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Type | Interior | Ocean View | Balcony |
---|---|---|---|
Cruise Only | £2,709 | £2,789 | £3,729 |
Cruise Only - price based on cruise only, call to add flights from your regional airport.
Voyage Code: O518
Arrive: Wed 19 March 2025 / Depart: Wed 19 March 2025 at 17:00
This large, modern port serves Chile’s capital, Santiago, a city with Spanish colonial charm and a vivacious spirit. Encircled by the Andes and the Coastal Range, Santiago is centered around the Plaza de Armas, with several of the city’s landmarks: the 18th-century Metropolitan Cathedral the Palacio de la Real Audencia from 1808, the City Hall and the National Museum of History. North of San Antonio lie the picturesque old port and university town of ValparaÃso and the colorful seaside resort of Viña del Mar. In between the coast and the capital are valleys filled with some of Chile’s most famous wineries, all inviting you to come and taste.
Arrive: Thu 20 March 2025 at 08:00 / Depart: Thu 20 March 2025 at 17:00
Coquimbo may be relatively small for a capital city (it's the seat of the Chilean province Elqui), but between its location along the Pan-American Highway and its status as an important port, Coquimbo receives quite a few domestic and international visitors. Many of them use the city as a jumping-off point from which to explore the attractions of the surrounding Elqui Valley. Reached by the Ruta de Estrellas (Route of the Stars), the valley's vineyards yield to a desert landscape that is home to approximately 70 percent of the world's astronomical observational infrastructure, including nearly a dozen observatories. Other popular out-of-town destinations include southern beach towns like Guanaqueros and Tongoy. Don't rush beyond city limits without checking out Coquimbo's own sights, though; because of its mining and port history, there's been a fair bit of global influence on local life and culture. One place where this influence is evident is the Coquimbo Mosque; while it's a recently built structure, inaugurated in 2007, it's still a testament to the long and fascinating history of this Chilean coastal town.
Arrive: Sun 23 March 2025 at 06:00 / Depart: Sun 23 March 2025 at 17:00
General San Martin was named for José de San MartÃn who, nearly 200 years ago, liberated Peru from Spanish rule. This thriving harbor is your gateway to the Nazca Lines geoglyphs, the ancient spires of Macchu Picchu, and the port of Pisco. Visit the Paracas National Reserve, a refuge for seals, penguins, flamingos and more. Sample shore excursions: Ballestas Island Wildlife Sanctuary Cruise; The Route of Pisco; Tambo Colorado & Paracas Museum.
Arrive: Mon 24 March 2025 at 08:00
Peru's bone-dry capital (only Cairo is drier as far as national capitals go), Lima is a booming energetic metropolis built on ancient foundations millennia in the making. At first she is no looker, but scratch that parched surface below the high-rise offices and dust-settled dwellings and Lima's charms begin to shine: Strikingly preserved pre-Columbian ruins sit defiantly among modern skyscrapers, a cultural potpourri of world-class museums, sun-toasted beaches beautifully illuminated by nightly sunsets and one of the most exciting and dynamic culinary landscapes in the world. Lima is a tale of two cities. Colonial charms abound in the city's historic center, where impressive plazas—including the cinematic 16th-century Plaza de Armas, the handiwork of Spanish conquistador Francisco Pizarro—are overseen by Baroque and neoclassical cathedrals, palaces, monasteries and remnants of ancient city walls. But a different Lima emerges in the cliff-hugging seaside barrios of Miraflores and Barranco. Miraflores, Lima's modern face, is a bustling enclave of chic restaurants, bars and nightlife, and Barranco is a bohemian resort commune flush with grand casonas converted into atmospheric hotels and eateries. One of the city's allures is navigating between the old and the new. But the Peruvian capital is at its most extraordinary at mealtimes, where the signature dishes of its world-famous cuisine—ceviche, lomo saltado pisco (beef stir-fried with tomatoes, peppers, onions and fried potatoes), aji de gallina (a pepper-laced chicken stew), causa (avocado and shrimp layered between mashed potato)—are the culinary stuff of legend, further wowing when chased by Peru's extraordinary national cocktail, the highly addictive pisco sour. ¡Salud!
Peru's bone-dry capital (only Cairo is drier as far as national capitals go), Lima is a booming energetic metropolis built on ancient foundations millennia in the making. At first she is no looker, but scratch that parched surface below the high-rise offices and dust-settled dwellings and Lima's charms begin to shine: Strikingly preserved pre-Columbian ruins sit defiantly among modern skyscrapers, a cultural potpourri of world-class museums, sun-toasted beaches beautifully illuminated by nightly sunsets and one of the most exciting and dynamic culinary landscapes in the world. Lima is a tale of two cities. Colonial charms abound in the city's historic center, where impressive plazas—including the cinematic 16th-century Plaza de Armas, the handiwork of Spanish conquistador Francisco Pizarro—are overseen by Baroque and neoclassical cathedrals, palaces, monasteries and remnants of ancient city walls. But a different Lima emerges in the cliff-hugging seaside barrios of Miraflores and Barranco. Miraflores, Lima's modern face, is a bustling enclave of chic restaurants, bars and nightlife, and Barranco is a bohemian resort commune flush with grand casonas converted into atmospheric hotels and eateries. One of the city's allures is navigating between the old and the new. But the Peruvian capital is at its most extraordinary at mealtimes, where the signature dishes of its world-famous cuisine—ceviche, lomo saltado pisco (beef stir-fried with tomatoes, peppers, onions and fried potatoes), aji de gallina (a pepper-laced chicken stew), causa (avocado and shrimp layered between mashed potato)—are the culinary stuff of legend, further wowing when chased by Peru's extraordinary national cocktail, the highly addictive pisco sour. ¡Salud!
Depart: Wed 26 March 2025 at 10:00
Peru's bone-dry capital (only Cairo is drier as far as national capitals go), Lima is a booming energetic metropolis built on ancient foundations millennia in the making. At first she is no looker, but scratch that parched surface below the high-rise offices and dust-settled dwellings and Lima's charms begin to shine: Strikingly preserved pre-Columbian ruins sit defiantly among modern skyscrapers, a cultural potpourri of world-class museums, sun-toasted beaches beautifully illuminated by nightly sunsets and one of the most exciting and dynamic culinary landscapes in the world. Lima is a tale of two cities. Colonial charms abound in the city's historic center, where impressive plazas—including the cinematic 16th-century Plaza de Armas, the handiwork of Spanish conquistador Francisco Pizarro—are overseen by Baroque and neoclassical cathedrals, palaces, monasteries and remnants of ancient city walls. But a different Lima emerges in the cliff-hugging seaside barrios of Miraflores and Barranco. Miraflores, Lima's modern face, is a bustling enclave of chic restaurants, bars and nightlife, and Barranco is a bohemian resort commune flush with grand casonas converted into atmospheric hotels and eateries. One of the city's allures is navigating between the old and the new. But the Peruvian capital is at its most extraordinary at mealtimes, where the signature dishes of its world-famous cuisine—ceviche, lomo saltado pisco (beef stir-fried with tomatoes, peppers, onions and fried potatoes), aji de gallina (a pepper-laced chicken stew), causa (avocado and shrimp layered between mashed potato)—are the culinary stuff of legend, further wowing when chased by Peru's extraordinary national cocktail, the highly addictive pisco sour. ¡Salud!
Arrive: Thu 27 March 2025 at 08:00 / Depart: Thu 27 March 2025 at 17:00
To the north is the "Lordiest City" of Trujillo, founded in 1535 and still rich in ornate colonial detail. At its edge, far older and long abandoned by the Chimu Indians, sits the eerie adobe metropolis of Chan Chan. Sample shore excursions: Trujillo and the Temples; Ch n Ch n Citadel/Dragon Huaca/Totora Caballitos.
Arrive: Sat 29 March 2025 at 05:00 / Depart: Sat 29 March 2025 at 19:00
Just outside this tranquil coast town lie the villages where the famous Panama hats are woven. Farther afield: colonial Quito, so perfectly preserved the entire Old Town has been designated a World Heritage Site. Sample shore excursions: A Day in Quito; Manta & Montecristi.
Arrive: Mon 31 March 2025 at 10:00
Located west of Panama City at the Pacific entrance to the Panama Canal, Fuerte Amador is a gateway to exploring the many faces of this unique Central American country. The impressive engineering of the canal itself is a wonder to behold; a quick trip to the Miraflores Locks' visitor center with its panoramic observation decks offers the chance to watch behemoth barges thread their way through the legendary manmade waterway. Just minutes from the cruise port, the recently opened Biomuseo is a Frank Gehry–designed natural-history museum dedicated to Panama's ecological marvels. And Fuerte Amador sits within easy taxi distance of Panama City, the bustling, multicultural capital metropolis where visitors can wander a conquistador-era UNESCO World Heritage Site, sip coffee in street cafés and peruse modern malls. For a rural escape, it only takes an hour or two by car to trade the city for the tropical rain forests of SoberanÃa National Park, where an aerial tram carries passengers through treetops, or to meet Emberá tribespeople in their traditional village along the Chagres River.
Depart: Tue 01 April 2025 at 05:00
Located west of Panama City at the Pacific entrance to the Panama Canal, Fuerte Amador is a gateway to exploring the many faces of this unique Central American country. The impressive engineering of the canal itself is a wonder to behold; a quick trip to the Miraflores Locks' visitor center with its panoramic observation decks offers the chance to watch behemoth barges thread their way through the legendary manmade waterway. Just minutes from the cruise port, the recently opened Biomuseo is a Frank Gehry–designed natural-history museum dedicated to Panama's ecological marvels. And Fuerte Amador sits within easy taxi distance of Panama City, the bustling, multicultural capital metropolis where visitors can wander a conquistador-era UNESCO World Heritage Site, sip coffee in street cafés and peruse modern malls. For a rural escape, it only takes an hour or two by car to trade the city for the tropical rain forests of SoberanÃa National Park, where an aerial tram carries passengers through treetops, or to meet Emberá tribespeople in their traditional village along the Chagres River.
Arrive: Thu 03 April 2025 at 08:00 / Depart: Thu 03 April 2025 at 15:00
Crystalline waters, snorkeling with tame stingrays, civilian submarines: This duty-free port has it all, plus Seven Mile Beach and a charming turtle farm. Sample shore excursions: Stingray City Cruise & Island Drive; Reef & Wreck Snorkel by Boat; Scuba Adventure; Nautilus One Semi-submarine.
Arrive: Sat 05 April 2025 at 07:00 / Depart: Sat 05 April 2025
There is an abundance of things to see and do in the Ft. Lauderdale area: visit the newly redesigned Ft. Lauderdale Beach and cafes, stroll the historic Riverwalk, shop the luxurious stores on Las Olas Boulevard or adventure to the Everglades for an intriguing air boat excursion.
Oosterdam 01 December 2024 14 nights
Itinerary: San Antonio - Puerto Montt - Puerto Chacabuco - Magellan Strait - Punta Arenas - Ushuaia - Falkland Islands - Montevideo - Buenos Aires
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Oosterdam 15 December 2024 22 nights
Itinerary: Buenos Aires - Montevideo - Punta del Este - Puerto Madryn - Falkland Islands - Antarctica - Ushuaia - Punta Arenas - Magellan Strait - Puerto Chacabuco...
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Oosterdam 03 January 2025 28 nights
Itinerary: Stay 2 nights in Santiago - Puerto Montt - Puerto Chacabuco - Magellan Strait - Punta Arenas, Chile - Beagle Channel - Ushuaia, Argentina - Cape Horn, Chile - Antarctica - Antarctica - Antarctica - Antarctica - Stanley, Falkland Islands - Puerto Madryn - Punta del Este - Montevideo - Buenos Aires - Buenos Aires - Stay 2 nights in Buenos Aires
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Oosterdam 06 January 2025 22 nights
Itinerary: San Antonio - Puerto Montt - Puerto Chacabuco - Magellan Strait - Punta Arenas - Ushuaia - Cape Horn - Antarctica - Falkland Islands - Puerto Madryn...
Call us now on 0800 019 0053
Oosterdam 28 January 2025 22 nights
Itinerary: Buenos Aires - Montevideo - Punta del Este - Puerto Madryn - Falkland Islands - Antarctica - Ushuaia - Punta Arenas - Magellan Strait - Puerto Chacabuco...
Call us now on 0800 019 0053
Oosterdam 19 February 2025 14 nights
Itinerary: San Antonio - Puerto Montt - Puerto Chacabuco - Magellan Strait - Punta Arenas - Ushuaia - Falkland Islands - Montevideo - Buenos Aires
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Oosterdam 02 March 2025 22 nights
Itinerary: Stay 2 nights in Santiago - San Antonio, Chile - Puerto Montt - Puerto Chacabuco - Chilean Fjords - Magellan Strait - Punta Arenas, Chile - Ushuaia, Argentina - Cape Horn, Chile - Falkland Islands - Montevideo - Buenos Aires - Buenos Aires - Stay 2 nights in Buenos Aires - Fly Buenos Aires to Iguaza Falls - Stay 2 nights in Iguazu Falls
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Oosterdam 05 March 2025 31 nights
Itinerary: Buenos Aires - Montevideo - Falkland Islands - Magellan Strait - Punta Arenas - Ushuaia - Puerto Montt - San Antonio - Coquimbo - San Martin...
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Oosterdam 05 March 2025 14 nights
Itinerary: Buenos Aires - Montevideo - Falkland Islands - Magellan Strait - Punta Arenas - Ushuaia - Puerto Montt - San Antonio
Call us now on 0800 019 0053
Oosterdam 19 April 2025 14 nights
Itinerary: Fort Lauderdale - Kings Wharf - Funchal - Tangier - Barcelona
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