Season’s Greetings from the KE team. Click here for our festive opening hours.

Follow in the footsteps of Shackleton

The Spirit of Shackleton polar cruise holiday offers the very best of the Antarctic and sub-Antarctic, from the Falkland Islands, to South Georgia... Read more
Follow in the footsteps of Shackleton

The Spirit of Shackleton polar cruise holiday offers the very best of the Antarctic and sub-Antarctic, from the Falkland Islands, to South Georgia and southwards to the Antarctic Peninsula, barren Elephant Island and the South Shetlands. 

This is cruising in style on the MS Expedition, a ship purpose-made for polar work, big enough to be comfortable and yet small enough to get close to the action. Wildlife sightings; different species of whale, albatross, penguin and seal, as well as dramatic landscapes of rock and ice will provide a lifetime of memories for any visitor to this remote wilderness region. Historically, too, this is a fascinating cruise, making landfall at notable places from all four of Shackleton’s Antarctic expeditions. 

Ernest Shackleton’s Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition left South Georgia aboard the Endurance on December 5th, 1914. Heading south, the vessel became trapped in pack ice in the Weddell Sea and was carried back northwards over the course of almost a year, before being crushed and then sunk east of the Antarctic Peninsula. Shackleton and his crew set up a camp on the ice and continued to drift northwards until, on April 9th, 1916 they found open water and using their small lifeboats were able to reach Elephant Island, their first landfall for 497 days. Shackleton and 5 of his crew then set out in the best of their boats, the 23-foot James Caird, to make the almost impossible 750 mile voyage back to South Georgia, a journey which took them 17 days. Then, after crossing this mountainous island on foot to reach the whaling station at Stromness, a series of rescue attempts were put in place to try to bring back the 22 expedition members left behind on Elephant Island. Three boats were forced back by pack-ice, before the steam tug Yelcho, loaned by the Chilean Government, finally picked up the men on August 30th, 2016. Amazingly, not one member of the expedition was lost.

>> FOLLOW IN THE FOOTSTEPS OF SHACKLETON

 
 
Footer logos
Your Wishlist
No Wishlist Items

Start your next adventure.

Click the heart icon on the search or holiday pages to save a holiday to your wishlist.

Holiday Search