In Search of the Northern Lights

Aboard Viking Vela with Viking Ocean Cruises

Departure Date

10 January 2025

Duration

12 Nights

Fly Cruise From

£8,390pp

Cruise Reference

ART-0INVI11

Cruise Overview

Just 22 nautical miles down river from the Tower Bridge in London, Tilbury is a popular turnaround port for cruises visiting Baltic and Northern European destinations.
North Holland’s ‘Gate to the North Sea’, IJmuiden has four harbours: the Vissershaven, Haringhaven, IJmondhaven and the Seaport Marina - the latter used by pleasure craft.

It is the largest Dutch fishing port, but is a relatively young town: it grew up in the 1870s when the North Sea Canal was opened.

During World War II, the German Navy demolished much of the town and built huge fortified concrete bunkers for their torpedo boats and submarines.

After 1945, the town was rebuilt by the architect Willem Marinus Dudok.

He designed IJmuiden’s most impressive building, the Stadhuis van Velsen, which houses local government offices.

For cruise passengers IJmuiden is the gateway to Amsterdam, the Dutch capital and one of Europe’s truly great cities, where elegant canals are lined by old brick gabled houses, and superb art galleries and museums are home to some of the world’s best-known paintings.

Please note that complimentary shuttle buses operate from the port to the centre of IJmuiden, not to Amsterdam.
At 68 degrees North, Narvik lies 140 miles inside the Arctic Circle.

Its history as a settlement began in the Stone Age, and Vikings are also known to have lived in the area.

The modern town came into existence in the 1870s to serve the needs of the iron industry.

Iron ore is mined in neighbouring Sweden and, as an ice-free port, Narvik was chosen as the ideal export location.

The LKAB mining corporation is still a major employer and landowner in the area, shipping some 25,000,000 tons of iron ore from the port annually.

This industrial heritage has shaped the town and now forms the basis of some of its most popular tourist attractions.

In 1883 a co-owned British-Swedish company was given permission to build a railway connecting the Swedish iron mines in Kiruna to Narvik.

It opened in 1902 and the town, then christened Victoriahavn, grew up around it.

Unfortunately much of Narvik was destroyed in World War II.

Invaded by the Nazis on 9 April 1940, it was later retaken by the Allies, representing the first military defeat of Hitler’s troops, but was evacuated as part of Operation Alphabet when it came under German occupation again.

The local war museum documents the turbulent history of this period.

Cruise Itinerary

Aboard Viking Vela

Launch Year: 2024 Length: 238 Width: 30 Currency: EUR Capacity: 998 Crew Count: Deck Count: Cabin Count:

Expand your horizons on our award-winning, all-veranda small ship, with just 998 guests, allowing us to dock where larger ships cannot.

Viking Vela Facilities

Viking Vela Includes

Cabin Details

Our intimate, all-veranda ships offer a wide variety of staterooms for your selection. From Veranda Staterooms to the abundance of extra perks and amenities in our spacious Explorer Suites, there’s no finer way to travel. And whichever stateroom you choose, you will find it beautifully designed in the understated elegance for which Viking is known.

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