Ellesmere Island (Nunavut Canada)

Cruise Port schedule, live map, terminals, news

Rating:
Ellesmere Island cruise port

Region
Arctic - Antarctica

Local Time
2024-03-28 15:24

min: -22 °F (-30 °C) / max: 0 °F (-17 °C) -1°F
-18.4°C
Wind: 37°/ 4.7 m/s  Gust: 7 m/sWind: 37°/ 4.7 m/s  Gust: 7 m/sGentle breeze
4.7 m/s
Min / Max Temperature0 °F / -17 °C
-22 °F / -30 °C
  Port Map

Port Ellesmere Island cruise ship schedule shows timetable calendars of all arrival and departure dates by month. The port's schedule lists all ships (in links) with cruises going to or leaving from Ellesmere Island, Nunavut Canada. To see the full itineraries (ports of call dates and arrival / departure times) and their lowest rates – just follow the corresponding ship-link.

DayShipArrivalDeparture
11 August, 2024
Sunday
Hapag-Lloyd Cruises Cruises cruise lineHanseatic Nature
12 August, 2024
Monday
Silversea Cruises Cruises cruise lineSilver Endeavour12:0019:00
18 August, 2024
Sunday
Quark Expeditions Cruises cruise lineQuark Ultramarine
27 August, 2024
Tuesday
Quark Expeditions Cruises cruise lineQuark Ultramarine
29 August, 2024
Thursday
Hapag-Lloyd Cruises Cruises cruise lineHanseatic Nature

Ellesmere Island (Nunavut, Canadian Arctic Archipelago) is the largest of the Queen Elizabeth Islands. Cape Columbia is Canada's most northerly land point (at 83°6′41″N). Ellesmere Island comprises a territory of 196235 km2 (75767 mi2). The island's total length is 830 km (520 mi), making it Canada's 3rd largest (after Baffin Island and Victoria Island) and world's 10th largest island. The Arctic willow is the only woody plant growing on the island.

A protected area is the Quttinirpaaq National Park comprising 1/5 of the island. The park includes 7 fjords and numerous glaciers. The island is also famous with Lake Hazen (North America's largest lake north of the Arctic Circle) and Barbeau Peak (Nunavut's highest mountain) located in the British Empire Range. Challenger Mountains are in the island's northeast region.

Large portions of the island are glaciers and ice fields (named Manson, Sydkap, Prince of Wales, Agassiz Ice Cap, Northern Ellesmere icefields). The Canadian Forces Station "Alert" is the world's northernmost settlement.

Tanquary Fiord is located on the island's north coast, in the Quttinirpaaq National Park. The fjord extends 48 km (30 mi) northwest. Craig Harbour is an abandoned settlement, located on Ellesmere's northern coast (Jones Sound), at approx 55 km (34 mi) southeast of Grise Fiord. Jones Sound is between Devon Island and the Ellesmere's southern end. The Sound's northwestern end is linked to Norwegian Bay by several sea channels, and its eastern end (via Glacier Strait) opens into Baffin Bay.

The list of "Canada top 10" largest islands (world rank in brackets) includes Baffin Island (5), Victoria Island (8), Ellesmere Island (10), Newfoundland (16), Banks Island (24), Devon Island (27), Axel Heiberg Island (32), Melville Island (33), Southampton Island (34) and Prince of Wales Island (40). All of them (excepting Newfoundland - in Newfoundland-Labrador) are located in the Nunavut- Northwest Territories of Arctic Canada.

Ellesmere Island is among the Arctic Ocean territories along the Northwest Passage route.

Grise Fiord

Grise Fiord (translated from Norwegian as "pig inlet") is a small Inuit hamlet (population around 200) located on the island's southern tip. It is also its largest of all 3 local communities.

The town was named in 1900 by Otto Sverdrup (1854-1930, a sailor and Arctic explorer from Norway) during his Arctic expedition. The reason for the "pig" name was that he thought walruses sounded like pigs. The hamlet's Inuktitut name is Aujuittuq (translated as "place that never thaws").

The village's houses are made entirely of wood and built on platforms to cope with the permafrost. Main occupation of the Inuit people is hunting seals, walruses, whales (narwhales and beluga), also polar bears and muskoxen. In the recent years, ecotourism is developing as tourists (including cruise ship passengers) come to Ellesmere and the surrounding islands to explore Arctic wildlife.

Due to mountain avalanches and ocean ice fields, during winter travel is limited to the village and a small patch of surrounding land to the east. Once per year, cargo ships arrive to Grise Fiord to deliver (sell) supplies and fuel.

Ellesmere Island has no any connecting roads, and is served only by a small airstrip near Grise Fiord (named Grise Fiord Airport). The airstrip has length of 510 m (1670 ft) and can serve only small-sized aircraft. For local transportation, the Grise Fiord residents use ATVs in the summer and snowmobiles in the winter. Small boats are used in the summer as transportation to the hunting grounds, and also for hunting sea mammals. Other important income sources are carving and making traditional Inuit crafts and clothing.

Being the world's most isolated community (located approx 1160 km / 720 mi) north of the Arctic Circle), Grise Fiord is also among the world's coldest inhabited places, with an average temperature of −16,5 C (2,3 F).

Ellesmere Island cruise terminal

Cruise ships to Ellesmere Island dock (anchor) at Grise Fiord - port town (Inuit hamlet, population under 200) located on the island's southern tip.

The following map shows all the island's fjords, bays, nearby surrounding islands and channels, as well as both Canadian Arctic research stations (Alert and Eureka).

Next photo shows the Eureka Research Station on Fosheim Peninsula (located on Slidre Fiord's northern side). This station is the world's 3rd northernmost permanently populated research base. The other two are located farther north - Alert (also on Ellesmere Island) and Nord (Greenland).

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