The White Continent
Earth's last true wilderness — a journey to Antarctica is not a holiday, it is a reckoning with the raw, indifferent grandeur of the planet itself.
Monthly weather patterns
All data applies to the Antarctic Peninsula region — the primary destination for most expeditions, extending south from the tip of South America. Conditions in the Ross Sea and East Antarctica differ significantly.
| Month | Air Temp (°C) | Sea Temp (°C) | Daylight Hours | Precipitation | Sea Conditions | Season |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| November | −2 to +3°C | −1 to 0°C | 18–20 hrs | Snow/rain, 45mm | Moderate | Shoulder |
| December | 0 to +4°C | 0 to +1°C | 20–24 hrs | Mixed, 40mm | Calm–Moderate | Peak |
| January | +1 to +6°C | +1 to +2°C | 20–24 hrs | Rain/drizzle, 35mm | Calm–Moderate | Peak |
| February | +1 to +5°C | +1 to +2°C | 16–20 hrs | Rain/snow, 40mm | Calm–Moderate | Peak |
| March | −2 to +2°C | 0 to +1°C | 12–16 hrs | Snow, 50mm | Moderate–Rough | Shoulder |
| Apr–Oct | −20 to −5°C | −2 to −1°C | 0–12 hrs | Snow | Severe | Closed |
The Drake Passage
The 800km crossing between Cape Horn and the South Shetland Islands is among the world's most notorious stretches of open ocean. Swells of 4–8m are common; Force 8–10 gales occur on roughly one in three crossings. Drake crossings typically take 36–48 hours each way. Some operators now offer "Drake by air" options, flying Punta Arenas to King George Island to eliminate the crossing entirely — at considerable extra cost.
Wildlife by month
Antarctica hosts some of the most extraordinary wildlife concentrations on Earth. Timing your visit determines which species you encounter at their most active and accessible.
| Species | Nov | Dec | Jan | Feb | Mar |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adélie Penguin Pygoscelis adeliae | ★ | ★ | ● | ● | ◌ |
| Chinstrap Penguin Pygoscelis antarcticus | ★ | ★ | ★ | ● | – |
| Gentoo Penguin Pygoscelis papua | ● | ★ | ★ | ★ | ● |
| Emperor Penguin Aptenodytes forsteri | ◌ | ◌ | ★ | ● | – |
| Weddell Seal Leptonychotes weddellii | ★ | ● | ● | ● | ◌ |
| Leopard Seal Hydrurga leptonyx | ● | ● | ★ | ★ | ● |
| Crabeater Seal Lobodon carcinophaga | ● | ● | ● | ★ | ● |
| Humpback Whale Megaptera novaeangliae | ◌ | ● | ★ | ★ | ● |
| Minke Whale Balaenoptera bonaerensis | ● | ● | ★ | ★ | ● |
| Orca Orcinus orca | ● | ● | ● | ★ | ● |
| Wandering Albatross Diomedea exulans | ★ | ★ | ● | ● | ★ |
| Antarctic Petrel Thalassoica antarctica | ● | ★ | ★ | ● | ◌ |
| Antarctic Krill Euphausia superba | ● | ● | ★ | ★ | ● |
Cruise operator tips
Antarctica is among the most regulated tourist destinations on Earth. The International Association of Antarctica Tour Operators (IAATO) governs all activity. No more than 100 passengers may be ashore at any one landing site simultaneously, which fundamentally shapes ship selection.
Expedition Class
The gold standard for Antarctica. Small enough for 100% IAATO-compliant single-group landings — everyone ashore simultaneously. Superior zodiac ratios, maximum flexibility, and access to shallow-draft sites unavailable to larger ships.
- Quark Expeditions — Ocean Endeavour, World Explorer
- Aurora Expeditions — Greg Mortimer, Sylvia Earle
- Lindblad Expeditions — National Geographic Endurance
- Ponant — Le Commandant Charcot (ice-capable)
Mid-Size Expedition
Requires split-group landing rotations — multiple groups alternating ashore and on zodiacs. Still fully IAATO-compliant with dedicated naturalist teams. HX Expeditions' Roald Amundsen and Fridtjof Nansen carry up to 490 passengers, meaning landings are carefully managed across several rotations. Often offers a broader range of cabin categories and onboard facilities.
- HX Expeditions — Roald Amundsen, MS Fridtjof Nansen (up to 490 pax)
- Silversea — Silver Wind, Silver Cloud
- Seabourn — Venture, Pursuit
- Viking — Viking Polaris, Viking Octantis
- Scenic — Scenic Eclipse I & II
Large Cruise Ships
Permitted under IAATO for "cruise only" voyages — scenic cruising without zodiac landings ashore. Dramatically different experience; suited to travellers with mobility constraints or those seeking comfort over immersion. No shore access at key sites.
- No IAATO landing rights at most Peninsula sites
- Panoramic viewing from ship only
- Lower per-passenger cost
- Fewer naturalist guides per passenger
Classic Antarctic Peninsula
Flies or sails from Ushuaia, Argentina, crosses the Drake Passage, explores the Antarctic Peninsula as far south as the Lemaire Channel and Petermann Island (~65°S). Typically 6–8 zodiac landings visiting gentoo, chinstrap, and Adélie penguin colonies, humpback whale feeding grounds, and historic whaling stations. The benchmark Antarctic experience.
Peninsula + South Georgia + Falkland Islands
The "trilogy" voyage. Adds South Georgia — arguably the world's greatest wildlife island — with its 400,000+ king penguins at Salisbury Plain, southern elephant seals, Antarctic fur seals, and the grave of Sir Ernest Shackleton at Grytviken. The Falklands add black-browed albatross colonies and rockhopper penguins. Expensive but transformative.
Weddell Sea & Emperor Penguin
Ventures east of the Peninsula into the Weddell Sea — the world's most pristine body of water — to reach Snow Hill Island, the northernmost accessible emperor penguin colony. Requires an ice-strengthened vessel and helicopter capability. Demands advance booking 18–24 months out and commands premium pricing. Sightings never guaranteed.
Ross Sea
The most remote Antarctic voyage, departing from Christchurch or Bluff, New Zealand, and sailing 3,500km south. Visits Cape Royds (world's southernmost Adélie colony), Cape Evans (Scott's Terra Nova hut, 1911), and Cape Crozier (world's largest emperor colony). Only a handful of operators run this route; voyages run 25–30 days.
Landing styles
Zodiac (inflatable Zodiac Mk V or similar) wet landings — stepping into shallow water — are standard at most sites. Dry landings onto rocks or jetties occur at stations. Kayaking and camping options are offered as add-ons by most operators at modest extra cost.
Book 12–18 months ahead
Quality small-ship departures sell out far in advance. Last-minute deals exist but are rare on expedition ships. December and January peak dates go first. Book by March of the year prior for the coming season.
IAATO membership matters
Always confirm your operator is a full IAATO member. IAATO members adhere to strict passenger limits, biosecurity protocols, and wildlife approach guidelines. Non-members operate outside these protections.
Naturalist guides
The quality of your expedition team defines the experience. Look for operators with a 1:10 or better guide-to-passenger ratio. Guides should hold relevant qualifications in marine biology, ornithology, geology, or history — not just wilderness guiding.
Packing essentials
Most operators provide waterproof expedition parkas and rubber boots for landings. Do not buy these yourself — the operator-supplied gear is purpose-built and fitted on arrival. Focus your packing on the layers worn beneath.
Base & mid layers
- Merino wool base layer tops × 3 (heavyweight, 250gsm)
- Merino wool base layer bottoms × 2
- Synthetic mid-layer fleece (200–300wt) × 2
- Lightweight down jacket (fits under parka)
- Merino wool neck gaiter × 2
- Warm wool or fleece hat × 2
- Lightweight balaclava
- Merino wool socks × 6–8 pairs (Smartwool, Darn Tough)
Hands & extremities
- Waterproof over-mitts (non-negotiable in wind)
- Thin liner gloves for camera operation × 2
- Midweight fleece gloves × 2
- Sunglasses (polarised, Category 3–4 — ice glare is severe)
- Glacier goggles (optional, for extended outdoor exposure)
- High SPF sun cream (50+) × 2 large tubes
- Lip balm with SPF × 3
Photography gear
- Telephoto zoom lens (100–400mm or 200–600mm)
- Waterproof camera bag or dry bag
- Extra batteries × 4 minimum (cold destroys charge)
- Battery hand warmers for camera bag
- Memory cards × 256GB+ total
- Laptop for nightly editing/backup
- Polarising filter
- Small waterproof point-and-shoot as backup
Health & seasickness
- Scopolamine patches (prescription — consult GP before departure)
- Oral antihistamine (meclizine/Bonine) as backup
- Sea-Bands acupressure wristbands
- Ginger capsules
- Comprehensive travel insurance with medical evacuation
- Personal prescription medications (3× supply)
- Blister treatment (Compeed) for active shore days
- Hand sanitiser × 4 (required for biosecurity at every landing)
Gear & accessories
- Small daypack (20–25L) for landings
- Dry bags 10L × 2 (for camera and valuables in zodiac)
- Trekking poles (foldable — invaluable on rocky landings)
- Small binoculars (8×42 or 10×42)
- Headtorch with spare batteries
- Reusable water bottle (insulated)
- Luggage padlocks (required for some port security)
Reference & documentation
- Passport valid 6 months beyond return date
- Travel insurance documents (hard copy)
- Antarctica — David McGonigal (field reference)
- The Worst Journey in the World — Apsley Cherry-Garrard (essential reading)
- Field guide to Southern Ocean birds
- Offline maps downloaded (Google Maps, Gaia GPS)
- IAATO visitor guidelines (read before departure)
Biosecurity is mandatory
IAATO regulations require all passengers to vacuum-clean clothing and gear before embarkation and after every landing, to prevent introduction of non-native seeds and organisms to the continent. Operators will provide equipment and briefings. Compliance is not optional — penalties include denial of landing rights. Velcro surfaces are a particular concern; minimise their use on outer layers.
The clothing recommendations, packing lists, and seasonal weather information provided in this guide are intended as general reference only. Protective clothing requirements, mandatory gear specifications, and seasonal operating conditions vary by operator, vessel, itinerary, and year — and must be verified directly with your expedition operator prior to departure. Antarctic conditions are inherently unpredictable; your operator's pre-departure documentation, packing lists, and crew briefings take precedence over any information presented here. This guide does not constitute safety advice. Travellers are responsible for ensuring they carry appropriate equipment as specified by their chosen operator and compliant with all IAATO guidelines.
Share your feedback
Have you sailed to Antarctica? Spotted something we've missed, or have a question about planning your expedition? We'd love to hear from you.
✉ venturetosee@gmail.com