Northwest Passage to Newfoundland: Glaciers, Mountains and Wildlife
Northwest Passage to Newfoundland: Glaciers, Mountains and Wildlife
Northwest Passage to Newfoundland: Glaciers, Mountains and Wildlife
16 Days Starting in Calgary, Canada and ending in St John's, Canada
Visiting: Calgary, Qausuittuq (Resolute), Beechey Island, Tallurutiup Imanga National Marine Conservation Area, Baffin Island, Qikiqtarjuaq, Cape Mercy, Torngat Mountains National Park, L'Anse aux Meadows, Saint Pierre and Miquelon, St John's
Tour operator:
Tour code:
PLU
Guide Type:
Fully Guided
Group size:
0 - 199
Age range:
18-99
Trip Styles:
Interests:
Activities:
Tour Overview
Embark on an unforgettable adventure through the Arctic with the "Northwest Passage to Newfoundland: Glaciers, Mountains and Wildlife" tour. This journey takes you from Calgary to St. John's, exploring the legendary Northwest Passage aboard the Ultramarine, a state-of-the-art Polar adventure ship. Discover the Viking ruins at L’Anse Aux Meadows, the pristine wilderness of Torngat Mountains National Park, and the stunning fjords of Baffin Island. Experience the rich Indigenous culture in Qikiqtarjuaq and the unique French charm of Saint Pierre and Miquelon. With heli-flightseeing, Zodiac excursions, and expert-led presentations, this tour offers unparalleled access to the Arctic's breathtaking landscapes and diverse wildlife. Enjoy all-inclusive meals, comfortable accommodations, and the camaraderie of fellow adventurers as you explore one of the world's most remote and beautiful regions.
Highlights
Itinerary
Day 1 : Start Calgary, Canada
Location: Calgary
Accommodation Name: hotel
Arrive at Calgary International Airport and make your way to your included hotel. The rest of the day is yours to explore this fascinating Western Canadian city, which mixes cosmopolitan flair with cowboy charm.
Day 2 : Fly To Qausuittuq (Resolute) And Embark
Location: Qausuittuq (Resolute)
Accommodation Name: Ultramarine
Meals Included: Breakfast, Dinner
This morning, we catch our flight to the northern gateway of Qausuittuq (Resolute) in Nunavut, where we start our adventure in the middle of the legendary Northwest Passage. You are transferred to your ship by Zodiac or helicopter depending on ship location and weather conditions.
Qausuittuq (Resolute), located on the southern shores of Cornwallis Island, means ‘the place with no dawn’ in Inuktitut. This name, unsurprisingly, refers to the 24-hour winter nights that occur in this remote northern region.
Timing of this expedition, however, is aptly positioned to take advantage of the late summer and early fall ice conditions, which make Quasuittuq accessible, while at the same time welcoming the setting sun high above the Arctic Circle. Upon departing Qausuittuq, your ship navigates through Tallurutiup-Imanga (Lancaster Sound). This 200mi (320km) waterway and the surrounding lands are extremely rich in wildlife and history, both indigenous and European. The Inuit and their predecessors have made their home in this domain for thousands of years.
Day 3 : Tallurutiup-Imanga (Lancaster Sound) And The Myth Of Franklin
Location: Beechey Island
Accommodation Name: Ultramarine
Meals Included: Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner
Today, we head to the western end of Devon Island, on the north side of Tallurutiup-Imanga, and go ashore at windswept Beechey Island, which is home to Beechey Island Sites National Historic Sites. These sites, maintained by Parks Canada, tell the story, or at least the part that’s not still shrouded in mystery, of Sir John Franklin’s much-chronicled 1845-46 expedition to explore the Northwest Passage.
The island is small, only 1.5mi (2.5km) at its widest point, but its shores are steep, and rise to a flat plateau 800ft (244m) high. That’s where Franklin and his crew of 128 men spent the winter after embarking from England aboard their two ships, HMS Erebus and HMS Terror. The ill-fated 1845-46 expedition – to navigate and chart the Northwest Passage – ended in tragedy for all 129 men and their two vessels.
What happened to Franklin and his men is the stuff of legend, but also the focus for several search expeditions over the years, which discovered bodies, personal belongings of crew members, and handwritten notes that suggested starvation, deaths from hypothermia, scurvy, and lead poisoning from the tinned food supplies. Accounts by Inuit suggest the crew split up into small groups and subsequently perished. What is known for certain is that no one survived.
The graves of three officers from HMS Erebus – John Hartnell, William Braine, and John Torrington – were discovered in 1851. You have an opportunity to visit their graves and honour the memory of the entire Franklin crew who braved massive challenges to explore the Northwest Passage.
Franklin’s story is an integral part of the history of Arctic exploration.
The wrecks of Erebus and Terror were discovered in 2014 and 2016, respectively.
Day 4 : At Sea: Explore The Largest Marine-Protected Area In Canada
Location: Tallurutiup Imanga National Marine Conservation Area
Accommodation Name: Ultramarine
Meals Included: Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner
We continue our exploration of Tallurutiup-Imanga, which, in 2017, became the Tallurutiup Imanga National Marine Conservation Area (Lancaster Sound National Marine Conservation Area). At 42,085sqmi (109,000sqkm), it’s the largest marine-protected area in Canada. Heed the advice we always give to our guests whenever a voyage takes them above the Arctic Circle: keep your binoculars ready, especially when out on deck, to view the diverse wildlife that inhabit these waters. Upon leaving Tallurutiup-Imanga, Ultramarine heads into the Davis Strait, which separates Baffin Bay and the Labrador Sea and forms part of the historic Northwest Passage. Clear skies later in the evening herald the promise of a spectacular display of the Northern Lights.
Day 5 : Baffin Island Fjords And Heli-Flightseeing
Location: Baffin Island
Accommodation Name: Ultramarine
Meals Included: Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner
This is an especially exciting day as you become one of the very few travellers to explore the majestic Icy Arm Fjord, which cuts almost 50m (80km) deep into northern Baffin Island.
Accessible only by water in summer when the sea ice recedes, this rarely visited fjord is known for its unrivalled landscape of towering cliffs and stunning glaciers, and is valued as much for its sheer remoteness as it is for its singularly pristine environment. Icy Arm Fjord is the epitome of unspoiled Arctic wilderness. We may observe polar bears, Arctic foxes, seals, walruses, as well as guillemots, kittiwakes and other Arctic-dwelling birds.
Excitement grows on Day 5 as Ultramarine’s two twin-engine helicopters are made ready for heli-flightseeing excursions. Prepare to view the remote Arctic terrain from the seat of a helicopter, camera at the ready. It’s also an excellent day for Zodiac cruises, which offer guests a sea-level intimacy with the surrounding lands and waters.
Day 6 : At Sea: Get Acquainted With The On-Board Features Of The Ultramarine
Location: Baffin Island
Accommodation Name: Ultramarine
Meals Included: Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner
Cruising along the east coast of Baffin Island, particularly from the middle of the island to the southern tip, brings into sharp perspective the sheer vastness of the largest island in Canada, and the fifth largest in the world. Day 6 is an excellent opportunity to familiarise yourself with the features of your ship, including the fitness centre, spa and library. Any surplus time between the expert-led polar presentations − and delicious meals, of course – is perfect for editing your digital photos. We know you’ve taken hundreds by now!
Day 7 : Life In Qikiqtarjuaq
Location: Qikiqtarjuaq
Accommodation Name: Ultramarine
Meals Included: Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner
Qikiqtarjuaq, fondly called Qik, is a small hamlet, populated mostly by Inuit, north of the Arctic Circle on Broughton Island, off the east coast of Baffin Island. Known as the iceberg capital of Nunavut, Qikiqtarjuaq is located at the northern entrance to the mountainous Auyuittuq National Park, which is home to narwhals, bowhead and orca whales, polar bears, seals and migratory birds. Community visits, arranged in collaboration with our local partners, enable you to learn about local culture, and purchase art and traditional handicrafts, such as parkas, boots and local art when available.
Day 8 : Cape Mercy: Fascinating History In The Remote Wilderness
Location: Cape Mercy
Accommodation Name: Ultramarine
Meals Included: Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner
History buffs will enjoy a visit to Cape Mercy, an isolated cove at the southern tip of Cumberland Sound in Nunavut.
Cape Mercy was named by British explorer John Davis, who sailed through this part of the Arctic in 1585. Fast-forward several centuries to the 1950s when Cape Mercy was chosen as the site of a Distant Early Warning Line (DEW) installation, which was part of a system of radar stations set up during the Cold War to detect nuclear attacks.
Today, Cape Mercy, accessible by water, offers modern-day travellers the chance to experience the splendid isolation of the Arctic with no sign of civilisation in sight. You can join a guided hike to a glacier-carved freshwater lake on Cape Mercy. Make sure you bring your camera for this off-ship excursion.
Day 9 : At Sea: Enjoy The On-Ship Amenities And Learning Opportunities
Accommodation Name: Ultramarine
Meals Included: Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner
There’s no shortage of activities on board Ultramarine for your at-sea days. You can relax and rejuvenate in the sauna with floor-to-ceiling windows, book a soothing treatment in Tundra Spa, visit the fitness centre, practice yoga, or deepen your Arctic knowledge by attending one of our expert-led presentations on geology, wildlife, history, glaciology or botany, among other Polar subjects.
Day 10 : Torngat Mountains National Park – The Land Of The Spirits
Location: Torngat Mountains National Park
Accommodation Name: Ultramarine
Meals Included: Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner
Today’s wilderness adventure into Torngat Mountains National Park will leave you awestruck. Within the national park, established in 2008, are Canada’s highest mountains east of the Rockies. The park is a wilderness landscape painting brought to life: breathtaking fjords, dramatic glacial formations, stunning landscapes and wildlife. For students of Indigenous history, Torngat Mountain National Park is especially meaningful: the park is located at the northern edge of the autonomous Nunatsiavut territory, which was recognised as the homeland of the Labrador Inuit in 2005, with its own constitution and administration.
In fact, these lands have been home to the Nunatsiavut and their predecessors for more than 7,500 years. We are honoured to explore this majestic wilderness territory with you. Torngat, in Inuktitut, means place of the spirits, which reflects the spiritual significance of the region to the Inuit communities. As a national park, this wilderness domain offers protection to boreal woodland caribou, black bears, Labrador wolves, red and Arctic foxes, polar bears, and peregrine falcons, among other species.
You will have incredible opportunities to explore this national wilderness area during helicopter, Zodiac and kayaking excursions, and guided hikes.
Day 11 - 12 : At Sea: Observe The Ever-Changing Terrain
Location: Baffin Island
Accommodation Name: Ultramarine
Meals Included: Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner
As we continue sailing, take note of the ever-changing landscapes and scenery throughout your 2,500-nautical mile voyage. We’ve progressed from a pristine tundra environment in the arctic, then down along the rocky, big-walled coast of Baffin Island, to the wind-battered coastal forests of Newfoundland and Labrador.
Day 13 : L’Anse Aux Meadows National Historic Site: Viking And Norse History
Location: L'Anse aux Meadows
Accommodation Name: Ultramarine
Meals Included: Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner
As we sail toward L’Anse Aux Meadows National Historic Site on the northern tip of Newfoundland, consider the differences in modern and ancient marine vessels. Today, you’re comfortably ensconced on the state-of-the-art Ultramarine, a beautifully designed ship with helicopters, quick-launch Zodiacs, a sauna and spa, dining areas surrounded by glass, high-tech presentation spaces, cabins with the best of amenities, and a wide array of exciting off-ship adventure options. Then consider the wooden longboats that transported the Vikings an incredible 1,355mi (2,180km) from Greenland to Newfoundland in 1000 CE. Today, you’re going to visit the archaeological remains of where they landed in their hand-hewn vessels. L’Anse aux Meadows National Historic Site (also a UNESCO World Heritage site) is the only confirmed Norse or Viking settlement in North America.
Enjoy a guided tour to see where Norseman Leif Erikson, son of Erik the Red, is believed to have founded Vinland (the East Coast area including what would later be known as Newfoundland) around 1000 CE. Explore the reconstructed sod huts and Norse ruins throughout the historic site, proof that Vikings discovered North America 500 years before Christopher Columbus’s much-chronicled arrival.
Day 14 : At Sea: The Music Continues
Accommodation Name: Ultramarine
Meals Included: Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner
Enjoy another evening of kitchen party music performed by our guest artists. If you haven’t already, seize the opportunity when the musicians take a break to inquire about the various musical traditions of Newfoundland and Labrador, particularly the origins of kitchen party music. Also, try to spend time with the expedition team, all of whom are polar experts with vast expertise they’re always eager to share.
Day 15 : Saint Pierre And Miquelon
Location: Saint Pierre and Miquelon
Accommodation Name: Ultramarine
Meals Included: Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner
Experience the traditional culture of France during our visit to the islands of Saint Pierre and Miquelon. This small archipelago, only 12.5mi (20km) from Newfoundland, is the only French territory on the North American continent. We disembark in the colourful and vibrant port town of Saint-Pierre, where we can stroll along the seaside, sample French patisseries and enjoy the cafe scene. Get a taste of Europe where you least expect it.
While Europeans have had a presence on the tiny archipelago since the early 17th century, the islands are traditional territory of the Mi’kmaq, the Indigenous people who first appeared in Atlantic Canada 10,000 years ago. The Mi’kmaq culture thrives throughout Eastern Canada.
Day 16 : Disembark And End St John’S, Canada
Location: St John's
Accommodation Name: Ultramarine
Meals Included: Breakfast
Your ship arrives at the pier in St John’s for a morning disembarkation. After breakfast, you may make your way to St John’s International Airport to connect with your homeward flight, or stay longer if you have booked additional accommodation.
What's Included
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All meals while on the ship
All meals are included while on the ship.
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Beer and house wine during dinner
Beer and house wine are provided during dinner.
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All accommodation
All accommodation is included in the tour.
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All transport and listed activities
All transport and listed activities are included in the tour.
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Tour leader throughout and qualified Expedition Staff
A tour leader and qualified expedition staff are provided throughout the journey.
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Mandatory transfer package including charter flights from Calgary, Canada to Resolute, Canada
The mandatory transfer package includes charter flights from Calgary, Canada to Resolute, Canada.
What's Not Included
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Travel insurance
Travel insurance is not included in the tour package.
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Single accommodation (available on request)
Single accommodation is not included but is available on request.
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Visas or vaccinations
Visas or vaccinations are not included in the tour package.
Accommodation
The Northwest Passage to Newfoundland: Glaciers, Mountains and Wildlife voyage is offered on the Ultramarine, a Polar adventure ship. These small ice-rated vessels are well qualified for Polar waters, offering intimate adventures with flexible itineraries, superb food, and excellent staff.
Food
All meals while on the ship included.
Typical meals
The ship’s galley offers good quality service and cuisine throughout, with excellent chefs preparing international menus including vegetarian dishes, accompanied by a wide variety of drinks from around the world on sale.
Breakfast: Buffet style – unlimited tea and coffee, a selection of fruit juices, hot options including bacon and eggs or omelettes, a selection of bread and toast and jam/honey/marmalade, fruit and cereal.
Lunch: Three-course set meal or the occasional buffet or barbecue.
Dinner: Three courses with a starter of soup, salad or anti-pasto, a choice of three mains with at least one vegetarian and one seafood option and a dessert of sweet pudding or ice cream or fruit, tea and coffee.
Vegetarians and vegans can be well catered for – please inform us before departure of any special dietary requests so our local team can be well prepared.
Mode of Transport
The tour includes all transport and listed activities, with a mandatory transfer package including charter flights from Calgary, Canada to Resolute, Canada. Transfers to the ship are by Zodiac or helicopter, depending on location and weather conditions.
Check out our Q&As
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What kind of wildlife might I see during the tour?
During the tour, you may observe polar bears, Arctic foxes, seals, walruses, guillemots, kittiwakes, narwhals, bowhead and orca whales, and various migratory birds. The tour also offers opportunities to see boreal woodland caribou, black bears, Labrador wolves, red and Arctic foxes, and peregrine falcons.
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What activities are available on the Ultramarine ship?
On the Ultramarine ship, you can enjoy a range of activities including frequent Zodiac excursions, trekking, and spending time on deck. The ship also features a fitness centre, spa, library, and offers expert-led polar presentations. Additionally, there are heli-flightseeing excursions and opportunities for kayaking.
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What cultural experiences are included in the tour?
The tour includes cultural experiences such as learning about Indigenous culture in Qikiqtarjuaq, visiting the Viking ruins at L’Anse Aux Meadows, and experiencing the traditional culture of France in Saint Pierre and Miquelon. You can also purchase local art and traditional handicrafts in Qikiqtarjuaq.
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What historical sites will be visited during the tour?
The tour visits several historical sites including the Beechey Island Sites National Historic Sites, which tell the story of Sir John Franklin's expedition, and L’Anse Aux Meadows National Historic Site, the only confirmed Norse or Viking settlement in North America. Additionally, Cape Mercy, with its Cold War history, is also part of the itinerary.
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What is the significance of Torngat Mountains National Park?
Torngat Mountains National Park is significant for its breathtaking fjords, dramatic glacial formations, and wildlife. It is located at the northern edge of the autonomous Nunatsiavut territory, recognized as the homeland of the Labrador Inuit. The park is spiritually significant to the Inuit communities and offers protection to various species.
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What happens if I need to change my holiday date once I’ve booked?
If you wish to make any changes to your booking, particularly if you need to alter any flights booked through us, please let us know as soon as possible. There is a booking or flight amendment fee of £40 per change and flight amendments often incur extra airline costs depending on the changes to be made and if the ticket has been issued or not.
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How long has the tour company been trading?
Exodus has been trading since 1974
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What documents will I receive before I travel?
Your final joining instructions and flight details, if booked with us, will then be sent out 2 to 3 weeks before departure. If you would like a hard copy posted, or if you require these any earlier, please contact the customer operations team. We advise that if you are booking connecting travel before receiving these, please ensure you leave plenty of time.
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Do you operate a “single share” option and how does it work?
Travellers are welcome to opt to share a room with a tour member of the same gender for no additional charge. If you'd like your own room, we can request a single supplement so that you will have your own room throughout.
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Can I join the tour once it has departed?
You are welcome to meet the group after the tour has departed however there is no reduction in rate for joining a tour after the departure date.
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Sep 18, 2025 - Oct 03, 2025Book with Confidence
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Transfer as credit to Future Tours
Exodus Adventure Travels allows you to transfer existing payments to a future tour to avoid cancellation fees if you can't travel and inform exodus adventure travels, 43 days before departure.
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Low Deposit
Exodus Adventure Travels requires a minimum deposit of 25% or the full booking value, whichever is less, with the final balance not due until 90 days before departure.
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Cancellation Policy
We don't charge a cancellation fee, here is a summary of exodus adventure travels charges.
Up to 70 days before tour starts: Forfeit 100% of deposit.