Departure
June 26, 2012
Trip Length
8 Days / 7 Nights
Price (per person)
$5,998
Single Supplement
$700
Internal Airfare
$170
Pricing Notes
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The summer sun never sets on this breathtakingly lush land of verdant hills, active volcanoes, fumaroles, and mudpots—this adventure puts Iceland’s surreal beauty on full display. From Þingvellir National Park, site of Iceland’s millennia-old parliament and nearby world-famous Gold Falls, you’ll journey to Vík, whose huge black sea columns are said to be trolls turned to stone. Beneath the sea cliffs of Skógar, you’ll tour Iceland’s finest folk museum before exploring the glaciers, lava fields, and black-sand desert at Skaftafell National Park.
Boat through Jökulsárlón Lagoon’s massive blue-tinted ice forms and take a “midnight sun” kayak tour acclaimed as one of Iceland’s top-ten “musts.” You’ll see Europe’s largest migratory-bird sanctuary at Lake Mývatn, a peaceful oasis surrounded by steaming earth, and visit Dettifoss, Europe’s most powerful waterfall, witnessing firsthand Iceland’s ongoing birth. Go in June for peak bird-watching, July for wildflowers, or August for trailside berry feasts. Even the cuisine will surprise you, whether it’s butter-grilled langoustine tails or Icelandic delicacies like arctic char, trout, free-range lamb, and reindeer.
PLEASE NOTE: This tour information and itinerary is 2012 specific; for 2013 tour details call 800.464.9255.
EXTEND YOUR TOUR: Reykjavik and Blue Lagoon
World travelers should add Iceland and Reykjavik to their list of places to visit next year, according to Lonely Planet and National Geographic. Iceland was the winning country and Reykjavik the winning city in the Lonely Planet Best in Travel Readers’ Choice award 2012 and National Geographic Traveler Magazine recommends Iceland as one of its top destinations for 2012.
GUEST COMMENT
This was a wonderful trip with lots of variety and full days. The food is excellent and the landscape magical and ever-changing. How can you not love Iceland when the guides so obviously love it?
”This tour is one of our Guided Walking Adventures, rated easy to moderate with challenging sections. Walks average 4-9 miles per day, with shorter and longer options on some days. The walking terrain is widely varied on well-worn heathland paths, grassy mountain trails, exposed trails with lava, rocks, and roots, and stretches of sandy beach along the North Atlantic Ocean. Occasionally, there will be shallow river crossings. While this is not a mountain climbing tour, there are daily ascents and descents. The hills are short (usually 20-minute, gradual climbs), but the terrain may be rocky, with roots and/or loose gravel, and may be slippery when wet. Due to the tricky footing on many of the trails, a walking stick is recommended. At Skaftafell National Park, you have the option to walk on a glacier and crampons are provided. The pace on this tour is leisurely with stops en route to explore villages, or to visit cultural and historic sites.
Reykjavík, Iceland
Reykjavík, Iceland
DAY 1Meet in Reykjavík. Þingvellir National Park; 4 miles, easy to moderate. Geysir and Gullfoss; 1 mile, easy. Transfer to Hella. Optional evening river walk; 2 miles, easy You begin with an early meeting in your centrally located Reykjavík hotel for a brief orientation before departing on the 50-minute drive northeast of the city through the countryside to Þingvellir National Park, one of the three national parks that you visit on this itinerary. A UNESCO World Heritage site, Þingvellir, literally “Parliament Plains,” is the site of Iceland’s ancient parliament first established in 930 AD and convened continuously until 1798. Not only a gathering place for chieftains establishing law, it was also an open air meeting place for games, feasts, marriages, and trade, and the site of some of the country’s momentous decisions: from the adoption of Christianity in 1000 AD to the foundation of the Republic of Iceland in 1944. Fascinatingly, it is situated on the dramatic rift valley where the North American and Eurasian tectonic plates pull apart, clearly visible at the great Almannagjá (Everyman’s Gorge), a group of gorges extending almost continuously from Lake Þingvallavatn north to Mt. Ármannsfell. The trail continues to Lögberg (Law Rock), where the “Law Speaker” proclaimed memorized laws. Moving into the park, a two-hour walk takes you through a lava field covered by patchy pine plantations, dwarf birch forest, and heathland plants such as bog bilberry, wooly willow, lady smock, sweet grass, and lichen. Crossing deep rifts, you reach Skógarkot—an abandoned sheep farm with wide views of distant peaks, rift walls, and Lake Þingvallavatn. After a special lunch you make your way to your first hotel with a number of stops en route. The first stop is at Geysir, the place giving its name to the phenomenon worldwide, and Strokkur, or the “churn,” the latter spouting every five minutes. From here, a 10-minute drive takes you to Gullfoss, or Gold Falls, Iceland’s most famous and visited waterfall, a national monument. Then you continue about 90 minutes more through much of the country’s agricultural land to Hella, known for the gentle Icelandic horses. Before gathering for a welcome cocktail and dinner in the hotel’s acclaimed riverside restaurant, you may slip into one of its geothermally heated outdoor hot tubs. On the menu, from organic, high-quality local produce, you may choose the restaurant’s award-winning fish soup (with a quartet of fish and shellfish) followed by fresh wild salmon from the neighboring river, chocolate and skyr (Icelandic cream cheese) cake for dessert. After dinner, with daylight lingering well into the night, you may choose to go for a peaceful evening walk along the banks of the Eystri-Rangá or an optional horseback ride at a nearby family-run ranch. DAY 21¼-hour transfer to Vík with stops en route at Seljalandsfoss, the Skógar folk museum, and Skogafoss waterfall. Vík cliff/beach walk; 2 miles, easy. 2½-hour transfer to Freysnes with stop en route in Klaustur. Optional late-afternoon glacier walk; 2 miles, easy After a bountiful buffet breakfast, you drive east along the Ring Road (the one road encircling the entire island) where you take in some of the southern coast’s most dramatic scenery—tall mountains with a succession of waterfalls cascading from the glaciers above on one side and views of the North Atlantic coastline with its black sand beaches and dramatic headlands on the other. A 20-minute drive brings you to a brief stop at Seljalandsfoss, a narrow waterfall dropping 130 feet into a shallow pool with space to walk behind it. From here another short drive brings you to the tiny village of Skógar, a summer resort and home to one of Iceland’s finest folk museums; its old turf farmhouse provides a glimpse into the fishing and farming culture of past centuries. After, you stop at the town’s breathtaking Skogafoss waterfall, which drops nearly 200 feet into the river Skógaá, full of salmon and char, and, according to legend, hiding a gold treasure trove visible when the sun hits it the right way. Continuing eastward, a 35-minute drive brings you to the town of Vík, Iceland’s most southerly village. This quaint town is tucked in between mountains, sea cliffs, and a long, beautiful, black sand beach. Following lunch at a charming local café in an 1831 timber house, a spectacular coastal walk departs directly from the restaurant. Reaching the outskirts of the village, you skirt the vertical Reynisfjall cliffs—home to a remarkable bird colony including kittiwakes, fulmar, and puffins—as well as the Reynisdrangar, a series of black basalt columns sculpted by the sea. According to local folklore, these twisted shapes are trolls turned to stone by the sunrise while dragging their boats to shore. The walk concludes with a stroll along the beach, ending with an optional visit to Vík’s lovely woolens shop. Another hour’s drive traverses the beautifully austere landscape of the moss-covered Eldhraun lava field, one of the largest lava fields in the world, and then another 90 minutes through a glacial flood plain called “The Sandur,” the world’s largest example of a black-sand desert, the sand and sediment deposited by subglacial volcanoes. By late afternoon you reach your hotel, situated at the base of vegetated glacial moraines in front of Iceland’s most impressive (and largest) glacier, Vatnajökull, and also adjacent to breathtaking Skaftafell National Park (the second national park on this tour). Before dinner at your hotel, your guides will take you on an optional 1-hour walk on the run-off glacier, Svínafellsjökull. DAY 3Skaftafell National Park; 8-10 mile morning/afternoon option, moderate, or 4-6 mile morning option, easy, followed by visit to Ingólfshöfði headland, easy Following a buffet breakfast, a few minutes’ drive brings you to the start of an optional full day’s loop walk in Skaftafell National Park. An initial ascent up the Bæjargil gully with its multiple waterfalls, including the spectacular Svartifoss or Black Waterfall, you continue across Skaftafellsheiði heath to the viewpoint at Sjónarnipa, where you enjoy a picnic lunch. From here, you may decide to continue across Skaftafellsheiði heath for the remainder of the afternoon. As you proceed toward Kristínartindar (the Peaks of Kristín) you take in some of Iceland’s most imposing and picturesque views, with Vatnajökull glacier and its craggy peaks to the north and the vast black desert to the south. The flora and fauna in the park are much more varied than in other parts of the country, and in mid-summer you find large numbers of butterflies and considerable bird life on the wooded slopes—the redwing, common snipe, meadow pipit, and wren are among the most common species. This is also one of the North Atlantic’s most important breeding areas for the great skua. The park’s sheltered position and rich volcanic soil encourages a profusion of lush vegetation and more than 200 species of plants have been found here, including abundant summertime wildflowers. Those who wish to forgo the more moderate afternoon walking option through Skaftafell National Park return to the Visitor Center following lunch. From here you drive south to Ingólfshöfði, a striking headland and the arrival point of Iceland’s first Norse Settler, Ingólfur Arnarson, more than 1000 years ago. Today these cliffs and grassy fields atop the promontory provide nesting grounds for more than a dozen bird species, including kittiwakes, snipe, guillemots, the Great Skua, various gulls, graceful Arctic terns, and their ungainly but charming opposites, the puffin. Getting to Ingólfshöfði is truly half the fun; you ride in an open cart tractor towed by a kindly—and now famous—local farmer over hard, seawashed volcanic sand. Once at the promontory, you climb up a sand dune to the top, where your farmer-host regales you with stories of the ancient Norse settlers, and dramatic tales of modern sailors shipwrecked along these shores. A late afternoon coffee at Skaftafell visitor center is a chance to explore the exhibition room with an interesting display showing the intertwined lives of the local people and natural history as well as to view a video showing the effects of the Skeidarár glacial outburst floods (jökulhlaup) in 1996. You return to relax at the hotel before gathering for dinner in its dining room. DAY 41-hour transfer to Jökulsárlón glacial lagoon. Jökulsárlón beach; 1 mile, easy. 4½-hour transfer to Seyðisfjörður with stops en route in Höfn and Djúpivogur. Fjarðará river; 2½ miles, easy to moderate. Optional evening walk through town; 1-2 miles, easy Today’s travels take you from Skaftafell in the south to the final destination of Seyðisfjörður in the east. With an early departure, an hour’s drive takes you to the dramatic Jökulsárlón glacial lagoon, the best known and largest of a number of glacial lakes in Iceland. Here, you board an amphibious vehicle for a 40-minute boat ride and a close look at the blue-tinted natural ice sculptures, a myriad of unique shapes and sizes. Two James Bond movies, “Die Another Day” and “A View to a Kill”, were filmed in this fantastic location, where a large pool between the nose of Breiðamerkurjökull glacier and the sea formed after the glacier began shrinking rapidly in the 1940s, and filled with icebergs calved from the glacier. Floating among the ice you may spot seals, eider ducks, and, even witness the glacier calving into the crystal turquoise waters. Crossing the road, an awe-inspiring walk takes you along the iceberg-covered black-sand beach where you might spot seals as well as the Great Skua. Climbing in your private coach, an 80-minute drive provides fantastic views of Vatnajökull glacier before arriving at the busy fishing port Höfn, the epicenter of Iceland’s lobster catch. At the lobster/langoustine capital of the north, the menu for lunch at a charming local restaurant with harbor views features langoustine tails grilled with butter, parsley, and garlic, served with salad and fresh bread. You have a short stroll before the three-hour transfer to Seyðisfjörður. Breaking up the drive, you take a coffee break in the charming, East Iceland fishing village of Djúpivogur, at the tip of the lower Eastfjords, and visit Langa-Búð, the oldest house in the region dating from 1790. You are able to reach your final destination of Seyðisfjörður on foot following a path along the south bank of the Fjarðará river dotted with numerous waterfalls, past Iceland’s oldest operational power plant (1913), and down the dramatic valley to your town-center hotel—truly a spectacular arrival! Iceland’s most picturesque coastal town, Seyðisfjörður is nestled in an 11-mile-long, calm, deep fjord, lined with snow-capped mountains and tumbling waterfalls. The town’s streets are lined with colorful Norwegian wood kit homes from the 19th and early 20th centuries, Iceland’s best preserved old wooden buildings. With a thriving arts scene, Seyðisfjörður also serves as the port to mainland Europe as the Smyril Line car ferry Norræna transits weekly to Norway, the Shetland and Faroe Islands, and Denmark. The modern Icelandic poet Matthías Johannessen called the town a “pearl enclosed in a shell.” Your home base for the next two nights lives up to the setting: a lovely heritage hotel, its rooms beautifully furnished with hand-crafted bedspreads, embroidered rugs, and antiques. The hotel’s warmly lit gourmet restaurant, housed in one of Iceland’s oldest general stores, invites and serves local, organic ingredients such as East Icelandic lamb fillet with celery purée, sautéed mushrooms, and red wine sauce, pan-fried fish of the day, or organic reindeer. Intrigued, you may opt for a late-evening stroll through the old town with a local resident or visit the vibrant Skaftfell Cultural Center and Café, where local artists and musicians meet in a grand old house with an art gallery. DAY 5Stafdalur to Vestdalur; 7-8 mile “country option,” moderate with a challenging downhill section, or 3-4 mile “town option,” easy A scrumptious breakfast buffet starts the day with still-warm home-baked bread, fresh fruit, and cereals. If participating in today’s more challenging “country option,” a 10-minute drive brings you to the trailhead for today’s 5-6-hour walk. The route from Stafdalur to Vestdalur is a spectacular traverse through peaceful upland heath, past the mountain-sided lake Vestdalsvatn, and down into Seyðisfjörður along the cascading Vestdalsá River. Appreciated for its scenery and birdlife, the area is one of the first sites in East Iceland to be listed on the Nature Conservation Register. Other than one steep downhill stretch at the day’s end, the trail isn’t too strenuous. Beginning at a ski lift, the trail heads north, with Stafdalsfell mountain on the left and the boggy Stafdalur River Valley on the right. Crossing the Stafdalur valley with a gentle ascent before rounding the west side of the lake, you soon arrive at the northeast corner of Lake Vestdalsvatn, where a picnic lunch is served. Nearby is the site of an amazing archeological discovery, the remains and jewels of a woman from the Viking Age around 940 AD, considered Scandinavia’s greatest Viking jewelry find. The trail then proceeds along the grassy Vestdalur Valley, with numerous waterfalls and fabulous fjord views the whole way. Upon reaching the Vestdalsá River, the trail descends steeply to the riverbank and ends on the coastal road, just a few miles north of the village center. The bus is waiting to drive those back to town who wish; others may choose to walk the rest of the way into town. Alternatively, today’s easier “town option” offers the chance to explore the history and architecture of the town of Seyðisfjörður in the company of a local guide, who will take you on a three-hour stroll though the village and surrounding areas. You are free to continue your explorations this evening with dinner on your own in one of Seyðisfjörður’s restaurants or cafés, or at your hotel. With the late setting sun, you may venture out on a midnight sun paddle: an evening guided kayak tour in the lagoon in front of the hotel—a wonderful way to experience the fjord—chosen by Lonely Planet as one of Iceland’s 10 best experiences. (The tour is at your own expense but your guides assist in arranging.) Or a more sedentary option is a visit to the local pub, Kaffi Lára, known for its beer, El Grillo, named for a British tanker sunk in Seyðisfjörður by German bombers in 1944. DAY 63-hour transfer to Lake Mývatn with stop en route at Sænautasel Farm. Leirhnjúkur, Námaskarð, Skútustaðagígar, and Hverfjall; 1-3-mile options, easy Today you leave the Eastfjords to head north with a final destination of Lake Mývatn, via a three-hour drive across the fascinating interior of the island with its stark and barren northeast highland desert plateaus. The halfway point is a coffee break at Sænautasel Farm, a reconstructed turf farm on a 37-mile-long remote heathland called Jökuldalsheiði, where you may see reindeer grazing! Halldór Kiljan Laxness, Iceland’s Nobel Prize-wining author, used the farm as the setting for his novel Sjálfstætt folk, or Independent People. Your destination—the Mývatn/Krafla region—is the part of Iceland showing that it is indeed a land in formation. Geologically active, the landscape is teeming with volcanic craters, recent lava fields, bubbling mud flats, and is part of the greater Krafla volcanic system, a three-mile wide and 50-mile long strip of faults and fissures running north to south, with the Krafla caldera at its center. In the midst of the evolving geology is stunning Lake Mývatn, a unique ecosystem and Europe’s largest migratory bird sanctuary, with its many species of waterfowl feeding on the insects and algae of the lake’s warm shallow waters. The region is also the center of the country’s geothermal energy industry. Not far from the lake in the active Krafla volcanic zone, you stop for an easy two-hour walk at Leirhnjúkur, an eerie expanse of still-smoldering lava resulting from the Krafla fires of 1974-1984. After fueling up with a picnic lunch, you explore the multicolored sulfurous slopes of Námaskarð pass at 1,300 feet above sea level and Hverir, a large geothermal field, full of bubbling mud pots, hissing steam vents, and fumaroles. Next, a short transfer brings you to Skútustaðagígar craters, an unusual geological formation only found in Iceland and on the planet Mars! Alternatively, you may elect to walk up to the rim of Hverfjall crater, one of the largest explosion craters in the world. This evening, after settling in to your spacious room on the shores of Lake Mývatn, you gather for dinner in the hotel’s dining room. If you still have energy after dinner, you may take an evening walk along the southwest shore of the lake to observe some of the varied birdlife—merganser, widgeon, teal, and the rare Barrow’s Goldeneye to name a few. Or you can jump on one of the hotel’s bikes for an easy spin. The Northern version of Reykjavík’s Blue Lagoon, the Mývatn Nature Baths, are nearby, and your guides can arrange a visit at your own expense. Lastly, a neighboring farm provides Icelandic horse rides, also at your expense, but with the guide’s assistance. DAY 7Jökulsárgljúfur National Park: Dettifoss; 1 mile, easy. Hljóðaklettar; 2 miles, moderate with challenging sections. Ásbyrgi; 2.5 miles, easy with challenging sections Today’s focus is the Jökulsárgljúfur National Park, which translates as “Glacial River Canyon,” Iceland’s most well-known canyon replete with extraordinary rock formations, waterfalls, and plant life. You walk in three of its main areas, starting with Dettifoss in the south, Hólmatungur and Hljóðaklettar along the Jökulsárgljúfur Canyon in the middle, and finally Ásbyrgi, the wooded horseshoe canyon at the park’s northern end. The day begins with a hearty breakfast followed by an 80-minute drive along the west bank of the Jökulsá River, Iceland’s second longest river. Arriving at the park’s southern boundary, an easy, 1-mile loop leads to Dettifoss, Europe’s most powerful waterfall (often compared to Niagara Falls). A short drive north arrives at the park center and the trailhead at Hólmatungur, with its luxuriant cascades and vegetation. Hólmatungur is a soft green oasis where underground springs and cascades feed astonishingly verdant vegetation, streams and rivers. Northernmost Hljóðaklettar (Echo Rocks) is a maze of fantastic rock formations and castle-like cliffs and caves of varying sizes along the Jökulsá River. Birdlife en route are snipes, ptarmigans, and snow bunting, with gyrfalcon, merlin, and ravens nesting on cliffs and rock pillars. A subsequent 30-minute drive brings you to the visitor center at Ásbyrgi where there is a choice of walks based on conditions and group preference. The broad, forested U-shaped canyon contains the rock “island” of Eyjan in its center, formed by a series of floods thousands of years ago. The island’s rare woodlands of birch, willow, and rowan are framed by cliffs colonized by fulmar. In the later afternoon, a two-hour drive via the coastal town of Húsavík returns you to the hotel in Mývatn for a celebratory farewell dinner in the hotel’s dining room. Starting with the Mývatn specialty of Hot Spring bread, baked in the local underground bakery using geothermal heat and traditional methods, topped with butter and smoked arctic char, the main course may be wild thyme-crusted roasted leg of lamb or poached arctic salmon with a white wine butter sauce. DAY 8Transfer to Akureyri with stop en route at Goðafoss. Flight from Akureyri to Reykjavik. Departure The final day of your tour begins with an early morning departure to the city of Akureyri for the flight back to Reykjavík. En route, just under an hour’s drive, you stop at the beautiful Goðafoss waterfall, meaning as it sounds, “waterfall of the gods.” Another 50 minutes brings you to Akureyri for a lunch break and a little time to browse its streets. Nestled at the head of Eyjafjörður, Iceland’s longest fjord, Akureyri is North Iceland’s largest fishing port, and its cultural, industrial, and trade capital. After your short flight, you arrive into Reykjavík’s domestic airport in the early afternoon and from here an easy bus ride can take you to the international terminal or downtown Reykjavík. |
Itinerary Changes Please bear in mind that this is a typical itinerary, and the actual activities, sites, and accommodations may vary due to season, special events, weather, or transportation schedules. We reserve the right to alter the itinerary since tour arrangements are made up to a year in advance, and unforeseen circumstances that mandate change may arise. Itinerary changes are made to improve the tour and your experience. |
"Iceland offers visitors a unique opportunity to witness the creative forces of nature at work. Nowhere else on earth can you see such a diverse array of geological phenomena on a week-long journey. Join us for a stunning display of geysers, glaciers, volcanoes, and waterfalls. We’ll hike along deep canyons and majestic fjords, while enjoying quality local cuisine and accommodations."
-Erling Aspelund
![]() | Night 1Hotel Rangá |
![]() | Nights 2 & 3Hotel Skaftafell |
![]() | Nights 4 & 5Hótel Aldan |
![]() | Nights 6 & 7Hótel Reynihlíð |
Please note that this is a sample hotel itinerary for this tour. While these exact hotels are featured on most departures, we occasionally reserve other hotels of similar style and quality. If you are currently booked on a Country Walkers adventure, a hotel itinerary has been sent to you for your exact departure date. Please call Country Walkers at 800.464.9255 if you have any questions about the exact hotels selected for any of our tours. |
![]() | Erling AspelundErling is a native of Reykjavík. He received his Masters from the Tisch School of the Arts in New York and worked for years in the computer software industry in Seattle. Erling has traveled all over Iceland and is passionate about the outdoors. He enjoys hiking, kayaking, swimming, skiing, and photography. |
![]() | Kristin BjornsdottirKristin moved back to her native Iceland a few years ago after living in the US where she graduated from New York University and worked in educational media. She is a certified travel guide and loves to share her passion for the outdoors and all things Icelandic. Kristin offers her extensive knowledge of Icelandic folklore and folktales as well as history and culture. |
![]() | Arngunnur YrBorn and raised in Iceland, Arngunnur studied fine arts in San Francisco. She is an accomplished painter who exhibits at galleries and art museums around the world. Her love of nature and the outdoors led her to guiding. She is a certified guide and spends her summers in Iceland sharing her extensive knowledge of Icelandic geology, nature, and culture with visitors. |
![]() | Sigurthor HeimissonSigurthor, also known as Sori, hails from the East Coast of Iceland. Trained as an actor, he has performed professionally in Iceland and the United States. Like most of the men in the village where he grew up, Sori worked as a fisherman in his youth. Today he applies his knowledge of the sea to competitive yacht sailing. Sori is a certified Iceland tour guide and particularly enjoys leading guests through his home territory in the East. |
Please note that these guides lead the majority of tours in this region, however, the guides for your tour may vary. When you reserve a tour, a guest list and guide biographies will be sent to you approximately one month prior to tour departure; the names and biographies of your tour guides will be included with this mailing. |
"Iceland offers visitors a unique opportunity to witness the creative forces of nature at work. Nowhere else on earth can you see such a diverse array of geological phenomena on a week-long journey. Join us for a stunning display of geysers, glaciers, volcanoes, and waterfalls. We’ll hike along deep canyons and majestic fjords, while enjoying quality local cuisine and accommodations."
-Erling Aspelund
"Iceland offers visitors a unique opportunity to witness the creative forces of nature at work. Nowhere else on earth can you see such a diverse array of geological phenomena on a week-long journey. Join us for a stunning display of geysers, glaciers, volcanoes, and waterfalls. We’ll hike along deep canyons and majestic fjords, while enjoying quality local cuisine and accommodations."
-Erling Aspelund
SINGLE SHARE (guided walking and small ship cruising)
If you are traveling alone and wish to share a room, we will make every effort to find you a roommate of the same gender.
Guided Walking: Based on availability, if you reserve a tour at least 91 days prior to the tour start date and wish to share a room, you will not be required to pay the single supplement fee (except where designated), even if we cannot find you a roommate.
Small Ship Cruising: A single supplement will be charged until we are able to confirm a roommate for you. If we are able to match you with a roommate, the single supplement will be refunded.
SINGLE SUPPLEMENT (guided walking, small ship cruising, and safaris)
You may choose a private room, as a limited number of single rooms are available for an additional fee.
Solo Traveler Supplement (safaris only)
On our CW Safaris, a solo traveler surcharge (above and beyond the single supplement fee) applies to select destinations. Please call for details.
Child Pricing
Child pricing is available on request. Minimum ages apply to select departures including Uganda: Gorillas & Chimps (minimum age 16).
Scheduled Tours
Choose a Scheduled Tour date, and rest assured that your active adventure will coincide with the very best travel conditions.
On Scheduled Walking tours, know that you'll walk with like-minded travelers in a small-group (average 6 to 7 guests per guide—never more than 18 per group) environment. Best of all, your departure is guaranteed to go—no date changes, no cancellations. With over 65 worldwide adventures, we're sure there's one just right for you!
Our Small Ship voyages use vessels from the best fleets in the world, carefully matching each ship with specific regions and destinations. Expedition ships provide unrivaled access to destinations not easily reached by larger vessels. Each ship is equipped with Zodiacs for shore transfers; these jaunts are explored with expert, local guides.
CW Safaris are expertly crafted to create unique, individual travel experiences. Our safaris are offered as independent adventures... journeys you will take with local expert guides, on your choice of select departures dates.
Reserve Your Safari
CW Safaris are expertly crafted to create unique, individual travel experiences. Our safaris are offered as independent adventures... journeys you will take with local expert guides, on your choice of select departures dates. Independent journeys mean you choose the time and place and we bring it all together for you — the destinations, the travel arrangements, the lodgings, the activities. Please allow 24-48 hours to confirm your requested dates.
Private & Custom
Looking for a one-of-a-kind travel experience? Celebrating a special occasion? Planning a family adventure? A Private Departure offers you privacy priced right! You simply select your destination, a tour date, and the number of travelers—the tour price calculates automatically. Our expert tour planners will work closely with you to assure an unforgettable vacation!
Self-guided Tours
Self-Guided Walking and Biking Adventures give you maximum flexibility as you travel at your own pace—setting off whenever you're ready, choosing when and where to stop for lunch, and planning the day around your own personal schedule. We provide comprehensive and up-to-date materials as well as maps, detailed route notes, and great accommodations. All tours are rated for activity level; Self-Guided Biking Adventures are ideal for either beginner or experienced cyclists. We supply quality bikes and panniers on all biking tours. On every Self-Guided Adventure your luggage is transported for you. Take your spirit of adventure even further on a Self-Guided trip.
Single Supplement
On our Self-Guided Adventures, a single supplement applies to all solo travelers for single occupancy of a room.
Solo Traveler Supplement
On our Self-Guided Adventures, a solo traveler surcharge (above and beyond the single supplement fee) applies to select destinations. Please call for details.
Single Supplement
On our Private Adventures, a single supplement applies when two (or more) friends traveling together with to reserve private rooms.
Guided Walking
Our Guided Walking Adventures place you at the heart of the most extraordinary destinations—exploring the world on foot allows for a truly up-close experience. Departing on a scheduled basis, these tours boast hand-crafted itineraries, fine accommodations with access to scenic trails, restaurants showcasing authentic fare, and distinctive cultural events. Trips are led by the best guides in the travel industry, always local to the regions in which they guide. With small groups of like-minded guests and Guaranteed Departures, Guided Walking trips invite you to slow down to experience the world.
View all Guided Walking Adventures.
Your Departure is Guaranteed
When you reserve a trip, the last thing you need is to have it cancelled due to low enrollment. With our Guaranteed Departures, you can relax! Every Guided, Self-Guided, and Safari trip is guaranteed to go. No date changes, no cancellations, no disappointments. We do receive inquiries from guests whose tours have been cancelled by other tour operators. This is an important guarantee, alleviating a common worry for many travelers.
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This was our 3rd CW trip and not our last. Iceland far exceeded our expectations. The country is fascinating and riveting to see. There is so much to learn and the people were so friendly―every one of them we met. We could easily have stayed longer. This is a forgotten destination but is a must go.
- N. & D. Hover, ColoradoWell organized, well planned, quality lodgings and food, superb guides, wonderful locations. Among the best of tours I’ve taken in over 20 countries.
- W. Parker, MississippiIceland is wall-to-wall highlights―WOW!
- J. Gardner, TexasMagnificent vistas. Personable, knowledgeable guides. Stunning hikes. Loved the content: history, geology, mythology, natural history, flora, fauna, and flying sheep!
- C. & C. HaydenFantastic. Truly saw everything Iceland had to offer. Kristin, our guide, was superb and all details of the trip went without any problems.
- A. Lennox, OntarioWe loved every aspect of our trip to Iceland―the air, the landscape, the food, the sagas, the hikes, and most of all, our charming, skillful guides.
- G. & H. Kopf, ConnecticutIceland is gorgeous. Kristin and Arngunnur were wonderful; they created a perfect balance between Icelandic culture and Icelandic natural beauty. They were flexible and kept everyone happy.
- J. Kennard, DelawareThe trip was phenomenal―from the waterfalls, geysers, volcanoes, black sand, glaciers, and glacial lagoon.
- K. Brown, TexasThis was a wonderful trip. I learned many new things about the Icelandic people, their history, and culture. The scenery was breathtaking. I would love to go back sometime.
- A. Champion, IllinoisCountry Walkers trips are perfect for me! I adore every minute of them. They are so well planned and well paced and the groups have been companionable and fun. Always small enough. The guides are superb. Kristin & Arngunnur were fabulous at interpreting Icelandic culture and designing a charming, action-packer trip.
- A. Dominguez, MarylandThe country was fantastic, the people were remarkable, and the culture and traditions were truly interesting. I thoroughly enjoyed the experience.
- D. Shamblin, IllinoisPhenomenal guides! Kristin and Arngunnur had incredible knowledge of Iceland from geology to folklore. They were thoroughly entertaining and made a great team!
- S. & D. Martel, ColoradoConsistently first-rate hikes, food, lodgings, cultural experiences, and especially good guides.
- B. Baird, MarylandThis was a wonderful trip with lots of variety and full days. The food is excellent and the landscape magical and ever-changing. How can you not love Iceland when the guides so obviously love it?
- D. & K. Peterson, California