Date |
Port |
Arrive |
Depart |
|
11/07/14 |
Greenock, Scotland (United Kingdom) |
- |
2000 |
|
12/07/14 |
At Sea |
- |
- |
|
13/07/14 |
Kollafjordur (Faroe Islands) |
0800 |
1400 |
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| Kollafjørdur is a small fishing port on the Faroe islands of Streymoy. Initially there were just a few dwellings adjoining the village church, which dating from 1837 is a typical black-tarred wooden building with white painted windows and a turf roof. Today, although it is home to less than a thousand people, the village stretches over four miles along the northern shore of the Kollafjørdur Fjord. From the port of Kollafjørdur optional excursions visit the island communities that live on this isolated archipelago where the landscape is both wild and dramatic. |
14/07/14 |
Eskifjordur (Iceland) |
0900 |
1400 |
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| Eskifjördur is a charming, yet isolated, coastal village that lies in the middle of Iceland’s East Fjords, a stunning landscape sculpted by ice age glaciers. Not surprisingly the sea has shaped village culture and industry and the Maritime Museum gives insight into how the nature, upon which the community depend, has also seen them adopt self-sufficiency. Further along the coast is a famous spar mine, where some of Iceland’s largest spar crystals have been found. The mine features in optional excursions along with the Maritime Museum, and the Icelandic Wartime Museum which recounts Iceland’s World War Two history. |
15/07/14 |
Akureyri (Iceland) |
0900 |
1800 |
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| Akureyri lies at the head of the 60-kilometre long Eyjafjördur, which is the longest fjord in Iceland. The capital of the north, which was founded as a trading post, is today an attractive town with colourful houses and well-kept gardens. It is also home to both the northernmost botanical garden and northernmost golf course in the world. Optional excursions highlight Iceland’s extraordinary landscapes including surreal rock formations, the lunar-like pseudo-craters at Skutastadir and the stunning, crescent-shaped Godafoss Waterfall. Laufas Folk Museum, or Myvatn Nature Baths, Iceland’s newest spa, are relaxing alternatives. |
16/07/14 |
Isafjordur (Iceland) |
0800 |
1800 |
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| Situated just below the Arctic Circle, Isafjördur is the largest town in the Westfjords region of Iceland. It sits on a gravel spit that stands out into the Skutulsfjördur flanked on three sides by towering mountains. There are only three roads leading out of the town and all are through tunnels. The Maritime Museum traces the life and history of the settlement where fishing has been, and remains, the area’s main source of income. The Westfjords region is a nature lover’s paradise and a popular excursion visits the magical island of Vigur, which is home to a large eider duck colony and vast bird population. |
17/07/14 |
Reykjavik (Iceland) |
0900 |
1900 |
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| Part old Norse, part modern city, the Icelandic capital has a quirky character of its own. Although Reykjavik is one of the world’s smallest capital cities, it is home to almost half of Iceland’s population. Mosaics, murals and sculptures are found throughout the oldest part of the town where brightly coloured houses with tin roofs are watched over by the towering Hallgrimskirkja Church. The classic ‘Golden Circle’ featuring vast lava fields, bubbling mud pools, crashing waterfalls and spouting geysers, is a popular optional excursion along with the chance to bathe in the famous geothermal Blue Lagoon. |
18/07/14 |
Heimaey, Westmann Islands (Iceland) |
0700 |
1500 |
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| Heimæy is the largest and only inhabited island in the Westman Islands, an archipelago of fifteen islands lying off the south coast of Iceland. On January 23rd 1973 a volcano erupted without warning by the side of Mt. Helgafell on the outskirts of the town and the islanders were forced to abandon their homes and flee to the mainland. Fortunately the fishing fleet was in port and amazingly there was no loss of life. Six months later when the volcano fell dormant most of the islanders returned to rebuild their homes on an island that was twenty percent larger in size. |
19/07/14 |
At Sea |
- |
- |
|
20/07/14 |
Kirkwall, Orkney Islands (United Kingdom) |
0800 |
1300 |
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| The capital of the amazing Orkney archipelago, the Royal Burgh of Kirkwall sits almost exactly in the centre of Mainland, dividing the island into East and West. The magnificent St. Magnus Cathedral, a legacy of the town’s rich Viking heritage, dominates Kirkwall’s skyline. In its shadow, the town is a cluster of grey stone buildings lining narrow, flagstone streets. Excursions explore these beautiful islands whose history can be traced back some 6,000 years through Neolithic standing stones and the magnificent archaeological site of Skara Brae. Modern day Orkney is a hive of creative activity and its craft workshops are perfect for a special souvenir. |
21/07/14 |
Leith, Scotland (United Kingdom) |
1100 |
- |
|