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Ice and a slice of luxury: Antarctic cruise includes a deep dive with champagne in a submersible

  • Visitors to Antarctica have to follow increasingly strict rules to safeguard the wildlife, but travellers can still explore the frozen continent in style
  • Post Magazine takes a trip on the Seabourn Pursuit, a luxury cruiser equipped with Zodiac inflatables and two submersibles

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As rules for visitors to the Antarctic are tightened, Post Magazine returns to view Mother Nature at her coolest, from the luxurious Seabourn Pursuit cruise ship, a Zodiac inflatable (above) and a submersible with champagne on ice. Photo: Peter Neville-Hadley

Now I know what it feels like to be a goldfish.

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I’m sitting in one of the twin bulbous eyes of a submersible, the great globe of centimetres-thick Perspex so transparent it needs a gentle touch with the tips of the fingers to be sure it’s there at all.

Each eye contains three swivel chairs with panoramic views of the sea floor, and because this submersible is one of two belonging to the 264-passenger Seabourn Pursuit, one of the newest vessels in Antarctic waters, the chairs are leather-covered and there’s a champagne cooler on board.

We may be in one of the world’s most remote and inhospitable wildernesses, and now 85 metres (280ft) below the surface of a freezing ocean, but we are determined to be civilised.

The Seabourn Pursuit has two submersibles, each capable of taking six passengers down to 300 metres underwater. Photo: Peter Neville-Hadley
The Seabourn Pursuit has two submersibles, each capable of taking six passengers down to 300 metres underwater. Photo: Peter Neville-Hadley

The beams of the multimillion-dollar vessel’s spotlights are filled with motes like those at a theatre, only ones that wriggle.

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On the seafloor’s sandy stage, they pick out starfish and their close relatives – wiry, brittle invertebrates, connected in myriad numbers arm to arm, spreading across the sea floor in a lacy net.

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