10 nights onboard Silver Cloud

Broome to Darwin

With 20 Zodiacs, 10 kayaks, and four superlative restaurants, Silver Cloud really does break the ice between expedition and luxury.

Leaving from: Broome, Western Australia
Cruise ship: Silver Cloud
Visiting: Broome, Western Australia Talbot Bay, Western Australia Freshwater Cove Montgomery Reef, Western Australia
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Silversea Cruises

Wellness should be about balanced indulgence, not self-sacrifice - that's the philosophy behind Silversea's new programme called Otium, named after the Roman leisure time dedicated to bathing, talking, singing, drinking, eating and relaxing. The easygoing regime includes a 24-hour room-service menu of comfort food, as well as new spa treatments, relaxing baths and hot chocolate served on your balcony.

254
Passengers
223
Crew
1994
Launched
2017
Last refit
16800t
Tonnage
156.7m
Length
21.52m
Width
18kts
Speed
7
Decks
USD
Currency
Cruise Itinerary
Day 1
Broome, Western Australia, Australia
Day 2
Talbot Bay, Western Australia, Australia
Day 3
Freshwater Cove, Australia
Day 3
Montgomery Reef, Western Australia, Australia
Day 4
River travel
Day 5
Swift Bay, Western Australia, Australia
Day 6
Ashmore and Cartier Islands, Australia
Day 7
Vansittart Bay, Western Australia, Australia
Day 8
Koolama Bay, Kimberley, Western Australia, Australia
Day 9
Wyndham, Western Australia, Australia
Days 10 - 11
Darwin, Northern Territory, Australia
Broome, Western Australia, Australia image
Day 1
Broome, Western Australia, Australia
Traffic in the Broome Harbour (a very busy working harbour) is restricted, requiring special permits for all vehicles accessing the pier area. Guests are not permitted in this area on an individual basis. In order to make disembarkation as smooth as possible Silversea will be providing a group motorcoach transfer from the pier to the airport.  This transfer will depart shortly after the ship is cleared.  Exact timings will be communicated by the ship's staff.Guests who do not wish to go to the airport immediately following disembarkation will be transferred to Pearl Luggers, located 10 - 15 minutes from the airport, where taxis are available for hire. 
Talbot Bay, Western Australia, Australia image
Day 2
Talbot Bay, Western Australia, Australia
Freshwater Cove, Australia image
Day 3
Freshwater Cove, Australia
Montgomery Reef, Western Australia, Australia image
Day 3
Montgomery Reef, Western Australia, Australia
River travel image
Day 4
River travel
Swift Bay, Western Australia, Australia image
Day 5
Swift Bay, Western Australia, Australia
The Bonaparte Archipelago is a rugged maze of islands that stretch almost 150km along Western Australia’s remote Kimberley coast. Remaining relatively unspoilt and remarkably pristine, Swift Bay is landscaped by heavily fractured sandstone providing an abundance of rock shelters. On the walls of these shelters are examples of both Wandjina and Gwion Gwion style rock art. Join your expedition team ashore for a guided walk to a number of rock art galleries depicting these unique rock art styles.
Ashmore and Cartier Islands, Australia image
Day 6
Ashmore and Cartier Islands, Australia
Ashmore Reef is a sanctuary for seabirds, shorebirds, marine turtles, dugongs, and many other marine species. Each year around 100,000 seabirds breed on Ashmore Reef including great knots, crested terns and white-tailed tropicbirds. The sanctuary zone provides the highest level of protection for wildlife.
Vansittart Bay, Western Australia, Australia image
Day 7
Vansittart Bay, Western Australia, Australia
Vansittart Bay is a beautifully protected large bay with several islands and coves. Jar Island contains ancient rock art galleries depicting the Gwion Gwion style unique to the Kimberley region. Mainly neglected by, or unknown to, the early European researchers of Aboriginal culture in the Kimberley in favour of the dominant & more dramatic Wandjina art, Gwion Gwion art has in recent years gained world prominence. Join your Expedition Team ashore for a short walk, past some fascinating rock formations, to the site of the Gwion Gwion art galleries.
Koolama Bay, Kimberley, Western Australia, Australia image
Day 8
Koolama Bay, Kimberley, Western Australia, Australia
Wyndham, Western Australia, Australia image
Day 9
Wyndham, Western Australia, Australia
Wyndham is a small settlement with the spirit of a Kimberley outback township. It was established in 1886 with the Halls Creek gold rush and sits on the Cambridge Gulf where several rivers converge. Today Wyndham has a population of roughly 900 people and operates largely as a port exporting cattle, servicing the mining industry and hosting a few small ships. For these vessels Wyndham is a gateway to the breathtaking Bungle Bungle mountain range and the nearby Ord River. The Bungle Bungle Mountains in Purnululu National Park are now a World Heritage Site. In excess of 350 million years have shaped geological formations of giant orange and black striped domes rising out of the ground into a landscape unlike any other. Known to the local Aboriginal people for thousands of years, the Bungles were only discovered by the outside world in the mid-1980s. Conversely, cruising the peaceful and tree-lined Ord River is a chance to look for freshwater crocodiles, fruit bats, short-eared rock wallabies and a variety of birds, including Mangrove Herons and Mangrove Gerygones.Please note: All destinations on voyages in the Kimberley region, and the order in which they are visited, are subject to tidal variations and weather conditions. Other destinations may be visited in lieu of the stop described above.
Darwin, Northern Territory, Australia image
Days 10 - 11
Darwin, Northern Territory, Australia
Darwin is Australia's most colorful, and exotic, capital city. Surrounded on three sides by the turquoise waters of the Timor Sea, the streets are lined with tropical flowers and trees. Warm and dry in winter, hot and steamy in summer, it's a relaxed and casual place, as well as a beguiling blend of tropical frontier outpost and Outback hardiness. Thanks to its close proximity to Southeast Asia and its multicultural population it also seems more like Asia than the rest of Australia. Darwin is a city that has always had to fight for its survival. The seductiveness of contemporary Darwin lifestyles belies a history of failed attempts that date from 1824 when Europeans attempted to establish an enclave in this harsh, unyielding climate. The original 1869 settlement, called Palmerston, was built on a parcel of mangrove wetlands and scrub forest that had changed little in 15 million years. It was not until 1911, after it had already weathered the disastrous cyclones of 1878, 1882, and 1897, that the town was named after the scientist who had visited Australia's shores aboard the Beagle in 1839. During World War II it was bombed more than 60 times, as the harbor full of warships was a prime target for the Japanese war planes. Then, on the night of Christmas Eve 1974, the city was almost completely destroyed by Cyclone Tracy, Australia’s greatest natural disaster. It's a tribute to those who stayed and to those who have come to live here after Tracy that the rebuilt city now thrives as an administrative and commercial center for northern Australia. Old Darwin has been replaced by something of an edifice complex—such buildings as Parliament House and the Supreme Court all seem very grand for such a small city, especially one that prides itself on its casual, outdoor-centric lifestyle. Today Darwin is the best place from which to explore Australia's Top End, with its wonders of Kakadu and the Kimberley region.
Ship Details
Silversea Cruises
Silver Cloud

With 20 Zodiacs, 10 kayaks, and four superlative restaurants, Silver Cloud really does break the ice between expedition and luxury.

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