Explore the Depths of Greenland: Inuit heritage, Arctic wildlife, polar landscapes, and a path toward political autonomy. This is a journey into the true heart of the Arctic.
Inspired since childhood by the tales of the great polar explorers, Louis Rudd is the only man to have crossed Antarctica twice from coast to coast, leading teams and facing the most uninhabitable continent on the planet alone. His story is one of a dreamer who found his true home in snow and ice, proving that mental and physical strength can conquer the impossible.
In the far north of the planet, where day and night alternate in periods of months, lies the Svalbard archipelago. Under Norwegian protectorate since 1920, this group of islands combines an indomitable nature, a history full of exploration, and a peculiar political system.
The remains of Shackleton's Endurance, the ship that was engulfed by ice in 1915, were discovered in 2022 in the Weddell Sea. We propose an exclusive journey in the footsteps of the explorer to Antarctica.
Discover the story of Louise Arner Boyd, an American socialite who organized and led a boat expedition in 1928 to rescue explorer Roald Amundsen in the Arctic.
We interviewed Francesc Bailón, anthropologist, polar traveler, expert in Inuit culture, and someone who has completed more than 30 expeditions to the Arctic.
In 1845, Sir John Franklin's Arctic expedition disappeared without a trace. For 12 years, his wife, Lady Jane, financed numerous expeditions to determine what had happened to her husband.
This is the story of Josephine Peary, the first woman who took part in an expedition to the Arctic in 1891, lived with the Inuit, gave birth on the ice, and discovered that Greenland was an island.
Antarctica exerts a great attraction for those travelers who see this continent as perhaps the most remote and inhospitable destination on the planet. Let yourself be fascinated by this continent on a once-in-a-lifetime journey.
A luxury airship carrying 16 pioneering travelers will land at the geographic North Pole for the first time in history. This dream will soon become a reality.
In 1914, the explorer, Ernest Shackleton, wanted to cross Antarctica on a 2,900-kilometer-long journey across the frozen continent passing through the South Pole. The adventure became a tough challenge that would last more than 2 years.