7 Jan 2028
Miami, Florida
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16:00
Miami is the busiest cruise port in the world, hosting a myriad of ships year-round from all over the globe. Although it is technically not on the Caribbean Sea, no other American city exudes more of the diverse tropical appeal of the Caribbean. The city is home to a large and vibrant immigrant population that blends snowbird refugees from more northern climes with emigres from all Latin America and the Caribbean, as well as sizable groups from Europe, the Middle East and Asia. From the hot-blooded Art Deco haunts of South Beach to the natural wonders of the UNESCO-inscribed Everglades and the laid-back charms of the Keys, South Florida offers a bounty of appealing attractions that make an extended stay in the region nearly mandatory for those either embarking or disembarking here.
8 Jan 2028
At Sea
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9 Jan 2028
At Sea
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10 Jan 2028
At Sea
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00:00
11 Jan 2028
Panama Canal Cruising
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00:00
11 Jan 2028
Fuerte Amador (Panama City), Panama
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00:00
Formerly a fortified armory, this newly developed port is the portal to colonial Panama City and an in-depth look at Miraflores Locks. Also from here, you can visit an Embera Indian village.
12 Jan 2028
Fuerte Amador (Panama City), Panama
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00:00
Formerly a fortified armory, this newly developed port is the portal to colonial Panama City and an in-depth look at Miraflores Locks. Also from here, you can visit an Embera Indian village.
13 Jan 2028
At Sea
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00:00
14 Jan 2028
At Sea
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00:00
15 Jan 2028
Guayaquil (Quito), Ecuador
08:30
18:00
16 Jan 2028
At Sea
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00:00
17 Jan 2028
Salaverry (Trujillo), Peru
07:00
18:00
Salaverry is the port city for Trujillo, the second largest city in Peru. Like Lima, Trujillo was founded by the Spanish conquistador Pizarro. Here you will find colonial mansions with fronts containing distinctive wrought-iron grillwork and pastel color paint. This area is also known for its numerous ancient archeological sites including the ancient Chimu capital of Chan Chan.
18 Jan 2028
Callao (Lima), Peru
08:30
00:00
A 45-minute drive from the port city of Callao brings you to exciting Lima, the City of Kings. From its founding in 1535 until today, it remains one of the most important cities in all South America. The handsome old buildings from the earliest colonial days surrounding the Plaza de Armas contrast with the soaring modern towers rising in the newer sections of the city.
19 Jan 2028
Callao (Lima), Peru
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00:00
A 45-minute drive from the port city of Callao brings you to exciting Lima, the City of Kings. From its founding in 1535 until today, it remains one of the most important cities in all South America. The handsome old buildings from the earliest colonial days surrounding the Plaza de Armas contrast with the soaring modern towers rising in the newer sections of the city.
20 Jan 2028
Callao (Lima), Peru
00:00
19:00
A 45-minute drive from the port city of Callao brings you to exciting Lima, the City of Kings. From its founding in 1535 until today, it remains one of the most important cities in all South America. The handsome old buildings from the earliest colonial days surrounding the Plaza de Armas contrast with the soaring modern towers rising in the newer sections of the city.
21 Jan 2028
General San Martin (Pisco), Peru
08:30
17:00
Pisco dates from 1640, and its Plaza de Armas is a Spanish colonial treasure. Another treasure is the Ballestas Islands, an offshore cluster of rocky outcroppings teeming with seabirds, penguins, sea lions, dolphins and other wildlife. Many visitors take the opportunity to take a scenic flight over the huge, mysterious Nazca Lines pictographs etched into the nearby desert surface 2,000 years ago. And still more belly up to a bar to sample a Pisco Sour cocktail made with the Pisco brandy distilled from locally grown grapes.
22 Jan 2028
At Sea
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23 Jan 2028
At Sea
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24 Jan 2028
At Sea
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25 Jan 2028
At Sea
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26 Jan 2028
At Sea
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27 Jan 2028
Easter Island, Chile
08:30
00:00
The southeastern-most point in the Polynesian Triangle, tiny Easter Island in the South Pacific is one of the most remote places on earth. Even more oddly, it belongs to Chile, which lies 3,700 miles away over the eastern horizon. In fact, a large slice of the island is Chile’s Rapa Nui National Park, preserving the sculptural heritage of the indigenous Rapa Nui people, whose ancestors carved the huge human effigies called moai that give the island its renown and earned it UNESCO World Heritage Site status. These stylized sculptures stand on the slopes of the island, gazing implacably out to sea, often on stone platforms called ahu. They were apparently carved between the 13th and 16th centuries, for reasons that are debated. But the enigmatic effigies, the dramatic volcanic landscape, the Rapa Nui people themselves and the sheer isolation of the island combine to draw visitors from every corner of the globe to this speck in the world’s largest ocean.
28 Jan 2028
Easter Island, Chile
00:00
19:00
The southeastern-most point in the Polynesian Triangle, tiny Easter Island in the South Pacific is one of the most remote places on earth. Even more oddly, it belongs to Chile, which lies 3,700 miles away over the eastern horizon. In fact, a large slice of the island is Chile’s Rapa Nui National Park, preserving the sculptural heritage of the indigenous Rapa Nui people, whose ancestors carved the huge human effigies called moai that give the island its renown and earned it UNESCO World Heritage Site status. These stylized sculptures stand on the slopes of the island, gazing implacably out to sea, often on stone platforms called ahu. They were apparently carved between the 13th and 16th centuries, for reasons that are debated. But the enigmatic effigies, the dramatic volcanic landscape, the Rapa Nui people themselves and the sheer isolation of the island combine to draw visitors from every corner of the globe to this speck in the world’s largest ocean.
29 Jan 2028
At Sea
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00:00
30 Jan 2028
At Sea
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00:00
31 Jan 2028
At Sea
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00:00
1 Feb 2028
At Sea
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00:00
2 Feb 2028
Robinson Crusoe Island
07:00
19:00
3 Feb 2028
Santa Clara Island, Chile
07:00
19:00
4 Feb 2028
At Sea
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00:00
5 Feb 2028
Valparaiso (Santiago), Chile
09:00
18:00
6 Feb 2028
At Sea
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00:00
7 Feb 2028
Puerto Montt, Chile
08:30
18:00
The lake country of southern Chile seems to be altogether another world from the deserts of the north. The Lake District is graced with spectacular scenery, including the magnificent snowcapped volcanic cone, Mt. Osorno. Puerto Montt serves as the principal port for this region and as a gateway for cruises southward into Chile‘s fjords.
8 Feb 2028
Castro, Chiloe Island, Chile
09:00
18:00
The towns are largely built of abundant local woods, and many houses are elaborately shingled in intricate designs. Even the cathedral is a beautiful, vaulted structure crafted of local hardwoods. The forest and the sea are the source of livelihood and much more in this rustic outpost.
8 Feb 2028
Gulf of Corcovado
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00:00
9 Feb 2028
Puerto Chacabuco, Chile
08:30
18:00
10 Feb 2028
At Sea
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00:00
11 Feb 2028
Scenic Cruising Wide Channel
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00:00
11 Feb 2028
Eyre Fjord
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00:00
11 Feb 2028
Pio XI Glacier
08:30
18:00
12 Feb 2028
Peel Fjord
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00:00
12 Feb 2028
Brujo Glacier
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00:00
12 Feb 2028
Sarmiento Channel
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00:00
13 Feb 2028
Strait of Magellan
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00:00
13 Feb 2028
Punta Arenas, Chile
07:00
18:00
Red roofs and smoking chimneys decorate the gently sloping hillsides of Punta Arenas (Sandy Point), the bustling center of one of the world‘s largest sheep farming areas. This pleasant community welcomes you with attractive parks and delightful Victorian architecture.
14 Feb 2028
At Sea
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00:00
15 Feb 2028
Garibaldi Glacier, Chile
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00:00
16 Feb 2028
Ushuaia, Argentina
07:00
18:00
The southernmost city in the world, Ushuaia is the capital of Argentine Tierra del Fuego and an important naval base boasting a strategic as well as a picturesque location on the shores of Ushuaia Bay and the Beagle Channel. This rustic coastal town is set among waterfalls, glaciers, snow-clad mountains and beech forests, and the nutrient-rich local waters abound with marine life. Though the houses here are painted warm, pastel colors, the weather is chilly year-round and winter sports such as downhill and cross-country skiing and skating are popular. Ushuaia‘s principal industries are raising sheep, logging, fishing and trapping. It became a boomtown with 30,000 residents in the late 1980‘s when the government sought to increase Argentina‘s presence near Antarctica by giving tax breaks to citizens who settled here.
17 Feb 2028
At Sea
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18 Feb 2028
At Sea
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00:00
19 Feb 2028
Antarctic Experience
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20 Feb 2028
Antarctic Experience
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21 Feb 2028
Antarctic Experience
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22 Feb 2028
Antarctic Experience
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23 Feb 2028
Antarctic Experience
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24 Feb 2028
At Sea
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25 Feb 2028
At Sea
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26 Feb 2028
The Seabourn Falkland Island Experience
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00:00
27 Feb 2028
The Seabourn Falkland Island Experience
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28 Feb 2028
Stanley/Falkland Is/Islas Malvinas
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18:00
An archipelago of over 700 islands spread over 4,700 square miles lies about 300 miles east of the coast of Argentina. Its political affiliation is with the United Kingdom, and it is named the Falkland Islands, although this is disputed by Argentina, which calls the island group Islas Malvinas. The islands were the focus of a short, violent military confrontation between the two nations in 1982 which resulted in many lives lost. Most visitors come to the islands attracted by the severe beauty of the landscape and the unusual wildlife to be seen there, especially colonies of penguins. Port Stanley, the capital, is a plucky outpost supporting the hardy islanders who farm and fish and, lately, newcomers set on exploiting the recently discovered oil reserves offshore.
29 Feb 2028
At Sea
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00:00
1 Mar 2028
At Sea
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2 Mar 2028
At Sea
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00:00
3 Mar 2028
Montevideo, Uruguay
07:00
19:00
Tucked in between Brazil and Argentina, the republic of Uruguay has nevertheless maintained its own identity and traditions. As South America‘s second smallest country, it has been called a city surrounded by a big ranch. Montevideo has also been referred to as “The Switzerland of South America,” for its same secretive bank system guaranteed by law. Uruguay is principally middle class and boasts the most highly educated citizens on the continent.
4 Mar 2028
Buenos Aires, Argentina
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00:00
Founded in 1536, Buenos Aires was administered by a Spanish viceroy for nearly three centuries before winning its independence in 1816. A sleepy port town for most of that time, it wasn‘t until the turn of the 20th century that the city finally emerged as an important shipping center. Today, Argentina‘s democratically elected government has made it South America‘s safest (and most expensive) country. This cosmopolitan city is characterized by broad boulevards with huge shade trees, beautiful residential districts, plazas containing monuments and fountains, interspersed with 20th-century high-rise buildings. It is a truly great walking city.
5 Mar 2028
Buenos Aires, Argentina
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18:00
Founded in 1536, Buenos Aires was administered by a Spanish viceroy for nearly three centuries before winning its independence in 1816. A sleepy port town for most of that time, it wasn‘t until the turn of the 20th century that the city finally emerged as an important shipping center. Today, Argentina‘s democratically elected government has made it South America‘s safest (and most expensive) country. This cosmopolitan city is characterized by broad boulevards with huge shade trees, beautiful residential districts, plazas containing monuments and fountains, interspersed with 20th-century high-rise buildings. It is a truly great walking city.
6 Mar 2028
At Sea
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00:00
7 Mar 2028
At Sea
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8 Mar 2028
At Sea
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9 Mar 2028
At Sea
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10 Mar 2028
At Sea
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11 Mar 2028
At Sea
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12 Mar 2028
Inaccessible Island, St Helena
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00:00
Inaccessible Island is an extinct volcano, last active six million years ago, with Cairn Peak reaching 449 m. The island is 12.65 km² in area, rising out of the South Atlantic Ocean 31 km south-west of Tristan da Cunha.
12 Mar 2028
Tristan da Cunha, Saint Helena
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00:00
Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha is a British Overseas Territory located in the South Atlantic and consisting of the island of Saint Helena, Ascension Island and the archipelago of Tristan da Cunha including Gough Island.
13 Mar 2028
Nightingale Island, St Helena
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18:00
Nightingale Island is an active volcanic island in the South Atlantic Ocean, 3 square kilometres in area, part of the Tristan da Cunha group of islands. They are administered by the United Kingdom as part of the overseas territory of Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha
14 Mar 2028
At Sea
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15 Mar 2028
At Sea
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16 Mar 2028
At Sea
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17 Mar 2028
At Sea
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18 Mar 2028
At Sea
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19 Mar 2028
At Sea
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00:00
20 Mar 2028
Richards Bay, South Africa
07:00
18:00
21 Mar 2028
Maputo, Mozambique
07:00
00:00
22 Mar 2028
At Sea
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00:00
23 Mar 2028
Durban, South Africa
09:00
18:00
At its founding in 1835, the city was named in honor of the then Governor of the Cape, Sir Benjamin D‘Urban. Sugar cane transformed Durban into a vital port city, and its attractive parks and meticulously groomed gardens continue to testify to the land‘s richness. Today, the city sprawls along the coast, its golden beaches hugging the ice-blue Indian Ocean.
24 Mar 2028
At Sea
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00:00
25 Mar 2028
Port Elizabeth, South Africa
08:30
18:00
Port Elizabeth is one of South Africa’s largest cities, (second in area and fifth in population), stretching 16 miles along the bay named “Algoa” by the Portuguese. The name indicated that it was from here their trading ships departed for the Goa coast of India on the favorable monsoon winds. Today it is renowned as a playground on the Indian Ocean coast, the breezes attracting surfers and yachtsmen to sport in the warm seas. The 2010 FIFA World Cup was held here, and spread even further its reputation as a world-class beach resort.
26 Mar 2028
Mossel Bay, South Africa
10:00
19:00
27 Mar 2028
At Sea
01:00
01:00
28 Mar 2028
Cape Town, South Africa
08:00
01:00
Nestled at the foot of Table Mountain and flanked by Devil‘s Peak and Lion‘s Head, Cape Town is known by South Africans simply as ‘the Cape,‘ an acknowledgment of its uniqueness and its status as the Mother City. The first area to be settled by Europeans in the 17th century, it is today a major seaport and the legislative capital of South Africa. The feeling here is not African but cosmopolitan, and a sense of history remains.
29 Mar 2028
Cape Town, South Africa
01:00
20:00
Nestled at the foot of Table Mountain and flanked by Devil‘s Peak and Lion‘s Head, Cape Town is known by South Africans simply as ‘the Cape,‘ an acknowledgment of its uniqueness and its status as the Mother City. The first area to be settled by Europeans in the 17th century, it is today a major seaport and the legislative capital of South Africa. The feeling here is not African but cosmopolitan, and a sense of history remains.
30 Mar 2028
At Sea
01:00
01:00
31 Mar 2028
Luderitz, Namibia
09:30
19:00
In 1883, a German businessman, Adolf Luderitz, purchased a parcel of land enclosing a small bay for purposes of speculation. The so-called Skeleton Coast had limited potential in many ways, being largely made up of the shifting sands of the Namib Desert. Then, in 1906, a local railway worker noticed an oddly sparkly stone beside the tracks. It proved to be a diamond, and it became clear that there were many like it lying literally on the surface of the sands. By 1909 a diamond rush was in full sway, and a thriving, German-styled town called Kolmanskop sprouted out of the desert to house the gem-seekers. When the easy pickings ended, the townspeople simply walked away, and the desert climate preserved the town as it was slowly engulfed by the shifting sands. Today it makes an evocative and haunting place to visit. The bay still hosts a bounty of wildlife as well, including seals, whales and flamingos. Other endeavors have started, too, such as the culture of delicious oysters in the clean, cold ocean waters.
1 Apr 2028
Walvis Bay, Namibia
09:30
01:00
Its name in Afrikaans means “Whale Bay,” but those days are long gone. Today its dramatic setting is inseparable from any impression of this deep-water port on Namibia‘s desolate, but beautiful “Skeleton Coast.” Here the undulating dunes of the Namib Desert meet the sea, and its lagoon is spangled with white pelicans, pink flamingos and other seabirds. Up the coast road is Dune Seven, the highest along Namibia‘s coast, and a great place to take off your shoes and feel some sand between your toes after your Atlantic crossing.
2 Apr 2028
Walvis Bay, Namibia
01:00
20:00
Its name in Afrikaans means “Whale Bay,” but those days are long gone. Today its dramatic setting is inseparable from any impression of this deep-water port on Namibia‘s desolate, but beautiful “Skeleton Coast.” Here the undulating dunes of the Namib Desert meet the sea, and its lagoon is spangled with white pelicans, pink flamingos and other seabirds. Up the coast road is Dune Seven, the highest along Namibia‘s coast, and a great place to take off your shoes and feel some sand between your toes after your Atlantic crossing.
3 Apr 2028
At Sea
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01:00
4 Apr 2028
At Sea
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01:00
5 Apr 2028
Luanda, Angola
08:00
19:00
6 Apr 2028
At Sea
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01:00
7 Apr 2028
At Sea
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01:00
8 Apr 2028
Sao Tome, Sao Tome & Principe
09:00
19:00
9 Apr 2028
At Sea
01:00
01:00
10 Apr 2028
Cotonou
10:00
19:00
Cotonou is a large port city on the south coast of Benin, in West Africa. At the eastern end of central Boulevard St. Michel is the huge Dantokpa Market, which features religious items and spices alongside everyday objects. To the southwest, the 19th-century Cotonou Cathedral has a striking red-and-white striped facade. Nearby, in the Haie Vive district, the Fondation Zinsou museum shows contemporary African art.
11 Apr 2028
Accra
08:00
19:00
Tema port is about 25 km from Ghana’s teeming capital. The cultures of West Africa share a traditional propensity to be busy. It’s exciting and can be dazzling to newcomers. Accra is a bustling, colorful city where everybody is rather joyfully struggling to get ahead. Enjoy it. The oldest section, Jamestown, is centered around the 17th century James Fort, where the British converted a traditional market for precious metals to a trade in slaves. Climb the red-and-white lighthouse for a view of the busy city. Visit the National Museum to get a glimpse of the elaborate and very ancient cultures of Ghana through exhibits of art and artifacts. Then survey Independence Square, and its memorial to the independent nation’s first leader Kwame Nkrumah. Once your pulse is up to speed, perhaps venture into the sea of humanity that is the Makola Market. The Artists Alliance gallery contains works in every medium imaginable from the fertile community of Ghanaian artists. The ANO Centre for Cultural Research is another place to discover the rich vein of creativity that runs from antiquity into today’s culture. A more vivid example can be experienced at Labadi Beach, where enterprising entertainers, venders and artists gather to ply their trades among the visitors from neighboring luxury hotels. Like the pulsing, jazzy Ghanaian popular music, the beat of Accra is fast-paced and insistent, but full of joy.
12 Apr 2028
Takoradi, Ghana
09:30
19:00
13 Apr 2028
At Sea
01:00
01:00
14 Apr 2028
At Sea
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01:00
15 Apr 2028
At Sea
01:00
01:00
16 Apr 2028
Dakar, Senegal
08:00
19:00
One of the most vibrant and cosmopolitan African cities, the Senegalese capital bears many visual reminders of its past as a French colonial outpost. Despite the Parisian-style boulevards and buildings, however, there is a distinctly African feel to the city. Bankers and executives can be seen going about their businesses dressed in the flamboyant traditional Grand Boubou costume, and women wear the feminine version with an equally striking headpiece. The common language is French, although many citizens may also speak as many as five or six ethnic languages, since the whole coast of West Africa has been steeped in a heritage of mutual trade for centuries. Among the many sights and sounds greeting visitors, none is more evocative and sobering than a visit to Goree Island and its House of Slaves. This fortress, just offshore of the city waterfront, displays many reminders of the brutal trade in human beings, including an unimposing doorway, set just above the waterline in the seaside wall, identified simply as the “Door of No Return.”
17 Apr 2028
At Sea
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01:00
18 Apr 2028
Mindelo, Cape Verde
10:00
19:00
19 Apr 2028
At Sea
01:00
01:00
20 Apr 2028
At Sea
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01:00
21 Apr 2028
Las Palmas, Spain
08:00
19:00
Las Palmas is a large Spanish city, which just happens to be on the island of Gran Canaria. That fact adds the exotic, slightly African and international flavor to the place. It played an important part in the early exploration and exploitation of Africa and the New World, some of which is recounted in the Casa de Colon Museum. Columbus may have slept there, but it was never his house. It was actually the mansion of early governors. Other museums of note are the Museo Canaria with a number of Cro Magnon skulls, and the fascinating Elder Museum of Science and Technology. For shopping, strolling and general local interest, head to La Vegueta, the oldest quarter and a UNESCO World Heritage Site, and the adjacent Triana high street shopping district. Most visitors are here for the beaches, and the municipal Playa de Las Canteras is a long, clean and safe option if that is your intention. The Canaria in the name of the islands refers to the indigenous Presa Canaria breed of dogs, which are large, strong and made quite an impression on the earliest Spanish visitors.
22 Apr 2028
Arrecife, Canary Islands
10:00
19:00
Lanzarote is the northernmost of the Canary Islands, often known as “volcano island.” Its capital is Arrecife, a quiet town of about 30,000 inhabitants. Present day Lanzarote consists of two quite distinct massifs: Famara in the north, and Los Ajaches in the south, where centuries of erosion have sculpted abrupt cliffs and deep ravines, contrasting sharply with the smoothly rounded hills of the island‘s central region.
23 Apr 2028
At Sea
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01:00
24 Apr 2028
Casablanca, Morocco
10:00
19:00
Casablanca, located on the Atlantic coast, is with 4 million inhabitants Morocco‘s largest city, and at the same time the largest port in Africa. Built on the site of ancient Phoenician Anfa, it remained a small fishing village for many centuries until the French arrived in 1912. Since then Casablanca has become a vast modern city, ever on the increase since Morocco‘s independence from France in 1956. A successful blend of oriental-style, white cubic dwellings with modern Moroccan quarters gives the city an interesting flair. Lovely beaches and attractive hotels make for a popular year-round holiday resort. To help understand Moroccan culture a visit to the Medina, the quaint old Moorish quarter, is a must for all visitors.
25 Apr 2028
Tangier, Morocco
08:00
19:00
26 Apr 2028
Cadiz (Seville), Spain
10:00
19:00
To taste the true flavor of this ancient port city, one should stroll its seaside promenade, pausing to rest beneath the huge banyan trees. The narrow, winding streets of the old town fan out from the port, leading you to sunny, palm-lined plazas. Visit the Catedral Nueva (New Cathedral), begun in the early 1800s but not completed for 116 years. Its dramatic, golden dome rises over a striking interior. For those who enjoy people-watching as much as sightseeing, the seafood restaurants along the eastern edge of the port provide the ideal setting.
27 Apr 2028
At Sea
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01:00
28 Apr 2028
Lisbon, Portugal
10:00
19:00
The great period of “the Discoveries” accounted for phenomenal wealth brought back from India, Africa and Brazil by the great Portuguese navigators. Gold, jewels, ivory, porcelain and spices helped finance grand new buildings and impressive monuments in Lisbon, the country‘s capital city. As you sail up the Tagus River, be on deck to admire Lisbon‘s panorama and see some of the great monuments lining the river. Lisbon is one of Europe‘s smallest capital cities but considered by many visitors to be one of the most likeable. Spread over a string of seven hills, the city offers a variety of faces, including a refreshing no-frills simplicity reflected in the people as they go unhurriedly through their day enjoying a hearty and delicious cuisine accompanied by the country‘s excellent wines.
29 Apr 2028
Leixoes (Porto), Portugal
09:30
19:00
The commercial center of northern Portugal and hub of the port wine trade, Porto is a gracious, cosmopolitan city noted for its 12th century cathedral and medieval churches, picturesque narrow streets and wine lodges at Vila Nova de Gaia. It is clustered on hills overlooking a river, and is a northern European style city with granite church towers, narrow streets and hidden Baroque treasures.
30 Apr 2028
A Coruna, Spain
10:00
19:00
A Coruna is the largest Galician city with a culture uniquely its own, a rich folkloric tradition and its own language. Of historically remote origin, A Coruna has preserved a considerable heritage of monuments and ancient buildings, among which are Romanesque churches and a Roman lighthouse. Its most beautiful and original feature is perhaps the characteristic façade of its houses, which are completely covered by mirador windows.
1 May 2028
At Sea
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01:00
2 May 2028
St. Malo, France
09:30
19:00
Saint-Malo, known as the Corsaires city, is situated at the Cote d‘Emeraude on the Rance River in the north-east of Brittany. The city‘s name stems from the Welsh Monk MacLow Saint-Malo. The city, which has been a seaward fortress since the end of the 17th century, had one of the most important ports in France. The mighty fortifications and ramparts were designed by Simon Garangeau, a disciple of the famous Vauban. Founded in the 6th century as a monastic settlement, the city retains much of its august, historic and dignified veneer. Saint-Malo is now a city of granite rebuilt after WWII to its original style and skyline. Nearby is the island monastery of Mont St. Michel, founded in 708. A focal point for tourists and the faithful alike, early pilgrims risked their lives crossing the treacherous mud flats to reach this site. Now a dam is needed to keep Mont St. Michel‘s flats from silting up.
3 May 2028
Cherbourg, France
10:00
19:00
The seaport and naval station of Cherbourg is situated along the English Channel northwest of Paris at the mouth of the Divette River. Believed to rest on the site of an ancient Roman station, Cherbourg has been occupied since ancient times and was frequently contested by the French and English in the Middle Ages because of its strategic location. Most recently passed to France in the late 18th century, the town was extensively fortified by Louis XVI. During WWII the Germans held Cherbourg until it was captured by the American forces shortly after the Normandy landings. Following a vast rehabilitation program that returned it to working condition, Cherbourg became an important Allied supply port. Today, Cherbourg is important for transatlantic shipping, shipbuilding, electronics and telephone equipment manufacturing, yachting and commercial fishing.
4 May 2028
Rouen (Paris), France
08:00
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The capital of upper Normandy and fifth largest port in France, picturesque and historic Rouen is renowned as a treasury of medieval architecture. With a large part of the city destroyed during World War II resulting in massive postwar reconstruction, Rouen today appears as an interesting blend of ancient and modern. Fortunately, it has kept its medieval character with still-inhabited houses dating from the 15th century, which line its narrow cobblestone streets. Among the city‘s most noteworthy attractions are the magnificent Cathedrale Notre-Dame built during the 13th century, and the famous Gros-Horloge, a giant Renaissance clock looming over the renowned pedestrian street of the same name. Two blocks away is the Place du Vieux Marche, or old market square, where Joan of Arc was burned at the stake in 1431. She is publicly commemorated at the site on the last Sunday of each May. The “City of a Hundred Spires” as Rouen is known, was an inspiration for Monet‘s impressionistic cathedral paintings. Rouen also makes an excellent point of departure for a visit to Paris, the “City of Light.”
5 May 2028
Rouen (Paris), France
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The capital of upper Normandy and fifth largest port in France, picturesque and historic Rouen is renowned as a treasury of medieval architecture. With a large part of the city destroyed during World War II resulting in massive postwar reconstruction, Rouen today appears as an interesting blend of ancient and modern. Fortunately, it has kept its medieval character with still-inhabited houses dating from the 15th century, which line its narrow cobblestone streets. Among the city‘s most noteworthy attractions are the magnificent Cathedrale Notre-Dame built during the 13th century, and the famous Gros-Horloge, a giant Renaissance clock looming over the renowned pedestrian street of the same name. Two blocks away is the Place du Vieux Marche, or old market square, where Joan of Arc was burned at the stake in 1431. She is publicly commemorated at the site on the last Sunday of each May. The “City of a Hundred Spires” as Rouen is known, was an inspiration for Monet‘s impressionistic cathedral paintings. Rouen also makes an excellent point of departure for a visit to Paris, the “City of Light.”
5 May 2028
Scenic Cruising Seine River
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6 May 2028
Dover (London), England
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Crossing the English Channel from continental Europe to Great Britain, the first view of England is the milky-white strip of land called the White Cliffs of Dover. As you get closer, the coastline unfolds before you in all its striking beauty. White chalk cliffs with streaks of black flint rise straight from the sea to a height of 350’ (110 m). Numerous archaeological finds reveal people were present in the area during the Stone Age. Yet the first record of Dover is from Romans, who valued its close proximity to the mainland. A mere 21 miles (33 km) separate Dover from the closest point in France. A Roman-built lighthouse in the area is the tallest Roman structure still standing in Britain. The remains of a Roman villa with the only preserved Roman wall mural outside of Italy are another unique survivor from ancient times which make Dover one of a kind.