So, how do you get to Antarctica? It’s not as simple as booking a flight. The continent has no permanent airport, and for much of the year, it’s a frozen, dark expanse, closer to outer space than you might think. If you’re set on “going South”, your journey will almost certainly begin in one of five key gateway cities.
These cities, established long before we fully understood Antarctica, are vital due to their proximity, connections, and polar expertise. They act as hubs for the majority of Antarctic traffic. The five historic gateways are:
• Christchurch, New Zealand: Home to the US programme and other research missions, connecting directly to the Ross Sea and the Scott and McMurdo bases.
• Hobart, Tasmania: Situated under the Australian claim, it’s another key access point.
• Cape Town, South Africa: Providing access to the bottom of the Atlantic.
• Ushuaia, Argentina and Punta Arenas, Chile: Located where the sea is narrowest, these two ports offer the easiest access to Antarctica, involving a day’s sail across the Drake Passage. They are also the departure points for 99% of tourist trips.
While these five cities remain the primary gateways, with history, industry and polar expertise, they now handle only 63% of the traffic to Antarctica. As interest grows, other cities are seeing increased arrivals. In a PNAS study of port-to-port traffic to Antarctica between 2014 and 2018 there were 75 recorded last ports that were outside these gateways. Port Stanley in the Falklands and Monte Video in Uruguay are recognised as informal gateways, with similar shipping standards. Some ships are travelling from as far away as Singapore, Bristol and Malaga.
The 5 Antarctic Gateways
Christchurch, New Zealand 🇳🇿
Hobart, Australia 🇦🇺
Cape Town, South Africa 🇿🇦
Ushuaia, Argentina 🇦🇷
Punta Arenas, Chile 🇨🇱
Despite this, if you’re travelling to Antarctica as a tourist, you will most likely depart from one of the five original gateway cities. Antarctica remains remote, but the routes south and the role of these cities are constantly changing. As an internationally neutral continent governed by the Antarctic Treaty, there are no port authorities controlling the borders. This has led to issues like private adventurism, illegal whaling and biofouling and so there are suggestions to make more cities official gateways.
Key: ★ Five Gateway Cities, Christchurch, Hobart, Cape Town, Punta Arenas and Ushuaia. Source/ Shavawn Donoghue, University of Tasmania
Adventure travel is like a camel: easy to recognise, hard to define. So the story goes of a traveller’s encounter with a lumpy animal in the desert. She knows what a camel is. Her friends back home understand what she means by ‘a camel’, but try describing one and you’ll find yourself at a loose end. More to the point of our parable, was the guided desert dune safari she booked really an adventure, or imitation sold to gullible tourists?
Adventure travel is one of those things that seems obvious until questioned. Bungy jumping in Queenstown, sounds adventurous. Cycle-packing the length of Patagonia, pretty adventurous. Camping above the arctic circle, that’s an adventure for someone. I know it when I see it, you might say. Adventures are the stuff of story books. You’re not going to read a paperback about someone who checks into a seaside resort and doesn’t leave the sun lounger.
Adventure is defined in the Oxford English Dictionary as something “unusual, exciting or [possibly] dangerous”. However, when you look up “adventure tourism” you’ll encounter a contradiction in terms. Adventure is something personal. Not usually shared by a coach-load of holidaymakers.
Adventure /ədˈventʃər/ [countable] an unusual, exciting or dangerous experience, journey or series of events.
As an experience that is supposed to be beyond the norm, do more people visiting a destination make it any less adventurous? The determination of the tourism industry to manage risk means that any hint of danger that remains seems ironic. Anyone visiting Antarctica 100 years ago could not be certain of returning. Today tourists come back with tote bags and penguin souvenirs.
Adventure travel is an elusive thing. You find yourself describing a moving target. Always chasing the new, looking for the next thing. Just when a place or activity finds itself in the spotlight the adventure travel trend has travelled on.
Despite the difficulty in describing it, adventure travel remains one of the fastest growing areas of travel. According to the Adventure Travel Trade Association the industry was worth over US $400bn last year, with its Goretex-clad clientele paying well above the odds for a trip of a lifetime. It’s no accident there are travel companies springing up across the globe with the promise of adventure.
Campfire stories: What is adventure travel? Photo / Thomas Bywater
What makes adventure travel an adventure?
Are you somewhere exciting? Are you setting out to do something new?
Stop! You may be on an adventure.
If you need help working out if the trip you’re taking is an adventure or another package holiday, you’re in the right place.
Adventure destinations
Off to deepest darkest Peru? Exciting but not necessarily an adventure. The destination is an important factor for adventure travel but it’s not all location, location, location. Going back to the definition of adventure, if you’re off somewhere “unusual and exciting” you could very well be an adventure tourist. Though these terms carry some subjectivity. If you’re booked somewhere inherently “dangerous” – featuring live volcanoes, sub-zero temperatures, or self-drive tuktuks – that also greatly increases the odds that you’re on an adventure.
However, a far better determiner of whether you are a budding adventure traveller is the next section: what you’ll do when you get there.
Adventure activities
Anyone reading an adventure travel brochure will be aware that it’s all about action.
Skiing in Siberia. Abseiling in Azerbaijan. Lama trekking along the Limpopo. All could be leading ads in Outdoor Adventure Magazine. Choosing the activity is almost as important as choosing the operator to go with. After all it’s them who will be taking you and your life in their hands. When working out which mountain guide, dirt buggy driver or fixer it’s worth checking their service history. If they’ve taken hundreds of other guests on similar trips, it’s a good sign. Better still is if you’ve had a guide recommended or met some of their previous guests.
Nasa astronaut Alan Shepherd famously said “a good landing is any landing you are able to walk away from.” Though you might want better bona fides from your bungy jumping outfit.
It pays to research your options, even when going with an off-the-peg group tour or adventure operator. Preplanning takes no authenticity away from your journey.
Adventure is intentional and enjoyable. Misadventure is accidental and chaotic. Being guided to the summit of Kilimanjairo is a thrill. Being stranded in the Serengeti, without a clue, is not.
This takes us nicely to the final step of our adventure FAQs.
What are the steps towards real adventure travel? Photo / Thomas Bywater
What’s the objective?
It’s a question you’ll hear around the camps of mountaineers and read in the climbing logs of grizzled alpinists.
Mountaineering – an objectively adventurous pursuit – is obsessed with objectives. General objectives. Objective hazards. Objectionably complex jargon. You don’t need to be scaling K2 via the Black Pyramid to benefit from having an objective.
In essence all that planning an objective asks is “what do you want to do?” and even “why do you want to do it?” Because often having an objective is what separates an adventure from a novelty holiday. Perhaps you’re hiking to the end of the Inca Trail to finally see Machu Picchu in person, two decades after an illustrated atlas moved you to ask “where’s that?” Maybe you’re off to find the island your great grandfather was lighthouse keeper. If there’s a purpose that’s moving you out of your comfort zone, it’s far more likely you’re heading out on an adventure.
An adventure is always a personal journey. That being said, your ego trip into the unknown is often an encroachment on someone else’s every day.
With tourists – sometimes literally – being helicoptered into a destination, some tours have little consequence or sometimes are directly harmful to the places being visited. The dangers of over tourism and over development have become talking points in the travel industry. As an activity that takes place in the remoter and more fragile parts of the globe, adventure travel has a danger of causing outsized impact.
By its nature adventure travel relies on local support and infrastructure far more than a trip to a resort, operated by some overseas hospitality conglomerate. Several tour outfitters have come up with ratings systems such as G-Adventures’ “Ripple Score” to try and show the proportion of a guest’s fee that stays in the local community. Your adventure objectives should always be secondary to the considerations of the locals. Sharing your objectives with the communities you are visiting is only fair. If you’re not there with their blessing, you’re an invasion.
Real adventure should have real benefits, not only for the traveller but the places and people they visit.
If you follow these steps you may be well on the way to your goal. In the end adventures are the holidays that you not only remember best, but other people want to hear about too. If you are asked follow up questions to “how was your holiday?”, chances are, you were on an adventure.
Researchers at Purdue University have come up with a theory about how much money you need to be happy, and it’s based on where you live.
They found that New Zealand is the seventh most expensive place to be happy. To be really happy in Aotearoa, you need to make at least $193,727 a year (or $114,597 in US dollars). That’s a lot of money! The average household income in 2022 was around $117,126, so happiness is still out of reach for most people.
Key notes
The study asked 1.7 million to reveal household income and happiness.
Brisbane and Sydney are both in the top 10 most expensive cities for happiness.
Bucaramanga, Colombia, is the world’s most budget-friendly city for happiness.
Purdue University looked at how much money you make and how happy you are. They studied over 1.7 million people from all over the world and found that there’s a point where more money doesn’t make you happier. Now, a new study using Purdue University’s data has created a list of the cheapest and most expensive places to be happy. S Money, a currency exchange company, calculated the cost of happiness in US dollars for over 500 cities in 164 countries. They found that Australia is the third most expensive place in the world to be happy. Brisbane and Sydney are both in the top 10 most expensive cities for joy. The average price of true happiness in Australia is $205,830. In Brisbane, it’s even more expensive, with the average price of happiness being $225,511. But don’t worry, there are still places where you can be happy without breaking the bank. Sierra Leone is the cheapest country in the world to be happy, with life fulfilment being valued at just $14,711 a year. Suriname is second cheapest, with life fulfilment being valued at $17,424, and Madagascar is third cheapest, with life fulfilment being valued at $19,293.
While happiness generally costs more in cities than in rural areas, there are some surprisingly affordable cities for those seeking joy.
In Bucaramanga, Colombia, you can enjoy a year of happiness for just $16,900. With a population of 581,000, it’s the world’s most budget-friendly city for happiness.
On the other hand, Auckland, New Zealand, was found to be the most expensive city for happiness, costing $207,000 per year and ranking 20th globally. In contrast, Christchurch, the cheapest city in New Zealand, offers contentment at a more reasonable $180,000 per year.
While happiness is closely linked to the cost of living, it can also be influenced by the amount needed to protect oneself from negative emotions.
Interestingly, the Islamic Republic of Iran was found to be the most expensive country to live in the world, with Iranians valuing happiness at $239,700. Meanwhile, the average household income in Iran is $3,340 in cities and $1,973 in rural areas, according to the Statistical Center of Iran.
While money can’t buy happiness, it can certainly help you plan a fun vacation
According to Harvard’s Department of Psychology, the relationship between money and happiness is surprisingly weak. A study titled “If money doesn’t bring you happiness, you aren’t spending it right” suggests that people often spend more money than they actually enjoy.
However, vacations were identified as a top investment for happiness-seekers. Professor Daniel T. Gilbert noted that the anticipation of traveling can often be more enjoyable than the actual holiday itself.
In fact, a study conducted in 1997 found that people viewed vacations in a more positive light before the experience than during it. This suggests that anticipation can sometimes provide more pleasure than consumption simply because it’s not tainted by reality.
Interestingly, it was also found that taking a lifetime of small trips can lead to greater happiness than saving up for one or two big bucket-list items.
Manage Consent
To provide the best experiences, we use technologies like cookies to store and/or access device information. Consenting to these technologies will allow us to process data such as browsing behavior or unique IDs on this site. Not consenting or withdrawing consent, may adversely affect certain features and functions.
Functional
Always active
The technical storage or access is strictly necessary for the legitimate purpose of enabling the use of a specific service explicitly requested by the subscriber or user, or for the sole purpose of carrying out the transmission of a communication over an electronic communications network.
Preferences
The technical storage or access is necessary for the legitimate purpose of storing preferences that are not requested by the subscriber or user.
Statistics
The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for statistical purposes.The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for anonymous statistical purposes. Without a subpoena, voluntary compliance on the part of your Internet Service Provider, or additional records from a third party, information stored or retrieved for this purpose alone cannot usually be used to identify you.
Marketing
The technical storage or access is required to create user profiles to send advertising, or to track the user on a website or across several websites for similar marketing purposes.