Iceland Pro Cruises: Cruising Around Iceland


Not many, if any cruise ships, can boast a resident opera singer and a pianist who studied under the Vatican’s chief organist. Few, if any, have discovered and given its name to an island in high Antarctica.

Tour guide and on-board lecturer Arndís Halla Ásgeirsdóttir studied at the Söngskólinn (Reykjavik Academy of Singing and Vocal Arts). She has recorded six albums and performed in Prague, Monte Carlo, South Korea and Venice. As well as performing regularly, accompanied by keyboards maestro Ingimar Palsson. In the Ocean Breeze Lounge of the north Atlantic Ocean-going MS Seaventure. And – sea conditions permitting – in a Zodiac inflatable dinghy in the acoustic caves of the Westmann islands where she gives a recital of “Amazing Grace”.

The Viking explorer Garðar Svavarsson is credited with being the first person to circumnavigate Iceland by boat. In 870.

In 1999 adventure company Zegrahm Expeditions started operating a ship-based tour of Iceland and, in 2015, Iceland’s leading tour operator, Iceland ProTravel, began circumnavigations of the country using a chartered ship, Ocean Diamond.

Today, from June to August the seven -deck, 113m, 60 crew and cosmopolitan and 55+, 160 passenger, two-suite MS Seaventure, which was built in 1990 in Japan and is responsible for Bremen Island when it was MS Bremen,  cruises around Europe’s most sparsely populated country. 

In 2024, they offer a “Hot Springs And Eternal Ice” combined Iceland Circumnavigation and Natural Wonders of Greenland.

Leaving and disembarking Reykjavik harbour beside the city’s Harpa concert hall, Iceland Pro Cruises 10- day, 1280 nautical mile (1380 land mile) “Circumnavigation of Iceland” cruise sails clockwise, taking in the ports and fishing villages of Stykissholmur on the Snaefellssnes peninsula,  Isafjordur, Siglufordur, north coast Husavik ( the whaling capital), Seydisfjordur and Djupivogur on the east coast  and the Vesmannjaer islands off south-east Iceland. Buses are waiting for you all the way round Iceland.

The cruise introduces you to glacier tongues and fingers, whales, dolphins, seals, a glacial lagoon, guano-splattered cliffs, countless waterfalls,  petrified trolls and other impressive lava formations, basalt outcrops and columns, volcanic deserts, Arctic chard hotel lunches, the islands of  Flatey and Grimsey, various seismic hotspots ,the 34-40 degrees Myvatyn nature baths in north Iceland ( a 288-mile drive from the capital)  and Vok’s floating bio-active thermal spring pools and freshwater  fields of Alaskan lupines and dwarf birch, the Bjarnarhofn shark museum with “hakarl” fermented Greenland shark tasting included ( think cheese), the fjord containing Iceland’s Loch Ness monster (The Lagerflyot Wyrm) and the country’s only arboretum.

It is a very well-organized luxury adult field trip. And very sinful.

A full-board expedition with far too much cake.

The captain is Croatian (the charming Ivo Botica), the crew Filipino and Balinese and the menus include Lambaframpartur” Icelandic slow braised lamb shoulder Steiktur lambalæri-Icelandic Braised Lamb shank, pan-seared duck (not eider), guinea breast, “Humarsupa” lobster soup, pan-seared fresh Icelandic ling and a sinful array of highly calorific and dangerously moreish desserts.

Including Icelandic-style date cake, Skyr (curdled milk and strained yoghurt) cake, Icelandic pancakes with cream and berries,  chilled yoghurt-peach cream pie, poached pineapple coupe  and too much vanilla ice cream.

The coastline slides by. Breaching humpbacks are sometimes on the menu.

Wine on board is $33-37, a G&T $10 and cocktails $8.  Also laid-on are chef Rufino’s afternoon tea gateaux.

You have to watch your weight on the SeaVenture. The Icelandic horse-trekking trip (never call them ponies) has a maximum weight limit of sixteen stone.

The shore excursions (two Zodiac landings and the rest from pier side) are brilliantly organized by cruise leader and expedition Hermann Helguson who wake you every morning over the tannoy  with “Good morning  dear ladies and gentleman to another beautiful day.”

Even if the weather and swell’s not. There is no such thing as typical Icelandic weather.

Along with his team of experts, Hermann gives multi-lingual lectures in the Expedition Lounge auditorium on everything from knitting, geology, ornithology  and political history. He even shows you his own dramatic drone film footage of the 2021 Fagradalsfjall eruption. 

Among many highlights including the Cyprus-registered ship slowly pirouetting mid-fjord surrounded by whales,  was the Crossing The Polar Circle party for which you get a certifcate to remind you of Lat 66 58’N, Longtitude 16 28’W  and the amount of “brennivin” (Icelandic caraway-infused aquavit) you consumed and the knees-up you had along with Abba, Bruce Springsteen, the Australian and German couples and the Texan with the moustache who kept confusing Iceland with Ireland.

As well as the idiosyncratic on-board entertainment( it is no spoiler to say that Canadian-Polish maitre d’, Peter Podazski,  is the star of the crew caberet show ), with the visit to the Herring Era Museum at  Siglufjordur came a quayside concert by old “herring girl” Birna Bjornsdottir who, dressed in traditional “sykikluter” scarf and “slidarphilis” herring salting and barreling apron who sang about her “silver darlings” ( “Gjofguds”) and made the Herring War of 1863  feel like only yesterday?

But ignore everything else.

Forget the volcanos, glaciers the size of Costa Rica, the ice caves, fulmar colonies, black beaches, seals, geysers, turf-roofed houses,  pyroclastic deposits, discrete cirques, pseudo-craters, the early Quantary period terrain, the optional $550 plane flight and the unrelenting dramatic landscape which one guidebook gamely and poetically described as “enormously large rocks strewn in unusual places”. 

The culture.

The main reason most people visit the world’s third largest snow cap is to combat crepey-ness.

Hardly anyone misses the bubbling mineral-rich thermal spring bath visits. And everyone bonds bathing together. Sitting up to your neck in warm water masked by sulphur steam visibly diminishes the signs of aging.

As well as the a la Kirk Douglas in “The Vikings” yoke pattern sweater, the puffin beanie and stone bramble jam, most come back from Iceland with souvenirs in the form of volcano ash exfoliators, transdermal Artic super-berry pads and glacial ice melt face mists to keep the forehead furrows from turning into fissures.

Nothing prepares you for the beauty of Iceland.

It leaves everyone with a happy glow.

Don’t miss more updates, news and reviews about Iceland Pro Cruises on Cruising Journal.

Kevin Pilley

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