12 nights onboard MS Fram

The Ultimate Fjord Expedition

Winners 2022 Favourite Specialist Cruise Line
Sail from Iceland to Greenland’s remote east coast and experience the epic grandeur of the world’s largest wilderness fjord system
Leaving from: Reykjavík
Cruise ship: MS Fram
Visiting: Reykjavík Hurry Inlet, King Christian X Land Bear Islands, Scoresby Sound Rypefjord
HX Hurtigruten Expeditions Logo
HX Hurtigruten Expeditions

Hurtigruten Expeditions offers more than 125 years of cruising experience, providing small-ship exploration of more than 250 destinations across 30-plus countries.

On Hurtigruten Expeditions cruise adventures, you will be accompanied by a highly skilled crew and expedition team on one of nine intimately-scaled expedition ships, taking you on breathtaking nature-based experiences in remote corners of the world.

318
Passengers
2007
Launched
2020
Last refit
11647t
Tonnage
114m
Length
20.2m
Width
13kts
Speed
7
Decks
NOK
Currency
Cruise Itinerary
Day 1
Reykjavík, Iceland
Embark.
Day 3
Hurry Inlet, King Christian X Land, Greenland
Day 4
Bear Islands, Scoresby Sound, Greenland
Day 5
Rypefjord, Norway
Day 7
Ittoqqortoormiit (ex Scoresbysund), Greenland
Day 9
Nordfjord, Norway
Day 10
Ella Island, Greenland
Day 11
River travel
Day 13
Reykjavík, Iceland
Disembark.
Reykjavík, Iceland image
Day 1
Reykjavík, Iceland
Sprawling Reykjavík, the nation's nerve center and government seat, is home to half the island's population. On a bay overlooked by proud Mt. Esja (pronounced eh-shyuh), with its ever-changing hues, Reykjavík presents a colorful sight, its concrete houses painted in light colors and topped by vibrant red, blue, and green roofs. In contrast to the almost treeless countryside, Reykjavík has many tall, native birches, rowans, and willows, as well as imported aspen, pines, and spruces.Reykjavík's name comes from the Icelandic words for smoke, reykur, and bay, vík. In AD 874, Norseman Ingólfur Arnarson saw Iceland rising out of the misty sea and came ashore at a bay eerily shrouded with plumes of steam from nearby hot springs. Today most of the houses in Reykjavík are heated by near-boiling water from the hot springs. Natural heating avoids air pollution; there's no smoke around. You may notice, however, that the hot water brings a slight sulfur smell to the bathroom.Prices are easily on a par with other major European cities. A practical option is to purchase a Reykjavík City Card at the Tourist Information Center or at the Reykjavík Youth Hostel. This card permits unlimited bus usage and admission to any of the city's seven pools, the Family Park and Zoo, and city museums. The cards are valid for one (ISK 3,300), two (ISK 4,400), or three days (ISK 4,900), and they pay for themselves after three or four uses a day. Even lacking the City Card, paying admission (ISK 500, or ISK 250 for seniors and people with disabilities) to one of the city art museums (Hafnarhús, Kjarvalsstaðir, or Ásmundarsafn) gets you free same-day admission to the other two.
Hurry Inlet, King Christian X Land, Greenland image
Day 3
Hurry Inlet, King Christian X Land, Greenland
Bear Islands, Scoresby Sound, Greenland image
Day 4
Bear Islands, Scoresby Sound, Greenland
Rypefjord, Norway image
Day 5
Rypefjord, Norway
Ittoqqortoormiit (ex Scoresbysund), Greenland image
Day 7
Ittoqqortoormiit (ex Scoresbysund), Greenland
Scoresbysund is the ultimate fjord system; likely the longest, largest and deepest of any in the world. The massive fjord is tucked into the eastern coast of Greenland and on the icy western edges of the Greenland Sea. Scoresbysund’s scale deserves several days to explore, especially while plying the waters between castle-sized icebergs as they gently drift under the persuasion of the Arctic waters in the mighty fjord. Scattered in the remote bays and smaller fjords are places to discover old Inuit settlements, slowly growing over with Arctic willow and dwarf birch. The lower slopes of many mountains are draped in the herbs and grasses favoured by muskox, Arctic fox, lemmings, Ptarmigan, Barnacle Geese, and Snowy Owls. Tundra walks give impressive views of landscape, flora and fauna. Not to be neglected, the waters of Scoresbysund warrant a vigilant eye for sightings of whales, seals, narwhals, beluga whales and walrus.
Nordfjord, Norway image
Day 9
Nordfjord, Norway

Glistening glaciers, soft sandy beaches, towering mountains and deep lakes. Nordfjord is the sixth-longest Norwegian fjord, stretching 105km from the island of Husevågøy at the mouth to the village of Loen at the other end, and is one of remarkable natural beauty. The region is home to Europe’s deepest lake as well as the largest glacier in mainland Europe, Jostedalsbreen.

Ella Island, Greenland image
Day 10
Ella Island, Greenland
River travel image
Day 11
River travel
Reykjavík, Iceland image
Day 13
Reykjavík, Iceland
Sprawling Reykjavík, the nation's nerve center and government seat, is home to half the island's population. On a bay overlooked by proud Mt. Esja (pronounced eh-shyuh), with its ever-changing hues, Reykjavík presents a colorful sight, its concrete houses painted in light colors and topped by vibrant red, blue, and green roofs. In contrast to the almost treeless countryside, Reykjavík has many tall, native birches, rowans, and willows, as well as imported aspen, pines, and spruces.Reykjavík's name comes from the Icelandic words for smoke, reykur, and bay, vík. In AD 874, Norseman Ingólfur Arnarson saw Iceland rising out of the misty sea and came ashore at a bay eerily shrouded with plumes of steam from nearby hot springs. Today most of the houses in Reykjavík are heated by near-boiling water from the hot springs. Natural heating avoids air pollution; there's no smoke around. You may notice, however, that the hot water brings a slight sulfur smell to the bathroom.Prices are easily on a par with other major European cities. A practical option is to purchase a Reykjavík City Card at the Tourist Information Center or at the Reykjavík Youth Hostel. This card permits unlimited bus usage and admission to any of the city's seven pools, the Family Park and Zoo, and city museums. The cards are valid for one (ISK 3,300), two (ISK 4,400), or three days (ISK 4,900), and they pay for themselves after three or four uses a day. Even lacking the City Card, paying admission (ISK 500, or ISK 250 for seniors and people with disabilities) to one of the city art museums (Hafnarhús, Kjarvalsstaðir, or Ásmundarsafn) gets you free same-day admission to the other two.
Ship Details
HX Hurtigruten Expeditions
MS Fram

The original Fram was the most famous explorer ship of her time, and the achievements of her Arctic and Antarctic expeditions are the stuff of legend.In this spirit, the comfortable surroundings and advanced technology on today’s MS Fram – which was fully upgraded in summer 2022 – make her exceptionally well suited for modern expedition cruising.

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