Sail To Iceland With Ponant’s Luxury Expedition Ship Le Bellot In Style

by | Jul 30, 2020 | At Leisure

From a multisensory underwater lounge that enables guests to comfortably experience the surrounding subaquatic world to enjoying a relaxed environment onboard, Ponant’s newly launched Le Bellot starts voyages to Iceland.

More than ever, luxury cruise fans are eager to return to sailing – provided all the safety measures have been put in place. For destinations far away from cities, how about exploring the shoreland of Iceland in a luxurious cruise?

The French cruise operator Ponant, a world leader in luxury expeditions, is all set to resume cruising. Starting from July till August 2020, Ponant is launching a series of all-new expedition cruises circumnavigating Iceland. Each cruise will start and conclude in Reykjavik. The seven voyages will showcase the brand-new Explorer Class luxury expedition ship, Le Bellot – the fifth in a series of six new Explorer class ships.

The 180-guest Le Bellot will explore the coast and shoreline of Iceland during 7-night itineraries revealing the dramatic glaciers, fjords, waterfalls, and volcanoes of the mythic Nordic island nation.

Highlights of this Icelandic itinerary include Vatnajökull National Park, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, and crossing the Arctic Circle to observe whales, orcas, seals, and Atlantic puffins that make up some of the wildlife in this remote region.

A team of naturalist guides will be on board to share their knowledge of the fauna and flora of the regions visited. The expedition will also include zodiac outings, hikes, volcanic beaches, rugged cliffs, glaciers, icebergs, and natural warm water springs.

Realising the need to be ecologically responsible, Le Bellot represents a new generation of cruise ships featuring sophisticated technology and refined design. Le Bellot comes with only 92 staterooms and suites, all with a balcony or a private terrace.

Inspired by Jules Verne, the ship is equipped with a multisensory lounge that enables guests to comfortably experience the surrounding subaquatic world to enjoying a relaxed environment onboard, the luxurious ship offers a civilised way for guests to explore remarkably remote destinations in comfort and style.

Safety First: Sail with Confidence

To successfully prepare to sail back and resume services, Ponant has collaborated with the Institut Hospitalo-Universitaire (IHU) Méditerranée Infection of Marseilles, one of the world’s leading centres in the field of infectious diseases, as well as with the Battalion of Marine Firemen of Marseilles and Bureau Veritas, a world leader in testing, inspection and certification (TIC).

The fleet is equipped with high-level hospitals aboard the ships, made up of a state-of-the-art medical infrastructure (radiology, biology and even resuscitation devices, etc.) that goes beyond all current touristic standards. An expert medical team made up of at least one doctor and a nurse, available around the clock, are present in these hospitals.

Ponant relies on the provision and maintenance of a “Covid-Safe” area around its ships, a hermetic sanitary bubble, thanks to the rollout of three layers of shields: stringent onboard access conditions, rigorous sanitary protocols throughout the cruise as well as daily checks (guests, equipment, ships). It includes the implementation of a health check for 100% of the people on board (guests and crew members) and filtering and disinfection at boarding in a guest circuit that has been entirely redesigned for before, during and after the cruise.

In addition, upon arrival at the airport in Iceland, all passengers must take a PCR serology test and obtain a negative result to gain access to the vessel. ◼

Subscribe to the latest edition now by clicking here.

 

© This article was first published online in July 2020 – World Travel Magazine.

Newsletter

The World Cup Just Emptied the Mediterranean

Everyone’s chasing the World Cup. Sixteen cities are packed for the tournament. Folegandros has a table, the Aeolians have ferry seats, Lisbon will give you Belcanto. Move while it lasts.

Inside Summer 2026: The Festival Black Book

The summer of 2026 is the kind that justifies the year's...

The Long Way Round: Malaysia, Dubai, and Staying Put

On three weeks in Malaysia, a summer in Dubai, and what you learn about a place when you stop being a tourist in it

Mid-June, Mayfair, and the 9.30 Light

Frida at Tate Modern, a Mexican pavilion in Kensington Gardens, the T20 World Cup at Lord’s, Wimbledon next door, and daylight holding till half past nine.

Three Desert Hotels Where Heat Is the Design Brief

At 45°C, three desert hotels — Bulgari Dubai, Qasr Al Sarab in the Liwa, and Royal Mansour Marrakech — show why climate-responsive design is remembered, not invented.

The Match We Watched in a Stranger’s Bar in Barcelona

On travelling alone, the universal language of a shared roar, and the night a foreign city stopped feeling foreign

Dinner at No O’Clock Under the Midnight Sun

Midsummer in the far north, where the sun refuses to set and time loosens its grip

The Dungchen Sounds First at Hemis Ladakh

The first sound is wrong, somehow. You expect drums or...

Why July Belongs to the South Pacific

The world’s most spread-out paradise is closer than you think — and right now is when it’s at its best.

Ten Days When Malta Stops Being Small

You can cross Valletta on foot in about twenty minutes,...

Related Articles

The World Cup Just Emptied the Mediterranean

The World Cup Just Emptied the Mediterranean

Everyone’s chasing the World Cup. Sixteen cities are packed for the tournament. Folegandros has a table, the Aeolians have ferry seats, Lisbon will give you Belcanto. Move while it lasts.

Mid-June, Mayfair, and the 9.30 Light

Mid-June, Mayfair, and the 9.30 Light

Frida at Tate Modern, a Mexican pavilion in Kensington Gardens, the T20 World Cup at Lord’s, Wimbledon next door, and daylight holding till half past nine.