and surrounding viewpoints bring a polished interlude after the wildness of the islands. The ship remains the base for lunch, rest and an evening at sea.

Day 7
Day 7

Wake to the low islands and open seascapes of Smøla. The area is known for birdlife, including white-tailed eagles, and for small fishing communities shaped by the sea. Guests can spend the day between coastal exploration, deck time and the quiet comfort of the ship.

Day 8
Day 8

Arrive at Brønnøysund, framed by mountains and islands along the Torget peninsula. Nearby landscapes include the Torghatten granite dome and the Vega Archipelago, both tied to geology and coastal heritage. The day brings Norway's maritime life into sharper focus before the route continues north.

Day 9
Day 9

Wake to Nusfjord in the Lofoten Islands, one of Norway's oldest and best preserved fishing villages. Traditional red rorbuer cabins line the harbour beneath steep mountains. After lunch, continue into Trollfjorden, where tender excursions bring guests close to cliffs, eagles and seals along the narrow water.

Day 10
Day 10

Arrive in Tromsø as the ship pauses before the next leg of the journey. Guests can unwind on board, use the social spaces, take a spa treatment, work out in the open air or simply rest in the Owner's Suite. The day is a natural reset before the voyage turns toward Arctic waters.

Day 11
Day 11

Step ashore at Bleik, a fishing village set along one of Norway's longest white sand beaches. Offshore, Bleiksøya is known for puffins and seabirds, while the surrounding waters can draw whales to rich feeding grounds. The evening returns to Aqua Lares for a slower night on board.

Day 12
Day 12

Arrive at Bear Island, remote, exposed and rich with birdlife. Tender excursions explore the island's cliffs, where puffins, guillemots and fulmars gather in large colonies. Naturalist guides bring the ecology of the island into focus as the cruise enters the space between Norway and Svalbard.

Day 13
Day 13

Reach Sørkapp, the southernmost point of Spitsbergen, where glaciers meet the sea and seabirds nest along Arctic cliffs. After lunch, explore Gnålodden, set beneath towering bird cliffs and known for one of Svalbard's best-known trapper's cabins. The day closes with the Arctic now fully around the ship.

Day 14
Day 14

Arrive in Bellsund to explore Calypsobyen, a former coal mining settlement and beluga hunting station from the early 20th century. Weathered structures and scattered ruins sit against raw Arctic scenery, giving the final full day a striking mix of industry, wilderness and silence. Dinner on board carries the mood of the voyage into its last night.

Day 15
Day 15

Arrive in Longyearbyen, the main settlement of Svalbard. There may be time to explore before departure, depending on the final programme. The cruise closes after lunch, with the route complete from Scottish stone and Atlantic cliffs to the glacier coast of Spitsbergen.

Day 1
Day 1

Board Aqua Lares in Glasgow and settle into the Owner's Suite. The first evening is gentle, with dinner on board, time to explore the ship and a first sense of the route ahead. The city falls behind as the cruise begins its northern passage.

Day 2
Day 2

Arrive at Iona, a small island with a profound place in Scottish spiritual history. Visit the abbey and walk through landscapes that feel quiet even by island standards. After lunch, continue to Staffa, where basalt columns and Fingal's Cave bring drama to the first full day.

Day 3
Day 3

Land at St Kilda, a UNESCO World Heritage Site with towering cliffs, seabird colonies and the remains of a community once held together by isolation. Later, arrive at Luskentyre Beach on Harris, where white sand and turquoise water sit beneath the mountains of the Outer Hebrides. Dinner is back on board as the ship prepares to continue north.

Day 4
Day 4

Step ashore on the Isle of Lewis to visit the Callanish Stones. The circle stands on open moorland and dates back more than 5,000 years. The afternoon gives time to return to the ship, use the wellness areas or watch the islands slip past from the sundeck.

Day 5
Day 5

Sail into the Shetland Islands for Mousa Broch, a remarkably preserved Iron Age stone tower. The visit brings history, coastal walking and the chance to see seabirds or seals around the island. Back on board, the evening settles around dinner, the lounge and the open sea ahead.

Day 6
Day 6

Arrive in Ålesund, one of Norway's most distinctive coastal towns. Its Art Nouveau buildings, harbour setting and surrounding viewpoints bring a polished interlude after the wildness of the islands. The ship remains the base for lunch, rest and an evening at sea.

Day 7
Day 7

Wake to the low islands and open seascapes of Smøla. The area is known for birdlife, including white-tailed eagles, and for small fishing communities shaped by the sea. Guests can spend the day between coastal exploration, deck time and the quiet comfort of the ship.

Day 8
Day 8

Arrive at Brønnøysund, framed by mountains and islands along the Torget peninsula. Nearby landscapes include the Torghatten granite dome and the Vega Archipelago, both tied to geology and coastal heritage. The day brings Norway's maritime life into sharper focus before the route continues north.

Day 9
Day 9

Wake to Nusfjord in the Lofoten Islands, one of Norway's oldest and best preserved fishing villages. Traditional red rorbuer cabins line the harbour beneath steep mountains. After lunch, continue into Trollfjorden, where tender excursions bring guests close to cliffs, eagles and seals along the narrow water.

Day 10
Day 10

Arrive in Tromsø as the ship pauses before the next leg of the journey. Guests can unwind on board, use the social spaces, take a spa treatment, work out in the open air or simply rest in the Owner's Suite. The day is a natural reset before the voyage turns toward Arctic waters.

Day 11
Day 11

Step ashore at Bleik, a fishing village set along one of Norway's longest white sand beaches. Offshore, Bleiksøya is known for puffins and seabirds, while the surrounding waters can draw whales to rich feeding grounds. The evening returns to Aqua Lares for a slower night on board.

Day 12
Day 12

Arrive at Bear Island, remote, exposed and rich with birdlife. Tender excursions explore the island's cliffs, where puffins, guillemots and fulmars gather in large colonies. Naturalist guides bring the ecology of the island into focus as the cruise enters the space between Norway and Svalbard.

Day 13
Day 13

Reach Sørkapp, the southernmost point of Spitsbergen, where glaciers meet the sea and seabirds nest along Arctic cliffs. After lunch, explore Gnålodden, set beneath towering bird cliffs and known for one of Svalbard's best-known trapper's cabins. The day closes with the Arctic now fully around the ship.

Day 14
Day 14

Arrive in Bellsund to explore Calypsobyen, a former coal mining settlement and beluga hunting station from the early 20th century. Weathered structures and scattered ruins sit against raw Arctic scenery, giving the final full day a striking mix of industry, wilderness and silence. Dinner on board carries the mood of the voyage into its last night.

Day 15
Day 15

Arrive in Longyearbyen, the main settlement of Svalbard. There may be time to explore before departure, depending on the final programme. The cruise closes after lunch, with the route complete from Scottish stone and Atlantic cliffs to the glacier coast of Spitsbergen.

Day 1
Day 1

Board Aqua Lares in Glasgow and settle into the Owner's Suite. The first evening is gentle, with dinner on board, time to explore the ship and a first sense of the route ahead. The city falls behind as the cruise begins its northern passage.

Day 2
Day 2

Arrive at Iona, a small island with a profound place in Scottish spiritual history. Visit the abbey and walk through landscapes that feel quiet even by island standards. After lunch, continue to Staffa, where basalt columns and Fingal's Cave bring drama to the first full day.

Day 3
Day 3

Land at St Kilda, a UNESCO World Heritage Site with towering cliffs, seabird colonies and the remains of a community once held together by isolation. Later, arrive at Luskentyre Beach on Harris, where white sand and turquoise water sit beneath the mountains of the Outer Hebrides. Dinner is back on board as the ship prepares to continue north.

Day 4
Day 4

Step ashore on the Isle of Lewis to visit the Callanish Stones. The circle stands on open moorland and dates back more than 5,000 years. The afternoon gives time to return to the ship, use the wellness areas or watch the islands slip past from the sundeck.

Day 5
Day 5

Sail into the Shetland Islands for Mousa Broch, a remarkably preserved Iron Age stone tower. The visit brings history, coastal walking and the chance to see seabirds or seals around the island. Back on board, the evening settles around dinner, the lounge and the open sea ahead.

Day 6
Day 6

Arrive in Ålesund, one of Norway's most distinctive coastal towns. Its Art Nouveau buildings, harbour setting and surrounding viewpoints bring a polished interlude after the wildness of the islands. The ship remains the base for lunch, rest and an evening at sea.

Day 7
Day 7

Wake to the low islands and open seascapes of Smøla. The area is known for birdlife, including white-tailed eagles, and for small fishing communities shaped by the sea. Guests can spend the day between coastal exploration, deck time and the quiet comfort of the ship.

Day 8
Day 8

Arrive at Brønnøysund, framed by mountains and islands along the Torget peninsula. Nearby landscapes include the Torghatten granite dome and the Vega Archipelago, both tied to geology and coastal heritage. The day brings Norway's maritime life into sharper focus before the route continues north.

Day 9
Day 9

Wake to Nusfjord in the Lofoten Islands, one of Norway's oldest and best preserved fishing villages. Traditional red rorbuer cabins line the harbour beneath steep mountains. After lunch, continue into Trollfjorden, where tender excursions bring guests close to cliffs, eagles and seals along the narrow water.

Day 10
Day 10

Arrive in Tromsø as the ship pauses before the next leg of the journey. Guests can unwind on board, use the social spaces, take a spa treatment, work out in the open air or simply rest in the Owner's Suite. The day is a natural reset before the voyage turns toward Arctic waters.

Day 11
Day 11

Step ashore at Bleik, a fishing village set along one of Norway's longest white sand beaches. Offshore, Bleiksøya is known for puffins and seabirds, while the surrounding waters can draw whales to rich feeding grounds. The evening returns to Aqua Lares for a slower night on board.

Day 12
Day 12

Arrive at Bear Island, remote, exposed and rich with birdlife. Tender excursions explore the island's cliffs, where puffins, guillemots and fulmars gather in large colonies. Naturalist guides bring the ecology of the island into focus as the cruise enters the space between Norway and Svalbard.

Day 13
Day 13

Reach Sørkapp, the southernmost point of Spitsbergen, where glaciers meet the sea and seabirds nest along Arctic cliffs. After lunch, explore Gnålodden, set beneath towering bird cliffs and known for one of Svalbard's best-known trapper's cabins. The day closes with the Arctic now fully around the ship.

Day 14
Day 14

Arrive in Bellsund to explore Calypsobyen, a former coal mining settlement and beluga hunting station from the early 20th century. Weathered structures and scattered ruins sit against raw Arctic scenery, giving the final full day a striking mix of industry, wilderness and silence. Dinner on board carries the mood of the voyage into its last night.

Day 15
Day 15

Arrive in Longyearbyen, the main settlement of Svalbard. There may be time to explore before departure, depending on the final programme. The cruise closes after lunch, with the route complete from Scottish stone and Atlantic cliffs to the glacier coast of Spitsbergen.

The Story

The Old North, Reached by Sea

This route follows a northern line shaped by faith, survival, fishing, exploration and ice. Iona was once one of the most important religious centres in the early medieval world. Staffa has drawn artists, writers and composers for centuries. St Kilda held a human community in extreme isolation until evacuation in 1930, leaving behind houses, cleits and the memory of a way of life built around birds, sea and endurance.

Further north, Norway's coast tells a different story. Fishing villages such as Nusfjord and island communities such as Smøla grew from the sea, with wooden cabins, harbours, eagles and mountain walls forming a working landscape rather than a staged one. The journey does not pass Norway as scenery alone. It enters the places that explain how people lived along this edge.

By the time Aqua Lares reaches Bear Island and Svalbard, the human story becomes thinner and the Arctic takes over. Trapper cabins, mining ruins and old hunting stations remain, but the land belongs more clearly to ice, birds, walrus, reindeer and polar bears. The luxury of the voyage is that guests can follow this entire progression by sea, from ancient Atlantic islands to the High Arctic, without losing warmth, privacy or grace.

From Isles to Ice — story
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Starting from USD 51,380 per person

Share your preferred timing and guest requirements with our team. We will prepare the final pricing, Owner's Suite arrangements, arrival planning, cruise proposal and final journey details around the guests travelling.

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Before You Go

What to Know About This Route

The journey begins in Scotland, continues through Norway and ends in Svalbard. English is spoken in Scotland and widely across expedition operations. Norwegian is the official language in Norway and Svalbard. The local currencies are the British pound in Scotland and the Norwegian krone in Norway and Svalbard.

Scotland observes UK time. Norway and Svalbard observe Central European Time, GMT+1, and Central European Summer Time, GMT+2, during summer.

This route operates in May. It is a powerful time for a northbound cruise, with lengthening daylight, active seabird colonies, spring conditions along the Norwegian coast and the approach of Arctic summer in Svalbard.

Visa requirements depend on nationality and travel route. Guests should check entry requirements for the United Kingdom and Norway. Svalbard is outside the Schengen visa area, but most onward travel from Longyearbyen routes through mainland Norway.

Guests arrive in Glasgow for embarkation. The cruise ends in Longyearbyen, with onward flights usually routed through Oslo or Tromsø. Private aviation may be arranged subject to aircraft range, permits, airport handling and weather.

Dress is practical and layered for landings, tender excursions and changing northern conditions. Guests should bring thermal base layers, waterproof outerwear, warm knitwear, gloves, walking shoes, sunglasses and comfortable clothing for the yacht.

Shore landings, tender excursions and wildlife viewing are led by the expedition team. Guests must follow all briefings, local rules and safety guidance, especially in remote Arctic areas.

The Arctic