Antarctic Peninsula Cruises
The Peninsula is the classic way to experience Antarctica. Some of the best wildlife and most dramatic scenery can be found in this part of the Frozen Continent.
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Special Offers Available: Swoop has access to the widest range of offers and can help you find the right trip, cabin, & price.
Expert impartial advice at no extra cost: no-nonsense advice on 1500 voyages across 30 ships
The Antarctic Experts. No Compromises: there’s no question we can’t answer
The only B Corp certified Antarctic specialist: so your adventures can be a force for good
A full concierge service, unlike booking direct: we leave nothing to chance in delivering your perfect trip
The Weddell Sea is Antarctica at its most raw and untamed. Accessible for only a few short months of the year, it offers a wild beauty parade of immense tabular icebergs unparalleled on the continent. This is where Shackleton made his name, and today’s adventurous travellers still follow in his footsteps, in search of the most dramatic ice and remote emperor penguin colonies.
Special Offers:Swoop has access to the widest range of offers and can help you find the right trip, cabin, & price.
The iconic emperor penguin is the goal of this expedition for wildlife enthusiasts, as your ice-strengthened ship sails into Antarctica’s challenging and little-visited Weddell Sea. Delve deep into historically significant and ice-laden waters, heading for the remote emperor rookery…
Sail on a 5* icebreaker to Antarctica’s remote Weddell Sea region. Custom-built with cutting-edge nautical technology, this tough yet elegant vessel is designed to tackle the notoriously icy conditions. Your expert guides and Photo Ambassador will scan the spectacular ice…
Maximise your time looking for Antarctica’s most iconic species, the emperor penguin, on this luxurious expedition to the remote Weddell Sea. If conditions allow, two sleek twin engine helicopters will fly you over vast tabular icebergs to Snow Hill Island,…
An expansive adventure exploring the Antarctic Peninsula’s dramatic eastern side and the Weddell Sea’s vast tabular icebergs and infamous icescapes. Your compact 130 guest expedition ship is purpose-built to navigate these challenging waters. Optional adventure activities, such as kayaking, scuba…
The Weddell Sea is home to Antarctica’s most spectacular icebergs and travellers here can expect to be enthralled by vast tabular icebergs with cliffs as high as tower blocks and great sheets of pack ice.
Geography accounts for the Weddell being so ice-choked. Its slow clockwise current rotates against the Eastern arm of the Peninsula, trapping winter sea ice rather than allowing it to all melt away every summer. This frozen pack then adds to the jumble of tabular bergs calving in great sheets off the landlocked Ronne Ice Shelf.
As a result, ice-free waters in the Weddell Sea are restricted to just a few short months of the year, giving expedition cruise ships only a narrow window to safely visit and enjoy this extraordinary landscape.
The Weddell Sea offers a rare opportunity to see Antarctica’s most iconic species: the emperor penguin. Absent on the more-visited Western side of the Peninsula, emperors may be seen on Snow Hill Island, their northernmost colony in Antarctica.
Snow Hill only be accessed in November, and even then its ice-bound location means that it can only be reached by ships with their own helicopters.
To avoid disturbing the penguins, helicopters aren't allowed to fly within a mile of the colony, so must visitors walk across the ice to the rookery, excitement building as they are guided by the sounds of the rookery.
Seeing of 10,000 tall handsome adult emperors and their fat fluffy chicks, set against an unearthly frozen landscape, can be an overwhelming experience and is surely one of the world's greatest wildlife encounters.
From the days of the first explorers to the modern quest for the wreck of the Endurance, the Weddell Sea continues to be a backdrop for the most extraordinary stories, waiting to be retold by onboard historian guides.
Shackleton's lost ship Endurance was rediscovered here in 2022, and while it continues to sleep undisturbed beneath the ice, sailing cannot fail to evoke wonder at the survival story that followed: from the months spent camping on the ice, to the dash to Elephant Island and the miraculous 800-mile voyage to South Georgia.
The Weddell Sea is also the backdrop to lesser known stories of Antarctic survival and heroism, like the 1902 Nordenskjold Expedition who were stranded on Snow Hill Island, and their relief expedition who were forced to take overwinter on Paulet Island when their own ship sank in the ice.
Emperor penguins are the Weddell Sea's signature species. While only a trip to the Snow hill rookery will provide you with a close encounter, there's always the chance of spotting individual penguins out on the ice in here.
The Weddell Sea is a great stronghold for Adelie penguins however, and they breed here in huge numbers. Their rookery on Paulet Island is estimated to be around 100,000 pairs strong.
It’s unsurprising that Weddell seals abound on the ice here, along with leopard seals, but the Weddell Sea also offers the chance to see plenty of crabeater seals, a species far less commonly seen on Peninsula cruises. The restriction of most Weddell Sea trips from January to March means that the Weddell Sea is great for whale watching.
Humpback whales and the most commonly seen here, as are orcas. Fin whales rarely choose to swim among the ice here.
The cruising season for the Weddell Sea runs from January through to March. Outside these months, the majority of the sea is mostly inaccessible due to sea ice. Some cruise ships on Peninsula trips may make opportunistic visits earlier if ice conditions allow but this cannot be guaranteed or predicted.
One exception is the small number of November trips to the very northern Weddell Sea and the emperor penguin colony at Snow Hill island. November is the only month this island is accessible: Weddell Sea trips running between January and March cannot offer the emperor penguins at Snow Hill.
One advantage of late season voyages is that most Weddell Sea trips also include time on the Antarctic Peninsula. This can give the best of both worlds: late season Peninsula action with penguin chicks on rocky beaches, while still enjoying pristine ice and snow in the Weddell Sea.
The majority of Weddell Sea cruises sail from Ushuaia in Argentina, although a small number of voyages every year also operate from Punta Arenas in Chile, flying across the Drake Passage to Antarctica instead.
Occasionally, some ships may include South Georgia to a Weddell Sea itinerary, allowing travellers to follow the story of Shackleton’s Endurance voyage from start to finish where it all unfolded.
Weddell Sea cruises typically spend longer in Antarctica than traditional Peninsula cruises as they add extra time along the Peninsula to the Weddell section of the itinerary.
The northwestern part of the Weddell Sea is the only accessible section of the sea due to the thick sea ice that persists throughout the year. The relatively small window of opportunity to come here means that it remains relatively little-visited: fewer people visit the Weddell Sea each year than cross the Antarctic Circle.
Most Weddell Sea voyages also include time on the western side of the Antarctic Peninsula. Not only does this give you longer in Antarctica, but you get to compare and contrast these two dramatically different parts of the continent.
Weddell Sea Cruises trips scored 4.1/5 from 9 reviews
We got two brilliant days at Snow Hill with breathtaking views and thousands of penguin chicks. We had a couple of windy snowy days that provided a small view of the typical Antarctic early summer. Every day was filled with new views and great experiences. Read the full review
Travelled: November 2023
Michael Robert Perata - USA
Helicoptering to a landing on sea ice, then walking 20 minutes to see the grandeur of a huge emperor penguin colony. It was a beautiful blue sky day in the vastness of ice, surrounded by icebergs frozen in the sea ice. The curious penguins, proudly showing off their chicks. Fantastic experience. Read the full review
Travelled: November 2023
Michael Robert Perata - USA
We very much enjoyed our expedition into the Weddell Sea and the blending of the historical expedition of Nordenskjold as explained by Jack the historian and Roger the expedition leader on board. Read the full review
Travelled: February 2023
John Mark Bowles - USA
The most memorable moment must be the first sight of seeing the emperor penguin colony! It was amazing, just stunning! It was like a dream come true Read the full review
Travelled: November 2022
Grace Huang - USA
Fantastic experience, would recommend to anyone interested in wildlife and the history of the area. Walking on an ice floe in the Weddell sea was perfect. Read the full review
Travelled: November 2017
David & Jill Blaen - United Kingdom
Review:
The best time to visit the Weddell Sea is during the height of the Austral summer in January, February and March when the sea ice in the Weddell breaks up enough to allow safe access for expedition cruise ships.
An exception are the voyages to see the emperor penguin colony on Snow Hill Island, which can only be visited in November.
The geography of the Weddell Sea means that the sea ice breaks up far later in the season than around the Antarctic Peninsula, so there is a much smaller window of opportunity to visit it.
Only a small number of ships sail here each year in January, February and March, putting visitors here in a pretty exclusive club. More people sail south of the Antarctic Circle every year than visit the Weddell Sea!
The Weddell Sea has a much starker and more featureless landscape than the Western Side of the Antarctic Peninsula – but it's one that much more dominated by ice, from thick pack ice to gigantic tabular icebergs.
The other key difference is how few ships and people each year explore the Weddell Sea.
The emperor penguin colony on Snow Hill island can only be visited on special November departures. The colony can only be accessed from the ship by helicopter.
Outside of these months, you may be lucky enough to see a isolated emperor penguins on the ice – but as with all Antarctic wildlife sightings, this cannot be guaranteed.
There is very little risk, though you may like to know that all expedition cruise ships visiting the Weddell Sea carry a high ice-class rating. Itineraries only visit the Weddell Sea during the most ice-free months, and none of them sail as far south as Shackleton. You'll be staying onboard in a comfortable cabin, rather than camped out on the ice eating sledging rations.
The Peninsula is the classic way to experience Antarctica. Some of the best wildlife and most dramatic scenery can be found in this part of the Frozen Continent.
Discover MoreFrom the onboard service and comfort of the suites to their fantastic expedition teams, luxury Antarctica cruise ships deliver a truly first-class polar experience.
Discover MoreA short two-hour flight quickly and comfortably transports you to the White Continent. On arrival, you then switch to an awaiting ship that acts as your floating hotel.
Discover MoreA jewel in Antarctica's crown, South Georgia is one of the world's great wildlife destinations: the Serengeti of the Southern Ocean
Discover MoreOur team has visited Antarctica over 150 times and has 100 collective years of polar experience, so from which trip is right for you to what shoes to bring - there’s no question we can’t answer.
Choosing the right voyage is complicated, Swoop makes it easy. We offer no-nonsense advice on 1500 voyages across 30 ships to find you the right trip, cabin, price - and we don’t charge a fee.
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