Where to see seals, sea lions and walruses on tour
Enjoy our photo guide to spotting some of our favourite water sausages from the Arctic to Antarctica
Enjoy our photo guide to spotting some of our favourite water sausages from the Arctic to Antarctica
Just because we aren’t travelling right now, doesn’t mean we can’t experience our big, beautiful world. Join one of our guides for a virtual walking tour of Antarctica.
...and learn how G Adventures and Planeterra are helping Green research whale sharks in the Galápagos
You know they can't fly. But do you know where they live?
To get to Antarctica, you have to cross the infamous Drake Passage
The lifelong conservationist is aboard select Expedition departures, from the Arctic to Antarctica
Check out seven of the furthest-flung, hardest-to-get-to destinations whose sheer beauty make them worth their often challenging journeys.
These ten trips topped travellers' wish lists ahead of the holidays — and they’re destined to become some of next year’s hottest destinations!
It’s the most remote, desolate place on Earth, and undoubtedly one of the coldest as well – but did you know that Antarctica is also purportedly the most haunted place on the planet?
Why a trip to the southernmost continent is unlike any other
Antarctica is a place of extremes and photography here is no exception. Photographer Paul Teolis talks about how Antarctica is the perfect setting for black and white photography.
We travel to the end of the world and find ports, post cards, and penguins.
It’s rush hour! Grab a little shoreline and watch these penguins at work.
See this diverse cast of birds and mammals who call the world’s southernmost continent home.
See the otherworldliness of Antarctica – with more shades of white than you can count!
G Adventures’ own Vanessa Mullin goes to the ends of the Earth to trace her family’s history. She tells her tale here.
Join us on a journey to some of the planet's most beautiful landscapes
Wanderer-in-Residence Gary Arndt shares some of his most loved snaps from the road.
Most people who've travelled to Antarctica will tell you you never really get used to the feeling of cruising past glaciers and ice floes. All it takes is seven seconds to escape to the great white south. Can you spare it?