Wildlife wonders of a Svalbard summer
During high summer in the Arctic, from late June through July, the break-up of sea-ice allows small-ship polar voyages to navigate around Spitsbergen and other islands in Svalbard. You’ll not only experience 24-hour daylight (and the midnight sun when it’s clear), but this is also prime time for seeing wildlife. Top of everyone’s wish list is the polar bear (around 3,000 inhabit Svalbard and the Barents Sea), but other mammals frequently seen include arctic fox, Svalbard reindeer, walrus, bearded seal, humpback whale and beluga. Seabirds nest in their millions on huge sea cliffs in the Svalbard archipelago – Brunnich’s guillemots, black guillemots, northern fulmars, kittiwakes and little auks crowding the narrow ledges. During shore excursions, you’ll be able to tiptoe through the tundra, observing the profusion of delicate Arctic flowers that need to bloom and set seed during the brief Arctic summer.