Sichuan
Newfoundland
A Tour for the Alpine Garden Society
Breathtaking scenery is everywhere on Spitsbergen and starts as your flight descends through a glacier-hung valley to Longyearbyen’s airport. Glaciers and ice-caps are rent by dark ‘Spits’ or steep-sided mountains that give the island its name. It is almost as far north as you can get (comfortably!) and still be on land. With an area approximately that of the Netherlands and Belgium together and a population that would not fill a large British village Spitsbergen can rightly claim to be Europe’s largest wilderness!
A glacier snout is visible just two kilometres up the valley from our little hotel! The diminutive Svalbard race of Reindeer graze contentedly between buildings and you’ll likely soon catch sight of an Arctic Fox scurrying past the hotel. At the furthest extent of the Gulf Stream’s influence Spitsbergen has a surprising 180 species of flowering plant and virtually all can be found around Longyearbyen. Abundant Mountain Avens looks superb amidst the barren landscape. Another popular ‘townie’ is the beautiful endemic Svalbard Poppy Papaver dahlianum whose creamy-yellow flowers decorate lichen and sedge dotted turf throughout. Another beauty is the White Arctic Bell Heather Cassiope tetragona and this flowers prolifically by the hotel. Indeed Spitsbergen has two endemic poppies – we’ll also see scree-loving Papaver cornwallisense. Mounds of creamy Saxifraga cespitosa mixes with Saxifraga cernua and pretty Pedicularis hirsuta. In fact saxifrages are the most diverse genus here with fourteen species and we’ll encounter yellow hirculus and aizoides, tall hieracifolia, and tiny hyperborea. The endemic Saxifraga svalbardensis flowers with Dwarf Golden Saxifrage and Pygmy and Tundra Buttercups. In sheltered spots Boreal Jacob’s Ladder puts forth its exquisite blue blooms.
The braided channels and marshes that descend Adventdalen are home to some fabulous plants. Saxifraga platysepala has pretty yellow flowers hardly noticed because of the brilliant red runners that loop out from the leaf rosettes. The gorgeous white woolly red-flowered Pedicularis dasyantha blooms with Lapland, Snow and Sulphur-coloured Buttercups as well as the sweetly-scented creamy Svalbard Buttercup. Beautiful Red (we call them Grey, but here they really are red) Phalaropes feed along streams and we’ll encounter Arctic and possibly Long-tailed Skuas. Purple Braya flowers on dry flats with Saxifraga oppositifolia – the latter is quite possibly the commonest flowering plant on Spitsbergen and colours whole areas purple!
It is Little Auks that give Fuglefjella its name – tens of thousands of them fly back and forth to a breeding colony amid a huge boulder field. A dozen species of Draba occur on Spitsbergen and here we’ll encounter many of them – white daurica, subcapitata, nivalis and lactea and yellow alpina, micropetala, corymbosa and oxycarpa. There’s also the delightful little campion Silene uralensis with its pink-veined inflated calyx.
Dates and Prices
26th June - 2nd July 2025 (7 days)
* doesn't apply if you're willing to share and a room-mate can be arranged
Flowers and Arctic Landscapes. Also Birds.
The minimum is 4 and the maximum is 12.
All flights. All transport, meals and accommodation in Spitsbergen. Services of your leaders. Please note: drinks, tips, and items of a personal nature including insurance, are not included.
We stay at the five-star Funken Hotel which has lovely rooms and an exceptional restaurant. The views are quite sensational with mountains all around – these descend literally to the back door – and the main part of the town and bay is laid out below. Arctic Foxes, Reindeer and Snow Buntings can be seen from your room and Svalbard Poppies and Cassiope flower just metres from the door! There’s one night at a hotel near Oslo Airport outbound. All rooms on this tour have en suite facilities.
Fairly easy. Up to five or six miles a day though always at a slow pace, perfectly suited to photographers.
UK flights are direct return flights from Heathrow or Gatwick via Oslo to Longyearbyen. Other indirect routes from regional UK Airports* are available.
*these routes may incur a supplement.
Cold! Well actually not that cold, though temperatures will generally be in the range 0°C to 15°C. You will need to bring plenty of layers. Though rainfall (and sometimes snowfall) amounts are low, cloud cover and fog are not uncommon – you can expect some sunny weather as well.
Contact us to check if there is availability for the number of places you require. Click on the ‘Book this Tour’ button on this page to be taken to the online booking form or contact us and we will send one to you which you can complete and send back to us. You will receive confirmation of your place, and then a detailed information pack will be dispatched to you about twelve weeks before departure. This will contain up-to-date health information.