AGENT Destination – Antarctica

Antarctica

Antarctica is the fifth largest continent in the world and site of the South Pole. Incredibly remote, yet ruggedly beautiful it’s the earths last great wilderness frontier. A land of extremes, it is the coldest and driest continent on Earth and has the highest elevation.

A cruise to Antarctica offers the opportunity to witness vast natural landscapes, seascapes and wildlife that you cannot see anywhere else. Onboard guest will be joined by naturalists who offer unique insights and presentations throughout the cruise. Guest can get up close to icebergs, wildlife and hard to reach places via kayaks and zodiacs. Teaming with wildlife you’ll see many kinds of penguin species, seals and whales.

There are many ways you can follow in the footsteps of the great explorers who first stepped on this continent, from luxury cruise ships, to expedition ships and icebreakers.

Antarctic Peninsula

Located in the Southern Hemisphere, The Antarctic Peninsula provides a beautiful backdrop for scenic cruising. Wildlife, Icebergs, glaciers, steep ice shelves and frosty mountain peaks can be seen from the deck of your ship. Although the peninsula is covered in ice, it has the mildest climate in Antarctica allowing flowering plants to grow freely!

Anver Island

Palmer station is located on Anver Island. The post was built in 1968 on the island’s southwest coast to honor American sealer Nathaniel B Palmer, who in 1820 was one of the first to see Antarctica. The station is resupplied by ship every six weeks.

Researchers here monitor the marine ecosystem, atmospheric studies and the effects of increased ultraviolet radiation and climate change on marine life and land.

Tourists get a walking tour, including visiting two aquariums filled with anemones, mollusks, sea urchins, krill and fish. You may also shop at the station store and taste the locally famous ‘Palmer brownies’ in the dining room.

Cuverville Island

Cuverville Island is located at the entrance of Errera Channel. The island is home to over six thousand pairs of Gentoo Penguins composing the largest rookery on the Antarctic Peninsula. The Island is also home to several species of Antarctic seal, as well as an array of Antarctic birds, notably shags and Southern Giant petrels. The calm waters around the island make it a popular place to explore on a zodiac. A fantastic way to see Minke whales and icebergs up close.

Deception Island

Deception Island had one of the safest harbors in Antarctica. The island is the caldera of a still active volcano. Steam rises above the icy ocean waters here making it a place where brave folks have been known to climb in and take a swim! A haven for sailors the island offers safe refuge from storms and icebergs. Today, cruisers hike around the abandoned village that once housed a Norwegian whaling company.

Drake Passage

Named after Sir Francis Drake, Drake Passage lies between the southern tip of South America and the South Shetland Island connecting the Atlantic and Pacific Ocean. Rough seas and fierce Storms are not uncommon here causing some guest to report nausea on their way to Antarctica.

Expedition Ships

Expedition cruising began in 1966 by those looking to preserve and conserve the natural beauty of the continent. The ships are designed to carry small groups of passengers, providing an intimate travel experience.

These ships bring guest close to the beauty of Antarctica while having a minimal impact on the environment. You will also find a qualified staff, naturalists and lecturers aboard. These ships also carry zodiacs to take passengers safely a shore.

Hope Bay

They call Hope Bay, Iceberg Alley. Located in the Antarctic Sound hundreds of icebergs of various shapes, hues and sizes can be seen. A truly inspiring experience. Visitors here will find the remains of a stone expedition hut from a Swedish Antarctic Expedition that wintered there in 1903. Also, an Argentinean base were the first child born in Antarctica was delivered.

Icebreaker

Icebreakers normally carry no more than 100 passengers. The advantage of an Icebreaker is that it can negotiate through Icy conditions other ships can’t do. These ships offer clean and simple accommodations for guests. The staff aboard these ships are highly experienced in travel to this region. You’ll find naturalists and lecturer’s too. The ships carry zodiacs to bring guests closer to the wildlife and land. Some provide onboard helicopters that can bring guest further inland.

Luxury Expedition Ships

Luxury cruise ships to Antarctica carry between 75 to 200 passengers. Onboard you’ll find all the amenities of a five-star resort. Spacious staterooms, gourmet dining and entertainment. Some also have verandas and butler service.

You won’t trade comfort for safety and adventure. Luxury ships to Antarctica have ice-strengthened hulls, active stabilizers for motion control, sophisticated navigation equipment, ample Zodiacs for landings, expert expedition staff and lecturers, an experienced crew and wait staff.

Neko Harbor

Neko Harbor is an inlet of the Antarctic Peninsula on Andvord Bay, situated on the west coast of Graham Land. Neko Harbor was discovered by Belgian explorer Adrien de Gerlache during the early 20th century. In the shadows of a giant glacier, Neko Harbor is home to over 200 breeding pairs of Gentoo penguins. Weddell seals can also be seen stretched out on the beach.

Paradise Bay

Paradise Bay is one of Antarctica’s most visited areas. Flanked by glaciers and mountains that reflect in the water this is truly paradise! While exploring in a zodiac you can see seals, penguins and sometimes even whales.

Port Lockroy

Port Lockroy located in the natural harbor of Wince Island in Antarctica. Discovered in 1904, the island was once used as a whaling base and later as a British military base. In the 1990s the base was renovated and turned into a museum, Post Office and gift shop. The Post Office is a very popular attraction. It can take as long as 2 weeks for your post card to get delivered, but, it’s cool to have the Antarctica post mark on it. There are also relics from the whaling days at Port Lockroy such as a massive fin whale skeleton.

Ross Island

Mount Erebus is the highest and most active volcano of Antarctica, one of the Volcanic Seven Summits, and the largest of 4 volcanoes that form the roughly triangular Ross Island. It is famous for its active boiling lava lake.

The island is covered by glaciers and was discovered by explorer Caption James Ross in 1841. The Mountain was climbed 1908 by members of Ernest Shackleton’s expedition.

St. Andrews Bay

Two hundred thousand king penguins can be found at Andrews Bay on South Georgia Island. The bay is also home to over 6 thousand elephant seals too.

South Shetland Islands

The South Shetland Islands are about 75 miles north of the Antarctic Peninsula and is home to several national research bases including: Chile’s Frei Station, Russia’s Bellingshausen Station, Peru’s Machu Picchu Research Station and air strip provides more than 200 flights a year. Explorers have been visiting the islands since at least the 17th century, due to its strategic location close to the Antarctica Peninsula.

Travel Notes:

Antarctic cruises are mainly concentrated at ice-free coastal zones over the Antarctic summer, from November to March, at that time guest will find 20 hours of daylight. Only 100 people can land ashore at once in Antarctica.

There are some very strict guidelines that cruise operators must follow, one of which that no more than 100 passengers are to simultaneously land ashore at any one landing site. This is for the protection of wildlife and the environment. So, you may have to take turns visiting if you are on a larger ship.

Here are a few of the places that cruise ships travel and visit in and around Antarctica:

South Pole

The South Pole is one of the hardest places to get to in the world. Accessible via helicopter excursion. You won’t find much there, except for an abandoned Soviet encampment.

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Boardwalk Travel agents should always offer travel insurance to each client. It will protect their travel and limit the risk of losing a customer because they were never offered a travel protection plan. Let the client be the one to reject, but every agent should offer it to every client.

7 Reasons to Buy Travel Insurance

Travel insurance isn’t just for expensive vacations. Travel insurance isn’t just for trips overseas. And travel insurance isn’t just for long journeys.

It’s essential to buy travel insurance for every trip, because you never know what might happen when you’re far from home! Every year, 55 million Americans purchase Allianz Travel Insurance to protect them against the most common travel mishaps.

Not sure if you need to insure your trip? Here are the top seven reasons to buy travel insurance.

1. Because you don’t want to lose all your money if you have to cancel your trip.

Even the best-planned trips sometimes have to be canceled. But many travel providers—such as tour operators, cruise lines and airlines—offer minimal or no refunds for last-minute cancellations. If this happens, can you afford to lose all the money you’ve spent on your trip?

One of the best reasons to buy travel insurance is having the protection of trip cancellation benefits. These can reimburse you for prepaid, nonrefundable trip costs when you must cancel for a covered reason. When you get your money back, you can book your vacation for another, brighter day.

What if you need to cancel for a reason that’s not covered? If you think that’s a possibility, consider buying the Cancel Anytime upgrade. Available on our most popular plans, OneTrip Prime and OneTrip Premier, Cancel Anytime can reimburse 80% of your lost non-refundable trip costs if you cancel your trip for almost any unforeseeable reason your plan does not already cover. That way, you can travel with confidence.

2. Because accidents can—and do—happen while traveling.

Healthy travelers often think they don’t need emergency medical insurance. The truth is, no one’s immune from illness and injury. We receive thousands of calls each year from American Allianz Travel Insurance customers who are experiencing a medical crisis during their trip, such as trauma, broken bones, heart attacks, and strokes. When you have travel insurance, you can contact 24-hour assistance for help in an emergency. Our team of experts can get you the help you need and may even be able to arrange payment in advance for covered emergency medical care.

3. Because your health insurance probably won’t work overseas.

If you get seriously sick or hurt in another country, don’t expect your health insurance card to help. “Many foreign medical facilities and providers require cash payment up front and do not accept U.S. insurance plans. Medicare does not provide coverage outside of the United States,” the U.S. Department of State warns.1 When you have travel insurance with emergency medical and dental benefits, it can pay for losses due to covered medical and dental emergencies that occur during your trip.

4. Because medical evacuations can be really expensive.

If you get seriously sick or badly hurt while traveling overseas, and you need to be taken via helicopter to the nearest high-quality hospital, the cost can be enormous. In some parts of the world, a medical evacuation can potentially cost six figures—and that doesn’t even include the expense of getting you home again.

Travel insurance with emergency medical transportation benefits can pay for you to be transported to the nearest appropriate facility if you suffer a covered illness or injury during your trip and our medical assistance team determines that the local medical facilities are unable to provide appropriate treatment. It can also pay for specialized transportation to bring you home, once your condition is stable.

5. Because travel delays are inevitable.

Airlines’ on-time stats rise and fall from year to year, but on average, around 18% of domestic flights are delayed.3 That’s not even counting the flights that are canceled! That’s why you need travel insurance with travel delay benefits, which can reimburse you for additional accommodation, meals or travel expenses and lost prepaid expenses due to a covered departure delay. You’ll be much happier if you have insurance that can reimburse you for your airport lunch or unexpected extra night in the hotel.

Here’s some even better news: You can get paid $100 per insured person, per day for a covered travel or baggage delay if you have SmartBenefits® (included with the OneTrip Prime and OneTrip Premier plans). You don’t need to provide any receipts—just proof of the delay!

6. Because a missing bag can ruin your trip.

In a recent survey, more than half of travelers said an airline had lost their luggage in the past. Just 34% of them ever got their missing bags back, and 72% said they’d lost an irreplaceable item.

When your suitcase goes AWOL, travel insurance can save the day. Baggage delay benefits can reimburse you for the reasonable additional purchase of essential items during your trip if your baggage is delayed or misdirected by a common carrier for 24 hours or more. Baggage loss/damage benefits can reimburse you for the actual price, actual cash value, repair or replacement of your lost/damaged items—whichever is less—based on the limits in your insurance policy’s letter of confirmation. Just remember: The best place for truly irreplaceable items is in your carry-on luggage, or at home.

7. Because sometimes, even expert travelers need a little help. 

One of the best reasons to buy travel insurance is the peace of mind you get from knowing help’s just a phone call away. When you face a crisis while traveling—a medical emergency, a lost passport, a stolen wallet, a natural disaster, etc.—you can always contact 24-hour assistance. Our U.S.-based team of travel experts will do everything in their power to take care of you and help make things right.