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Epic South America Journey

Departing on 3 Jan 2028 from Southampton aboard the Aurora - Cruise No: 2267290

Your Itinerary

Southampton — Las Palmas de Gran Canaria — St Vincent CVI — Recife — Salvador — Rio de Janeiro — Rio de Janeiro — Sao Paulo (from Santos) — Montevideo — Montevideo — Port Stanley — Cape Horn — Magellan Straits — Punta Arenas, Chile — Amalia Glacier — PIO X Glacier - Chile — Puerto Montt — San Antonio, Chile — San Antonio, Chile — Coquimbo — Arica — Callao — Callao — Fuerte Amador — Transit Panama Canal — Cartagena, Colombia — Aruba — Curacao — Grenada — Bridgetown — St. Lucia — Antigua — St.Maarten — Tenerife — Southampton
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Date
Port
Info
Arrive
Depart
1
3 Jan '28
Southampton

The city center is a charming mix of old city walls and a large modern shopping centre. With multiple restaurants, museums, cinemas and theatres there is plenty to be explored. Time spent at embarkation and disembarkation ports may be limited which may restrict availability of shore excursions.

2
4 Jan '28
At Sea
3
5 Jan '28
At Sea
4
6 Jan '28
At Sea
5
7 Jan '28
At Sea
6
8 Jan '28
Las Palmas de Gran Canaria

Las Palmas is a capital of Gran Canaria, one of Spain’s Canary Islands off northwestern Africa. A major cruise-ship port, the city is known for duty-free shopping and for its sandy beaches. At Playa de Las Canteras, a coral barrier lines the beach and shelters swimmers. The annual Las Palmas de Gran Canaria carnival brings together flamboyantly costumed performers, music and dancing.

7
9 Jan '28
At Sea
8
10 Jan '28
At Sea
9
11 Jan '28
St Vincent CVI
10
12 Jan '28
At Sea
11
13 Jan '28
At Sea
12
14 Jan '28
At Sea
13
15 Jan '28
At Sea
14
16 Jan '28
Recife

Recife, the capital of Brazil’s northeastern state of Pernambuco, is distinguished by its many rivers, bridges, islets and peninsulas. Recife Antigo, on its own island by the harbor, is the historic old town center dating to the 16th century. To its south, popular Boa Viagem Beach is sheltered by reefs and lined by tall apartment blocks, modern hotels and restaurants.

15
17 Jan '28
At Sea
16
18 Jan '28
Salvador

Salvador, the capital of Brazil’s northeastern state of Bahia, is known for its Portuguese colonial architecture, Afro-Brazilian culture and a tropical coastline. The Pelourinho neighborhood is its historic heart, with cobblestone alleys opening onto large squares, colorful buildings and baroque churches such as São Francisco, featuring gilt woodwork.

17
19 Jan '28
At Sea
18
20 Jan '28
At Sea
19
21 Jan '28
Rio de Janeiro

Famous for its colourful carnival and fabulous beaches, as well as the dramatic entry to its cruise port, Rio de Janeiro in the south-eastern corner of Brazil has much more to offer than sun and sand. You can enjoy breathtaking views from the top of Sugar Loaf Mountain (the cable car journey up is even more spectacular!), or take a taxi up Corcovado Mountain in the Parque Nacional de Tijuca to view the city’s most famous landmark, the 30 metre-high statue of Christ the Redeemer. Make time, too, to visit Praca Floriano, the vast square at the heart of the city which is home to its exquisite Teatro Municipal opera house and close to the city’s best art gallery, Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes. Floriana Square is also the place to catch Rio’s social life at its best – grab a beer at a pavement caf and tap your feet to the rhythms of the Samba before exploring the shops along the 19th century Rua da Carioca.

20
22 Jan '28
Rio de Janeiro

Famous for its colourful carnival and fabulous beaches, as well as the dramatic entry to its cruise port, Rio de Janeiro in the south-eastern corner of Brazil has much more to offer than sun and sand. You can enjoy breathtaking views from the top of Sugar Loaf Mountain (the cable car journey up is even more spectacular!), or take a taxi up Corcovado Mountain in the Parque Nacional de Tijuca to view the city’s most famous landmark, the 30 metre-high statue of Christ the Redeemer. Make time, too, to visit Praca Floriano, the vast square at the heart of the city which is home to its exquisite Teatro Municipal opera house and close to the city’s best art gallery, Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes. Floriana Square is also the place to catch Rio’s social life at its best – grab a beer at a pavement caf and tap your feet to the rhythms of the Samba before exploring the shops along the 19th century Rua da Carioca.

21
23 Jan '28
Sao Paulo (from Santos)
22
24 Jan '28
At Sea
23
25 Jan '28
At Sea
24
26 Jan '28
Montevideo

Just across the Rio de la Plata from Buenos Aires, Montevideo could hardly be more different. Here the pace is sedate, the architecture perfectly preserved Colonial Spanish and the city itself something of a split personality. Around Plaza Constitucion, ministries and palaces signify the city’s role as Uruguay’s capital. But along the coast stretch miles and miles of flawless beaches, displaying a fun-loving resort quality that’s just delightful.

25
27 Jan '28
Montevideo

Just across the Rio de la Plata from Buenos Aires, Montevideo could hardly be more different. Here the pace is sedate, the architecture perfectly preserved Colonial Spanish and the city itself something of a split personality. Around Plaza Constitucion, ministries and palaces signify the city’s role as Uruguay’s capital. But along the coast stretch miles and miles of flawless beaches, displaying a fun-loving resort quality that’s just delightful.

26
28 Jan '28
At Sea
27
29 Jan '28
At Sea
28
30 Jan '28
Port Stanley

The capital of the remote Falkland Islands, Port Stanley, is little more than a village, but a truly historic and welcoming one. You’ll be urged to sign the visitors’ register outside the Government House before seeing the tributes to our war heroes in Christ Church Cathedral.

29
31 Jan '28
At Sea
30
1 Feb '28
At Sea
31
1 Feb '28
Cape Horn

Cape Horn is a rocky headland on Hornos Island, in southern Chile’s Tierra del Fuego archipelago. It’s surrounded by wild seas off the southern tip of South America where the Pacific and Atlantic oceans meet. The albatross-shaped Cape Horn Monument commemorates the lives of thousands of seafarers who perished attempting to sail around the cape. A secluded lighthouse and the tiny Stella-Maris Chapel are nearby.

32
2 Feb '28
Magellan Straits
33
3 Feb '28
Punta Arenas, Chile

Punta Arenas overlooks the Strait of Magellan to Tierra del Fuego – the most southerly point of land before you reach Antarctica. Kiss the toe of the Indian on the Magellan monument in Playa del Armas and local legend says you’ll return to this spectacular place. Head to Otway Bay for a visit to a penguin colony, or take a trip of lifetime flightseeing over the Antarctic Peninsula.

34
4 Feb '28
Amalia Glacier
35
5 Feb '28
PIO X Glacier - Chile
36
6 Feb '28
At Sea
37
7 Feb '28
Puerto Montt

Puerto Montt is the starting point for scenic tours to the lakes and fjords of this little-known but remarkably beautiful section of the Chilean coastline. Waterfalls, mountains and inlets of the sea combine with the lack of development or pollution to give you a series of sparkling vistas.

38
8 Feb '28
At Sea
39
9 Feb '28
At Sea
40
10 Feb '28
San Antonio, Chile

San Antonio is a Chilean city, commune and the capital of the San Antonio Province in the Valparaíso Region. It is the hub of the fishing area that spans the Chilean coast from Rocas de Santo Domingo to Cartagena

41
11 Feb '28
San Antonio, Chile

San Antonio is a Chilean city, commune and the capital of the San Antonio Province in the Valparaíso Region. It is the hub of the fishing area that spans the Chilean coast from Rocas de Santo Domingo to Cartagena

42
12 Feb '28
At Sea
43
13 Feb '28
Coquimbo

Coquimbo is a port city, commune and capital of the Elqui Province, located on the Pan-American Highway, in the Coquimbo Region of Chile. Coquimbo is situated in a valley 10 km south of La Serena, with which it forms Greater La Serena with more than 400,000 inhabitants

44
14 Feb '28
At Sea
45
15 Feb '28
At Sea
46
16 Feb '28
Arica

Arica is a port city in northern Chile, known for its surfing beaches. Near the center, a path climbs up to Morro Arica hill, which has sweeping views and the Museo Histórico y de Armas war museum. Designed by French architect Gustave Eiffel in metal and wood, Gothic San Marcos Cathedral dates from 1876. The high plains of the Andes mountains rise to the east, home to Lauca National Park and Chungará Lake.

47
17 Feb '28
At Sea
48
18 Feb '28
Callao

Callao is a seaside city on the Pacific Ocean in the Lima metropolitan area. Callao is Peru’s chief seaport and home to its main airport, Jorge Chávez International Airport. Callao municipality consists of the whole Callao Region, which is also coterminous with the Province of Callao.

49
19 Feb '28
Callao

Callao is a seaside city on the Pacific Ocean in the Lima metropolitan area. Callao is Peru’s chief seaport and home to its main airport, Jorge Chávez International Airport. Callao municipality consists of the whole Callao Region, which is also coterminous with the Province of Callao.

50
20 Feb '28
At Sea
51
21 Feb '28
At Sea
52
22 Feb '28
At Sea
53
23 Feb '28
Fuerte Amador

The fast-growing city of Fuerte Amador lies at the Pacific end of the Panama Canal on a peninsular jutting out from Balboa. It has a marina and a yacht club, and lies close to Panama City, which is on the other side of Ancon Hill.

54
24 Feb '28
Transit Panama Canal

The Panama Canal is the worlds biggest short-cut. You will be amazed by its sheer scale and clockwork efficiency.

55
25 Feb '28
At Sea
56
26 Feb '28
Cartagena, Colombia

Cartagena de Indias, to give its full name, is an historic city in Columbia founded in 1533 and ringed with massive walls built by the Spanish to fend off pirates. The city’s palaces and the maze of winding streets give the city its unique Iberian character.

57
27 Feb '28
At Sea
58
28 Feb '28
Aruba

Talcum-soft beaches, world class shopping, glitzy casinos, stunning sea views and tracts of desert landscape scattered with giant boulders and exotic cacti are all yours to enjoy when you visit popular Aruba, jewel of the ‘deep’ Caribbean.

59
29 Feb '28
Curacao

The largest island in the Dutch Antilles, Curaçao is home to more than 50 nationalities. Willemstad is full of 17th, 18th and 19th century Dutch and Spanish Colonial architecture. The two sides of the city are divided by Santa Anna Bay, a narrow channel flanked by pastel-tinted, gabled houses and spanned by the spectacular swing-aside Queen Emma pontoon bridge. On one side you will find the 18th century Fort Amsterdam and Breederstraat, gateway to Willemstads main shopping and restaurant district where you can buy everything from Delft pottery to Italian silk ties, Japanese electrical goods, Indonesian batik clothing, locally-made black coral jewellery and, of course, the sapphire-blue liqueur to which Curaçao has given its name.

60
1 Mar '28
At Sea
61
2 Mar '28
Grenada

Sailors through the centuries have rated it one of the worlds prettiest harbours and it is hard to disagree. Horseshoe-shaped and set in a volcanic crater, Grenadas capital and cruise port St Georges is flanked by two forts, with colourful French colonial style buildings ranged along the front. It is the perfect entrance to one of the Caribbean’s most scenic islands. Only 12 miles by 21, it is awash with waterfalls, mountain valleys, rainforests, lakes and volcanic craters. The beaches are to die for, especially Grand Anse – a two-mile stretch of pure white sand just around the bay from St Georges. Grenada is also the island you can smell before you can see it. The ‘Spice Island’ grows more spices per square mile than anywhere else on the planet with nutmeg its signature seasoning. In fact, gentle haggling with spice vendors is part of the fun of cruising to this laid-back Caribbean island.

62
3 Mar '28
Bridgetown

Barbados is the most British of the Caribbean islands, where cricket is the national passion and afternoon tea a tradition. Yet the flawless skies, lilting rhythms of both speech and calypso and the endless beaches all provide vivid reminders that you are a long way from home. Enjoy a stroll around Bridgetown, the capital which boasts impressive colonial architecture and take a snap of what used to be known as Trafalgar Square.

63
4 Mar '28
St. Lucia

The charms of this, the loveliest of Caribbean islands, are many and varied. Soufriere is the world’s only “drive-in” volcano; Marigot Bay is almost unbelievably pretty and the Creole cuisine is rightly famed throughout the Caribbean.

64
5 Mar '28
At Sea
65
6 Mar '28
Antigua

With over 365 beaches, there is a slice of white sand heaven for every day of the year – even a leap year – on the idyllic Caribbean holiday island Antigua. Antigua played host to Admiral Horatio Nelson’s fleet in the late 1700’s. Nelson’s Dockyard now bustles with crew and guests from yachts and cruise ships sailing these waters for pleasure rather than for King and Country. The main port, St John’s, is also the capital and a vibrant hub for shopping as well as being within easy range of some of the best beaches – at Fort James, Deep Bay, Galley Bay and Hawksbill. Almost perfect weather conditions and low humidity, due to the warm prevailing trade winds, allows Antigua to boast of being the sunniest of the Eastern Caribbean islands with the lowest annual rainfall. It is also the largest of the English-speaking Leeward Islands although it is only 14 miles long and 11 miles wide. Still, with a population of less than 70,000, this means there are lots of wide open spaces – especially on those gorgeous beaches.

66
7 Mar '28
St.Maarten

An island with a split personality, this is one of the few places in the Caribbean where the European powers co-existed peacefully. Hence, this lovely island is a mixture of Dutch, French and Caribbean tastes and delights.

67
8 Mar '28
At Sea
68
9 Mar '28
At Sea
69
10 Mar '28
At Sea
70
11 Mar '28
At Sea
71
12 Mar '28
At Sea
72
13 Mar '28
At Sea
73
14 Mar '28
Tenerife

Looking for a holiday that combines culture and exploration with comfort and relaxation? Tenerife is a true slice of paradise. Explore its foodie treasures, tranquil sunsets burning with tones of pink, orange and yellow and put your underwater camera to good use. There are countless experiences to be had, yet also peaceful and idyllic with sparkling waters and powder-soft sand.

Visiting the largest of the Canary Islands, our Tenerife cruises bring you close to one of the world’s most dramatic and varied landscapes, ranging from verdant valleys and lush plantations to glorious beaches, vast pinewoods and the volcanic `moonscape’ of Mount Teide National Park. Tenerife’s cruise port Santa Cruz has grown from a fishing village to a splendid city with classy bars and restaurants, varied shops, fine architecture and interesting museums. With our cruises to Tenerife the action begins right outside the port gates, where you will find a caf-lined boulevard leading to the Plaza de Espana, at the heart of the port’s main shopping area. Look out for bargain electrical goods and cut-price CDs, Tenerife’s speciality. Prefer museums and galleries? Try the Museo de Bellas Artes, which contains works by Bruegel, or discover the island’s history, topography, flora and fauna at the Museo de la Naturaleza y El Hombre.

74
15 Mar '28
At Sea
75
16 Mar '28
At Sea
76
17 Mar '28
At Sea
77
18 Mar '28
Southampton

The city center is a charming mix of old city walls and a large modern shopping centre. With multiple restaurants, museums, cinemas and theatres there is plenty to be explored. Time spent at embarkation and disembarkation ports may be limited which may restrict availability of shore excursions.

Launched

1999

Tonnage

76,152

Length

886

Crew

850

Capacity

1,874

Exclusively for adults – Mid-sized Aurora is a world-class ship, bringing you the joys of classic cruise travel. In April 2019, she enjoyed a refit and started an exciting new chapter as a ship that caters exclusively for adults. With a skydome over her inviting Crystal Pool you’ll enjoy stylish surrounds whatever the weather. At her heart a 35 foot sculpture dominates the atrium while The Crow’s Nest offers panoramic views.

Art Gallery
Emporium
Night Nursery
Reception

Carmens
Champions
Children’s Play Area
Crow’s Nest
Curzon Theatre
Masquerades
Monte Carlo Casino
Night Club
Photo Gallery

Crystal Pool Bar
Jumping Jacks
Oasis Spa
Terrace Pool
Vanderbilts
Whirlpool

Decibels
Golf Nets
Intergalactica
Library
Mayfair

Alexandria Restaurant
Anderson’s Bar
Atrium Bar
Bar
Bistro
Cafe Bordeaux
Lounge
Medina Restaurant
Pennant Bar
Pennant Grill
Piccadilly Court
Raffles Bar
Riviera Bar
Side Walk Cafe
Sports Bar
The Atrium
The Orangery
The Playhouse
Uganda Room

Gym
Sports Court

Description

Exclusively for adults – Mid-sized Aurora is a world-class ship, bringing you the joys of classic cruise travel. In April 2019, she enjoyed a refit and started an exciting new chapter as a ship that caters exclusively for adults. With a skydome over her inviting Crystal Pool you’ll enjoy stylish surrounds whatever the weather. At her heart a 35 foot sculpture dominates the atrium while The Crow’s Nest offers panoramic views.

Other

Art Gallery
Emporium
Night Nursery
Reception

Entertainment

Carmens
Champions
Children’s Play Area
Crow’s Nest
Curzon Theatre
Masquerades
Monte Carlo Casino
Night Club
Photo Gallery

Relaxation

Crystal Pool Bar
Jumping Jacks
Oasis Spa
Terrace Pool
Vanderbilts
Whirlpool

Recreational

Decibels
Golf Nets
Intergalactica
Library
Mayfair

Food and Drink

Alexandria Restaurant
Anderson’s Bar
Atrium Bar
Bar
Bistro
Cafe Bordeaux
Lounge
Medina Restaurant
Pennant Bar
Pennant Grill
Piccadilly Court
Raffles Bar
Riviera Bar
Side Walk Cafe
Sports Bar
The Atrium
The Orangery
The Playhouse
Uganda Room

Fitness

Gym
Sports Court

Included Services

  • Port Taxes & Fees
  • Gratuities Included
  • All Meals (Excluding Speciality Dining)
  • Available to book in GBP £ (Call for prices)

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