Showing posts with label Zegrahm Expeditions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Zegrahm Expeditions. Show all posts

Monday, 13 February 2012

The Ultimate Galapagos voyage with Zegrahm

Join Zegrahm Expeditions’ expert leaders Jack Grove and Greg Estes aboard the elegant Isabella II, a luxury yacht carrying only 40 passengers, on their Ultimate Galapagos voyage departing June 21, 2012.

This 13-day expedition is designed to give travelers a comprehensive overview of the islands, with in-depth exploration of both the marine and terrestrial worlds. Taking full advantage of Jack and Greg’s knowledge and years of experience, we offer travelers a truly behind-the-scenes look at the Galápagos. Jack, a former Galápagos resident with decades of experience that ranges from marine research to conservation efforts, also wrote the comprehensive volume The Fishes of the Galápagos Islands, while Greg Estes, a licensed naturalist guide, has written a book on Darwin called Darwin in Galápagos.

For more details contact www.thecruiseline.co.uk

Thursday, 27 October 2011

Zegrahm offers Whale sharks in Mozambique

In March of 2012, Zegrahm Expeditions will celebrate a first as they visit the coast of East Africa on an inaugural tour! This Mozambique Odyssey visits Tanzania and South Africa aboard the spacious 110-passenger Clipper Odyssey.

The World Wildlife Fund is partnering with Zegrahm Expeditions on this exceptional journey to southeastern Africa; but did you know that WWF co-created and expanded Quirimbas National Park, now the largest marine protected area in the Indian Ocean and Africa? Quirimbas was once the poorest province in Mozambique but now has the country’s highest growth rate thanks to the park.

WWF’s involvement ensures that local communities and park authorities alike share both the benefits and the responsibilities of managing the park on land and at sea. Join this expedition and you’ll see just how much support is needed—the park protects over 750,000 hectares of coastal forest, mangroves, and rich coral reefs including the abundant marine life, sea turtles, and hundreds of fish species.

In the middle of Zegrahm’s journey, cruise to the beautiful beaches of Punta da Barra, where we’ll have the opportunity to see whale sharks; this location is one of the best whale shark viewing places in the world? They are present year-round in this area, and there’s a good chance you will also see manta and devil rays, loggerhead and green sea turtles, and even bottlenose dolphins. Snorkel and swim with this incredible marine life sharing the water with you.

For more in formation visit www.zeco.com or adventure cruise specialists The Cruise Line.

Tuesday, 18 October 2011

Have a Blue Christmas with Zegrahm Expeditions


Zegrahm Expeditions is offering a break from the traditional holiday season vacation. Spend December 17, 2011 to January 3, 2012 cruising from the Indian ports of Chennai and Kochi to the Sri Lankan harbours of Trincomalee and Colombo and explore India's Lakshadweep Islands and the northern Maldives. Highlights of the expedition include snorkeling, diving, shore walks, birding with naturalists, and a visit to a 16th-century palace.

Since the holiday season is a time to share with family and friends, Zegrahm is offering a special group discount for this voyage. Groups of four travelers or more receive a 10 percent savings on the brochure rate for each member. Groups of eight or more travelers receive a 15 percent savings. Travelers that are unable to join the 2011 voyage can participate in the 2012 voyage, which takes place December 1-18, 2012.

To learn more about the India and The Maldives voyage please visit www.zeco.com or luxury adventure cruise experts The Cruise Line.

Thursday, 1 September 2011

Nambia opening up as a cruise Destination.

Namibia is opening up as cruise destination. The Country's Tourist Board has a very good site to give you ideas. The Namibian operator who has the contract for all of the land arrangements for the arriving cruise lines into Walvis Bay and organises all of the excursions and transport options. Abenteuer Afrika Safari and the website is .
Many cruise lines are now formly establised here such as Zegrahm Expeditions but also adventure cruise specialist The Cruise Line is a good place to start in the UK.
Picture courtesy of Fotoseeker

Wednesday, 24 August 2011

Zegrahm Expeditions Sponsors Youth Education Camp in Zambia

Children in the Wilderness Program Seeks to Bridge the Gap Between Communities and Wildlife.

Zegrahm & Eco Expeditions, an adventure travel company, has partnered with Children in the Wilderness to educate youth in Africa on environmental conservation and life skills. The six-day wilderness safari camps hosts rural children between the ages of 8-16 from seven South African countries. Children are paired with park guides, who educate on the importance of conservation and introduce the youth to the beauty and diversity of the natural environment.
“Each year Zegrahm Expeditions has made it a tradition to donate to an organization that does charitable work in a region our expeditions visit or to a cause near and dear to our hearts,” stated Jon Nicholson, President of Zegrahm Expeditions. “I am pleased to sponsor the Children in the Wilderness camp as a thank you to our loyal travelers, travel advisors, and friends for their continued support.”
Zegrahm Field Director Jonathan Rossouw and photographer/videographer Giovanna Fasanelli, were able to take part in the Zegrahm sponsored camp in Zambia in June. The pair participated in the activities set up for the children, which included going on game drives, a scavenger hunt to determine the difference between trash and recyclables, seeing a Thornicroft’s giraffe found only in the Luangwa Valley, and watching elephants feeding. The children also learned life lessons ranging from HIV prevention to the uses of medicinal plants. Other camp activities included arts and crafts, soccer, and potato sack races. The Children in the Wilderness program gave the very best knowledge, and fun, to the youth who participated.
To learn more about the camp, view a short video of the camp experience here http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i0C7vtU4H4U. To learn more about Zegrahm Expeditions and their small-group expeditions to Zambia that stay in the same camp that hosted the children, please visit http://www.zeco.com/ or for Zegrahm's other expeditions The Cruise Line.

Wednesday, 27 July 2011

Souther Sun in the Indian Ocean

Zegrahm is offering four incredible voyages with something for everyone. Whether it’s a cultural immersion in India’s southwestern shores; a combination of culture and natural history in India and the Maldives; or plenty of sun, sand, and underwater adventures in the Seychelles, each expedition is designed to give their inquisitive travelers the perfect alternative to the typical holiday offerings in Mexico, Hawaii, or the Caribbean.
Plus, each of these winter getaways is in the intimate comfort of the recently refurbished (see below for details!), 110-passenger Clipper Odyssey. In addition to a bevy of complimentary amenities such as a variety of daily activity options; all gratuities, accommodations, and meals; and transfers on group arrival and departures dates, the Clipper Odyssey’s shallow draft and fleet of Zodiacs allow them to land on pristine atolls and uninhabited islands where many of the big ships simply can’t go.
First on the roster is India for a 15-day sojourn skirting the subcontinent’s southern shores. In addition to experiencing the fascinating city of Mumbai, the colonial European charm of Goa, Kochi’s maze of islands and waterways via houseboat, our Southern India by Sea program spends two full days in Sri Lanka. The highlights of our time in Sri Lanka (once lauded by Marco Polo as the “finest island of its size”) include a visit to the Pinnawala Elephant Orphanage and the World Heritage Sites of Kandy’s Buddhist Temple of the Tooth and the seaside fortress of Galle.
Next up, the India & the Maldives with Sri Lanka & Lakshadweeps is the perfect union of culture and natural history. They cover all the highlights of Southern India and Sri Lanka, then make their way to the unspoiled islands of the Lakshadweeps and the Maldives. The days in these two archipelagos will be spent discovering the region’s underwater riches with daily snorkel, dive, and glass-bottom boat excursions. And, since many families enjoy traveling together over the holidays, Zegrahm are happy to offer special group savings on this voyage: groups of four or more travelers receive 10% off the brochure rate and groups of eight or more receive 15% off!
The New Year brings two amazing voyages focused on the Seychelles. First, from January 13 – 27, travelers on the Ultimate Seychelles expedition will enjoy daily adventures above and below the waterline. Whether it be hiking among the endemic coco-de-mar palms on Praslin Island, admiring Aldabra Atoll’s giant Indian Ocean tortoises, photographing the pink granite boulders of La Digue, or snorkeling and diving among 150 coral species and 850 species of rainbow-hued fish, this voyage is sure to make you forget that winter exists elsewhere in the world.
Finally, the brand-new Classic Seychelles offers the very best of these Indian Ocean islands, including La Digue, Praslin, and Aldabra Atoll, plus the Comoros Islands and Tanzania. After spending your days snorkeling, diving, birding, and beach-combing in the Seychelles, you make your way to the volcanic islands of the Comoros where we find an interesting mélange of Arabic and French architecture nestled among the island’s stunning natural beauty. You then conclude your explorations in magical Zanzibar—on the “Spice Island” you wander the labyrinth of alleyways, filled with treasures of the East that established its fame: cloves, cinnamon, and vanilla.
And, while winter may seem like light years away, we encourage you to book soon to secure the cabin of your choice. Then, instead of menu planning for the holidays or buying new snow shovels, you can start daydreaming about glistening temple complexes and secluded, sugar-sand beaches! 
For more information visit www.zeco.com or The Cruise Line

Wednesday, 20 July 2011

The World of Ice

Zegrahm Expeditions Director Kevin Clement is fortunate enough to live within the boundaries of Denali National Park. His specialty is subarctic ecology, but his work as a naturalist and an ecotourism and adventure travel guide has taken him from his home in Alaska to all seven continents. Kevin has traveled to Antarctica 49 times and never tires of lecturing on one of his favorite subjects, ice.

Living for many years in Alaska, traveling widely in the Arctic, and doing a lot of climbing and glacier travel, I thought I had seen ice. But I was wrong. I had never seen ice until I went to Antarctica for the first time. Ice occurs there on such an enormous scale and in such an immense variety of forms, nowhere else even compares. Antarctica is the world capital of ice and here are a few reasons why:

• The surface of Antarctica is more than 99 percent ice. Only a few scraps of rock peek out from under the ice cap. • The Antarctic ice sheet is up to 15,000 feet thick, averaging about 6,000 feet.
• It stores the equivalent of 60 years of precipitation on Earth. (Or, the flow of the Mississippi River for 46,000 years.) • The weight of that great mass, bearing down on the South Pole, makes the earth slightly pear-shaped.

If you were going to taxonomically classify ice, the first division you would have to make would be between ice formed from salt water and from fresh water; in other words, sea ice and glacier ice. In the Far South, you’re certain to see plenty of both.

Sea Ice
Ecologists call the annual formation of sea ice in the South the greatest seasonal event on Earth. In the late fall it is expanding at the rate of 30 square miles per minute. It effectively doubles the size of the continent for the winter.

The ice is essential for all life in the Southern Ocean, and responsible for its phenomenal productivity. The underside of that extensive plain of frozen water is the breeding ground for a staggering population of algae, which sustains krill and the entire food chain. The surface is a resting place, a floating dock, a nursery, and a hunting platform for seals and penguins.

And then, when summer comes, most of it breaks up. It shatters into ice floes, a huge armada of ice. The loose floes often congregate into great packs, roaming around unpredictably at the whim of winds and currents. What was a clear channel one day might be choked with an impassable mass the next.

Glacier Ice
The ice in a glacier is not just frozen water; it is compressed snowflakes. It results from snow falling and falling and falling, and not melting, for uncounted millennia, until the sheer weight of the mass crushes and metamorphoses the snow at the bottom. The crystals merge and re-form, and a new kind of ice is born. And it starts to move.

All glaciers move, by definition. Because under pressure, ice does a strange thing: it becomes plastic. It squeezes out like toothpaste, it flows downhill. As it moves, it crushes everything in its path. Glaciers are by far the most rapid agent of erosion on earth. They gouge. They grind. They bulldoze. They carve. The spectacular results of this movement are landscapes like South Georgia. A landscape like that also exists under the Antarctic ice sheet, entombed in ice.

In Antarctica, almost none of that ice ever melts. Most of it leaves the continent in the awe-inspiring form of icebergs. Every year, Antarctica shrugs off some 2,014 billion tons of ice.

Not only do icebergs come in a greater variety of shapes than you imagine; actually, the variety is greater than you can imagine. Explosively calved from glaciers, bergs are pinnacled, castellated, jagged, arched, extruded, angular, towering, tunneled, and any number of other things, sometimes all at once.

But the biggest bergs are not calved from glaciers; they are broken off from ice shelves. Ice shelves are amalgamations of glaciers that carry so much impetus that they do not stop when they reach the edge of land, but thrust out over the ocean and cover it under a vast expanse of frozen freshwater.

Tidal changes cause this raft of ice to flex; cracks form, hundreds of miles long; and chunks float away. Some of these chunks, called tabular bergs, rise several hundred feet above the surface and are larger than Belgium. Early explorers often mistook them for islands, because it defies belief that such enormous objects could be floating. To believe them, you must see them.

To see them, and to see the whole range of possibilities of ice, all of the myriad shapes and forms it can assume, you have to come to the world capital, as I finally did. You have to come to Antarctica.

Join Zegrahm for one of two expeditions to Antarctica, South Georgia, and the Falkland Islands departing December 2011 and January 2012 (Kevin is a lecturer on the January departure). ZE

Saturday, 16 July 2011

An award Winning Journey in Remarkable Times with Zegrahm

Voyage through the Red Sea
Zehrahm's brand-new Voyage through the Red Sea expedition has been named one of National Geographic Traveler magazine’s “Best Tours of a Lifetime” for 2011. The tour explores Jordan, Egypt, and Saudi Arabia, including first-time visits to the lesser-traveled countries of Sudan and Eritrea. The November 6 – 22 itinerary is the perfect time to explore this seat of the world’s earliest civilizations with pleasant temperatures ranging from 55 to 85°F and a stable, yet fascinating political environment where a new chapter in the region’s history has literally unfolded within the last year (plus, this comes with the added bonus of fewer crowds at some of the region’s most popular tourist sites).
This voyage combines the Red Sea’s best cultural attractions along with several opportunities to engage in the region’s natural history with snorkeling and diving excursions. Among the many highlights of this award-winning expedition, you will have the opportunity to:
• Explore the rose-colored wonders of Petra, the capital of the ancient Nabatean Empire and now a World Heritage Site—even enjoy a candle-lit nighttime walk through the Siq to the Treasury, if you so choose;
• Overnight in Luxor, often considered the “world’s greatest open air museum,” to explore its various monuments, temples, and tombs;
• Cruise along the Nile in a traditional felucca sailing vessel, savoring lunch and views of the countryside along the way;
• Enjoy a walking tour of Jeddah’s well-preserved old city, considered the gateway to Mecca;
• Take in traditional daily life as we wander the pathways connecting the old, coral-block buildings of Suakin, Sudan—a major trading stop en route to Mecca;
• Snorkel and dive in the shimmering waters of Eritrea’s Dahlak Archipelago, an area renowned for its rich marine life and scenic beauty.

For more details visti www.zeco.com

Saturday, 14 May 2011

In the Wake of The Vikings with Zegrahm

Zegrahm Expeditions is excited to announce a community-based partnership with W.I.L.D. Expeditions, an adventure education  youth to be stewards of the environment through life-changing kayaking and sailing experiences. W.I.L.D. Expeditions has recently begun work building a traditional 56-foot Viking ship to educate children about Viking heritage and give them additional means to explore the waters of the Pacific Northwest. In conjunction with Zegrahm’s July 2011 In the Wake of the Vikings: Scotland, Iceland; the Faroes, the adventure travel company is offering any traveler who lives in the Northwest USA and books this upcoming voyage an exclusive tour of the Viking ship in Anacortes, Washington, including the opportunity to meet the shipbuilder himself. In addition, for each of these bookings Zegrahm will donate $1,000 per booking to W.I.L.D. Expeditions to help complete the building of the ship and fund upcoming youth programs.
The building of the vessel is being completed by master shipwright, Jay Smith, who was recently featured on the History Channel special, “The Big Build: Viking Longboat.” Jay has gathered over 70 crooks from oak trees in Oregon for the ship's frames and pure Alaskan yellow cedar from British Columbia for planking. Studying with Scandinavian masters to perfect his trade, the ship will be traditionally built by hand using many of the old Viking tools.
Not only will In the Wake of the Vikings expose travelers to the unspoiled islands of the Faroes and the volcanic wonders of Iceland—two areas that are difficult to explore on your own—but Zegrahm’s expert expedition team adds an educational component by bringing the region’s cultural heritage and natural history to life. Among others, archaeologist, Colleen Batey, will share her stories of excavating Viking sites in Northern Scotland, Iceland, and the Orkney Islands, and her work with the Smithsonian on the Vikings: North Atlantic Saga exhibit. Iceland native, Ragnar Hauksson, will lecture on the everyday life of Icelanders coupled with the folklore, fairy tales, and sagas. And, expedition leader and Zegrahm cofounder, Mike Messick, will ensure that travelers make the most of their time in these northern realms with ample opportunities to explore the itinerary’s planned ports of call and several expeditionary exploits by Zodiac. Additionally, travellers will have the opportunity to:

• “Storm the beach”—via Zodiac—at Dunrobin and explore this 13th-century castle and its Versailles-inspired gardens
• Sail past seabird colonies perched on cliffs along the region’s dramatic fjords
• Take a cliff-side hike and enjoy stunning views while learning about the volcanic geology below your feet
• Tour (and taste!) Scotland’s best-known industry: whiskey
• Visit picturesque coastal villages still steeped in Viking tradition
• Embark on a thrilling snow mobile ride across Europe’s largest glacier

Zegrahm President Jon Nicholson notes, “We hope travelers will join us on this eye-opening expedition that showcases the lives of true expeditionary travelers—the Vikings—who have made such an impact on our own cultural heritage here in the Pacific Northwest. Not only will the voyage itself and the private tour of a real-life Viking ship be inspirational, but we are excited to support a wonderful organization that is enhancing the lives of youth in our area.”
To learn more about this expedition, visit Zegrahm’s Web site at www.zeco.com.

Tuesday, 10 May 2011

Zegrahm Expeditions "Tours of a LifeTime"


Zegrahm Expeditions is once again thrilled to be selected for National Geographic Traveler Magazine’s “Tours of a Lifetime.” In the past, the honours have been bestowed upon the adventure travel company’s tropical, natural history-focused expeditions—Beyond Rapa Nui, Ultimate Seychelles, and Faces of Melanesia—but this year they are excited to announce that the honors were given to a brand new, in-depth cultural tour: Voyage Through the Red Sea. This 17-day expedition, aboard the Clipper Odyssey, departs November 6, 2011 and visits Jordan, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Sudan and Eritrea.

This voyage combines the Red Sea’s best cultural attractions along with several opportunities to snorkel and dive, plus offers a rare glimpse into a number of hospitable countries rarely visited by Western travelers. Highlights of this tour include:

• Exploring the rose-colored wonders of Petra, the capital of the ancient Nabatean Empire and now a World Heritage Site.
• Cruising along the Nile in a traditional felucca sailing vessel.
• Visiting several exquisite World Heritage Sites in Egypt—Monastery of St. Catherine (Above) and the treasures of ancient Thebes, including Luxor, Karnak, and the Valley of the Kings.
• Walking tour of Jeddah’s well-preserved old city, considered the gateway to Mecca.
• Snorkeling and diving in the shimmering waters of the Dahlak Archipelago, an area renowned for its rich marine life and scenic beauty.

To learn more about this voyage visit www.zeco.com or The Cruise Line