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Home Cruises European Influences in the New World - EX20231013NYCQUE EXPLORA I departing 13 Oct 2023

European Influences in the New World - EX20231013NYCQUE EXPLORA I departing 13 Oct 2023

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From New York, the city of steeples, to Quebec City, “la vieille capitale”, North America is blessed with more than 400 years of European influence. New York City, originally founded by the Dutch as New Amsterdam and gifted the Statue of Liberty from France, now offers the world the 9/11 Memorial & Museum that honours hope, resilience, and unity for all future generations. Fall foliage calls us to the wealthy summer playground of Newport, a seaside town bursting with superlatives. Home to the International Tennis Hall of Fame, America’s first polo club, and infamous immigrant industrialist from the Gilded Age including the Astors and the Vanderbilts, who financed the building of a young America. It even boasts the oldest operating restaurant in the U.S., The White Horse Tavern, which has been serving guests since 1673. However, older still is beautiful Boston, dubbed the Athens of America, that’s built upon almost 400 years of academia and culture. The city’s wharves whisper of tea parties, its libraries of revolutionary greats, and its Freedom Trail rings out with the call to the brave. Go behind-the-scenes inside the Old North Church, Paul Revere’s House, and Bunker Hill Monument. Visit the JFK Presidential Library & Museum to relive America’s “Camelot.” In Halifax, the capital of Nova Scotia, rooted in Celtic, Acadian, and African cultures along with the largest number of lighthouses of any Canadian province. Head to pretty Peggy’s Cove to see the most photographed lighthouse in the country then crack open a ruby lobster in the surrounding fishing village. For two days, we follow the “whale route” of the St. Lawrence River where 13 species of marine mammals feast of the plentiful krill. Enticing, enchanting, Quebec City calls with her 400-year-old Vieux-Quebec (Old Town), an impeccable UNESCO site, that still ripples with life along meandering cobbled streets and the green-cooper turreted Chateau Frontenac. Extend you Quebecois immersion in the City of Saints, Montréal, where the celebrated Golden Square Mile awaits with impeccable Victorian-era buildings bursting with French boutiques, Parisian-style bistros, magnificent McGill University and the stately Montréal Museum of Fine Arts.

EXPLORA I
Ship
Cruise Line
Embark
13 Oct 2023
Duration
7 Nights
From / To
New York City, United States of America / Quebec
Ports of call
New York City, United States of America - New York City, United States of America - Boston, United States of America - Halifax, Canada - Scenic sailing at the Gulf of St. Lawrence See full itinerary

Suite from £3,230pp

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Itinerary

Show sea days

Date Date
Location Location
 
In In
Out Out
Date 13/10/2023
Location New York City, United States of America
In
Out 19:00

From New York, the city of steeples, to Quebec City, “la vieille capitale”, North America is blessed with more than 400 years of European influence. New York City, originally founded by the Dutch as New Amsterdam and gifted the Statue of Liberty from France, now offers the world the 9/11 Memorial & Museum that honours hope, resilience, and unity for all future generations. Fall foliage calls us to the wealthy summer playground of Newport, a seaside town bursting with superlatives. Home to the International Tennis Hall of Fame, America’s first polo club, and infamous immigrant industrialist from the Gilded Age including the Astors and the Vanderbilts, who financed the building of a young America. It even boasts the oldest operating restaurant in the U.S., The White Horse Tavern, which has been serving guests since 1673. However, older still is beautiful Boston, dubbed the Athens of America, that’s built upon almost 400 years of academia and culture. The city’s wharves whisper of tea parties, its libraries of revolutionary greats, and its Freedom Trail rings out with the call to the brave. Go behind-the-scenes inside the Old North Church, Paul Revere’s House, and Bunker Hill Monument. Visit the JFK Presidential Library & Museum to relive America’s “Camelot.” In Halifax, the capital of Nova Scotia, rooted in Celtic, Acadian, and African cultures along with the largest number of lighthouses of any Canadian province. Head to pretty Peggy’s Cove to see the most photographed lighthouse in the country then crack open a ruby lobster in the surrounding fishing village. For two days, we follow the “whale route” of the St. Lawrence River where 13 species of marine mammals feast of the plentiful krill. Enticing, enchanting, Quebec City calls with her 400-year-old Vieux-Quebec (Old Town), an impeccable UNESCO site, that still ripples with life along meandering cobbled streets and the green-cooper turreted Chateau Frontenac. Extend you Quebecois immersion in the City of Saints, Montréal, where the celebrated Golden Square Mile awaits with impeccable Victorian-era buildings bursting with French boutiques, Parisian-style bistros, magnificent McGill University and the stately Montréal Museum of Fine Arts.

Date 14/10/2023
Location New York City, United States of America
In
Out 06:00

From New York, the city of steeples, to Quebec City, “la vieille capitale”, North America is blessed with more than 400 years of European influence. New York City, originally founded by the Dutch as New Amsterdam and gifted the Statue of Liberty from France, now offers the world the 9/11 Memorial & Museum that honours hope, resilience, and unity for all future generations. Fall foliage calls us to the wealthy summer playground of Newport, a seaside town bursting with superlatives. Home to the International Tennis Hall of Fame, America’s first polo club, and infamous immigrant industrialist from the Gilded Age including the Astors and the Vanderbilts, who financed the building of a young America. It even boasts the oldest operating restaurant in the U.S., The White Horse Tavern, which has been serving guests since 1673. However, older still is beautiful Boston, dubbed the Athens of America, that’s built upon almost 400 years of academia and culture. The city’s wharves whisper of tea parties, its libraries of revolutionary greats, and its Freedom Trail rings out with the call to the brave. Go behind-the-scenes inside the Old North Church, Paul Revere’s House, and Bunker Hill Monument. Visit the JFK Presidential Library & Museum to relive America’s “Camelot.” In Halifax, the capital of Nova Scotia, rooted in Celtic, Acadian, and African cultures along with the largest number of lighthouses of any Canadian province. Head to pretty Peggy’s Cove to see the most photographed lighthouse in the country then crack open a ruby lobster in the surrounding fishing village. For two days, we follow the “whale route” of the St. Lawrence River where 13 species of marine mammals feast of the plentiful krill. Enticing, enchanting, Quebec City calls with her 400-year-old Vieux-Quebec (Old Town), an impeccable UNESCO site, that still ripples with life along meandering cobbled streets and the green-cooper turreted Chateau Frontenac. Extend you Quebecois immersion in the City of Saints, Montréal, where the celebrated Golden Square Mile awaits with impeccable Victorian-era buildings bursting with French boutiques, Parisian-style bistros, magnificent McGill University and the stately Montréal Museum of Fine Arts.

Date 15/10/2023
Location Boston, United States of America
In 09:00
Out 23:00

From New York, the city of steeples, to Quebec City, “la vieille capitale”, North America is blessed with more than 400 years of European influence. New York City, originally founded by the Dutch as New Amsterdam and gifted the Statue of Liberty from France, now offers the world the 9/11 Memorial & Museum that honours hope, resilience, and unity for all future generations. Fall foliage calls us to the wealthy summer playground of Newport, a seaside town bursting with superlatives. Home to the International Tennis Hall of Fame, America’s first polo club, and infamous immigrant industrialist from the Gilded Age including the Astors and the Vanderbilts, who financed the building of a young America. It even boasts the oldest operating restaurant in the U.S., The White Horse Tavern, which has been serving guests since 1673. However, older still is beautiful Boston, dubbed the Athens of America, that’s built upon almost 400 years of academia and culture. The city’s wharves whisper of tea parties, its libraries of revolutionary greats, and its Freedom Trail rings out with the call to the brave. Go behind-the-scenes inside the Old North Church, Paul Revere’s House, and Bunker Hill Monument. Visit the JFK Presidential Library & Museum to relive America’s “Camelot.” In Halifax, the capital of Nova Scotia, rooted in Celtic, Acadian, and African cultures along with the largest number of lighthouses of any Canadian province. Head to pretty Peggy’s Cove to see the most photographed lighthouse in the country then crack open a ruby lobster in the surrounding fishing village. For two days, we follow the “whale route” of the St. Lawrence River where 13 species of marine mammals feast of the plentiful krill. Enticing, enchanting, Quebec City calls with her 400-year-old Vieux-Quebec (Old Town), an impeccable UNESCO site, that still ripples with life along meandering cobbled streets and the green-cooper turreted Chateau Frontenac. Extend you Quebecois immersion in the City of Saints, Montréal, where the celebrated Golden Square Mile awaits with impeccable Victorian-era buildings bursting with French boutiques, Parisian-style bistros, magnificent McGill University and the stately Montréal Museum of Fine Arts.

Date 16/10/2023
Location At Sea
In
Out

From New York, the city of steeples, to Quebec City, “la vieille capitale”, North America is blessed with more than 400 years of European influence. New York City, originally founded by the Dutch as New Amsterdam and gifted the Statue of Liberty from France, now offers the world the 9/11 Memorial & Museum that honours hope, resilience, and unity for all future generations. Fall foliage calls us to the wealthy summer playground of Newport, a seaside town bursting with superlatives. Home to the International Tennis Hall of Fame, America’s first polo club, and infamous immigrant industrialist from the Gilded Age including the Astors and the Vanderbilts, who financed the building of a young America. It even boasts the oldest operating restaurant in the U.S., The White Horse Tavern, which has been serving guests since 1673. However, older still is beautiful Boston, dubbed the Athens of America, that’s built upon almost 400 years of academia and culture. The city’s wharves whisper of tea parties, its libraries of revolutionary greats, and its Freedom Trail rings out with the call to the brave. Go behind-the-scenes inside the Old North Church, Paul Revere’s House, and Bunker Hill Monument. Visit the JFK Presidential Library & Museum to relive America’s “Camelot.” In Halifax, the capital of Nova Scotia, rooted in Celtic, Acadian, and African cultures along with the largest number of lighthouses of any Canadian province. Head to pretty Peggy’s Cove to see the most photographed lighthouse in the country then crack open a ruby lobster in the surrounding fishing village. For two days, we follow the “whale route” of the St. Lawrence River where 13 species of marine mammals feast of the plentiful krill. Enticing, enchanting, Quebec City calls with her 400-year-old Vieux-Quebec (Old Town), an impeccable UNESCO site, that still ripples with life along meandering cobbled streets and the green-cooper turreted Chateau Frontenac. Extend you Quebecois immersion in the City of Saints, Montréal, where the celebrated Golden Square Mile awaits with impeccable Victorian-era buildings bursting with French boutiques, Parisian-style bistros, magnificent McGill University and the stately Montréal Museum of Fine Arts.

Date 17/10/2023
Location Halifax, Canada
In 10:00
Out 20:00

From New York, the city of steeples, to Quebec City, “la vieille capitale”, North America is blessed with more than 400 years of European influence. New York City, originally founded by the Dutch as New Amsterdam and gifted the Statue of Liberty from France, now offers the world the 9/11 Memorial & Museum that honours hope, resilience, and unity for all future generations. Fall foliage calls us to the wealthy summer playground of Newport, a seaside town bursting with superlatives. Home to the International Tennis Hall of Fame, America’s first polo club, and infamous immigrant industrialist from the Gilded Age including the Astors and the Vanderbilts, who financed the building of a young America. It even boasts the oldest operating restaurant in the U.S., The White Horse Tavern, which has been serving guests since 1673. However, older still is beautiful Boston, dubbed the Athens of America, that’s built upon almost 400 years of academia and culture. The city’s wharves whisper of tea parties, its libraries of revolutionary greats, and its Freedom Trail rings out with the call to the brave. Go behind-the-scenes inside the Old North Church, Paul Revere’s House, and Bunker Hill Monument. Visit the JFK Presidential Library & Museum to relive America’s “Camelot.” In Halifax, the capital of Nova Scotia, rooted in Celtic, Acadian, and African cultures along with the largest number of lighthouses of any Canadian province. Head to pretty Peggy’s Cove to see the most photographed lighthouse in the country then crack open a ruby lobster in the surrounding fishing village. For two days, we follow the “whale route” of the St. Lawrence River where 13 species of marine mammals feast of the plentiful krill. Enticing, enchanting, Quebec City calls with her 400-year-old Vieux-Quebec (Old Town), an impeccable UNESCO site, that still ripples with life along meandering cobbled streets and the green-cooper turreted Chateau Frontenac. Extend you Quebecois immersion in the City of Saints, Montréal, where the celebrated Golden Square Mile awaits with impeccable Victorian-era buildings bursting with French boutiques, Parisian-style bistros, magnificent McGill University and the stately Montréal Museum of Fine Arts.

Date 18/10/2023
Location At Sea
In
Out

From New York, the city of steeples, to Quebec City, “la vieille capitale”, North America is blessed with more than 400 years of European influence. New York City, originally founded by the Dutch as New Amsterdam and gifted the Statue of Liberty from France, now offers the world the 9/11 Memorial & Museum that honours hope, resilience, and unity for all future generations. Fall foliage calls us to the wealthy summer playground of Newport, a seaside town bursting with superlatives. Home to the International Tennis Hall of Fame, America’s first polo club, and infamous immigrant industrialist from the Gilded Age including the Astors and the Vanderbilts, who financed the building of a young America. It even boasts the oldest operating restaurant in the U.S., The White Horse Tavern, which has been serving guests since 1673. However, older still is beautiful Boston, dubbed the Athens of America, that’s built upon almost 400 years of academia and culture. The city’s wharves whisper of tea parties, its libraries of revolutionary greats, and its Freedom Trail rings out with the call to the brave. Go behind-the-scenes inside the Old North Church, Paul Revere’s House, and Bunker Hill Monument. Visit the JFK Presidential Library & Museum to relive America’s “Camelot.” In Halifax, the capital of Nova Scotia, rooted in Celtic, Acadian, and African cultures along with the largest number of lighthouses of any Canadian province. Head to pretty Peggy’s Cove to see the most photographed lighthouse in the country then crack open a ruby lobster in the surrounding fishing village. For two days, we follow the “whale route” of the St. Lawrence River where 13 species of marine mammals feast of the plentiful krill. Enticing, enchanting, Quebec City calls with her 400-year-old Vieux-Quebec (Old Town), an impeccable UNESCO site, that still ripples with life along meandering cobbled streets and the green-cooper turreted Chateau Frontenac. Extend you Quebecois immersion in the City of Saints, Montréal, where the celebrated Golden Square Mile awaits with impeccable Victorian-era buildings bursting with French boutiques, Parisian-style bistros, magnificent McGill University and the stately Montréal Museum of Fine Arts.

Date 19/10/2023
Location Scenic sailing at the Gulf of St. Lawrence
In
Out

From New York, the city of steeples, to Quebec City, “la vieille capitale”, North America is blessed with more than 400 years of European influence. New York City, originally founded by the Dutch as New Amsterdam and gifted the Statue of Liberty from France, now offers the world the 9/11 Memorial & Museum that honours hope, resilience, and unity for all future generations. Fall foliage calls us to the wealthy summer playground of Newport, a seaside town bursting with superlatives. Home to the International Tennis Hall of Fame, America’s first polo club, and infamous immigrant industrialist from the Gilded Age including the Astors and the Vanderbilts, who financed the building of a young America. It even boasts the oldest operating restaurant in the U.S., The White Horse Tavern, which has been serving guests since 1673. However, older still is beautiful Boston, dubbed the Athens of America, that’s built upon almost 400 years of academia and culture. The city’s wharves whisper of tea parties, its libraries of revolutionary greats, and its Freedom Trail rings out with the call to the brave. Go behind-the-scenes inside the Old North Church, Paul Revere’s House, and Bunker Hill Monument. Visit the JFK Presidential Library & Museum to relive America’s “Camelot.” In Halifax, the capital of Nova Scotia, rooted in Celtic, Acadian, and African cultures along with the largest number of lighthouses of any Canadian province. Head to pretty Peggy’s Cove to see the most photographed lighthouse in the country then crack open a ruby lobster in the surrounding fishing village. For two days, we follow the “whale route” of the St. Lawrence River where 13 species of marine mammals feast of the plentiful krill. Enticing, enchanting, Quebec City calls with her 400-year-old Vieux-Quebec (Old Town), an impeccable UNESCO site, that still ripples with life along meandering cobbled streets and the green-cooper turreted Chateau Frontenac. Extend you Quebecois immersion in the City of Saints, Montréal, where the celebrated Golden Square Mile awaits with impeccable Victorian-era buildings bursting with French boutiques, Parisian-style bistros, magnificent McGill University and the stately Montréal Museum of Fine Arts.

Date 20/10/2023
Location Quebec
In 07:00
Out

From New York, the city of steeples, to Quebec City, “la vieille capitale”, North America is blessed with more than 400 years of European influence. New York City, originally founded by the Dutch as New Amsterdam and gifted the Statue of Liberty from France, now offers the world the 9/11 Memorial & Museum that honours hope, resilience, and unity for all future generations. Fall foliage calls us to the wealthy summer playground of Newport, a seaside town bursting with superlatives. Home to the International Tennis Hall of Fame, America’s first polo club, and infamous immigrant industrialist from the Gilded Age including the Astors and the Vanderbilts, who financed the building of a young America. It even boasts the oldest operating restaurant in the U.S., The White Horse Tavern, which has been serving guests since 1673. However, older still is beautiful Boston, dubbed the Athens of America, that’s built upon almost 400 years of academia and culture. The city’s wharves whisper of tea parties, its libraries of revolutionary greats, and its Freedom Trail rings out with the call to the brave. Go behind-the-scenes inside the Old North Church, Paul Revere’s House, and Bunker Hill Monument. Visit the JFK Presidential Library & Museum to relive America’s “Camelot.” In Halifax, the capital of Nova Scotia, rooted in Celtic, Acadian, and African cultures along with the largest number of lighthouses of any Canadian province. Head to pretty Peggy’s Cove to see the most photographed lighthouse in the country then crack open a ruby lobster in the surrounding fishing village. For two days, we follow the “whale route” of the St. Lawrence River where 13 species of marine mammals feast of the plentiful krill. Enticing, enchanting, Quebec City calls with her 400-year-old Vieux-Quebec (Old Town), an impeccable UNESCO site, that still ripples with life along meandering cobbled streets and the green-cooper turreted Chateau Frontenac. Extend you Quebecois immersion in the City of Saints, Montréal, where the celebrated Golden Square Mile awaits with impeccable Victorian-era buildings bursting with French boutiques, Parisian-style bistros, magnificent McGill University and the stately Montréal Museum of Fine Arts.

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