The StoryThe North That Still Holds Power
Svalbard was recorded by Dutch navigator Willem Barentsz in 1596, when European ships began pushing into Arctic waters in search of new routes and resources. By the 17th century, the archipelago had become a centre of whaling, with shore stations at places such as Smeerenburg. The remains are still there, held in the ground among old graves, blubber ovens and the silence of the coast.
The islands later drew trappers, miners, scientists and polar explorers. Some built huts beneath bird cliffs. Some crossed ice and fjords in the dark months. Others came to study glaciers, weather and wildlife in a place where the edge of the habitable world feels unusually close.
Aqua Lares enters that history with a different kind of privilege. The yacht brings warmth, service and privacy into waters that once demanded hardship. It lets a small group move between sauna heat and glacier air, between private dinners and old whaling shores, between the soft interior of the ship and the difficult north outside the glass.