30 NIGHT Southeast Asia CRUISE
Wed Sep 17th 2025
Onboard Seven Seas Explorer
Itinerary Summary
Vancouver, Ketchikan, Sitka, Seward, Kodiak, Dutch Harbor, Kushiro/JAPAN, Hakodate/JAPAN, Sendai/JAPAN, Shimizu/JAPAN, Kobe/JAPAN (Overnight), Kochi/JAPAN, Hiroshima/JAPAN, Kyongju/S. KOREA, Nagasaki/JAPAN, Tokyo/JAPAN
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G2
Deluxe Veranda Suite
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F2
Superior Suite
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SS
Seven Seas Suite
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ES
Suite
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MS
Master Suite
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RS
Regent Suite
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Itinerary

Day 1 : Vancouver

7:00 AM - 8:00 PM

In Vancouver, you're never out of sight of towering peaks--or of the sea. It is a prosperous city adorned with flowers lining the streets and lush greenery like Stanley Park. Museums offer fine collections of the dramatic Northwest native arts. Vancouver's Chinatown is the second-largest in the world. The waterfront Gastown district recalls the city's colorful past as a premier Pacific port since the days of the Clipper ships.

Day 2 : At Sea

Day 3 : Ketchikan

7:00 AM - 5:00 PM

Ketchikan is the salmon capital of the world. The canneries are busy, and the stream below Creek Street's rustic boardwalk bustles with life. Visit the ancient grove of Totem Bight, the largest collection of authentic totem poles anywhere. Make a flight to nearby Misty Fjords--a breathtaking vista of Alaska's unspoiled wilderness and America's newest national monument, or, try a little salmon fishing.

Day 4 : Sitka

9:00 AM - 6:00 PM

When Alaska belonged to Russia, Sitka was the capital and center for its fur trading empire. Today, Sitka's Russian heritage and magnificent setting make it an enchanting destination. The city features a harbor studded with islands, a backdrop of mountains, and spectacular Mt. Edgecumbe, a volcano often compared to Japan's Mt. Fuji. Sitka displays its past in such attractions as St. Michael's Cathedral with its striking onion-shaped dome, the Russian Blockhouse, and world famous New Archangel Dancers. Visit the Historic Park, with a ruined Indian fort where Tlingit Indians battled Russian settlers in 1804.

Day 5 : At Sea

Day 6 : Seward

8:00 AM - 6:00 PM

The city of Seward is located in southern coast Alaska in Kenai Peninsula Borough at the top of the Resurrection Bay. The city of Seward was founded back in 1902 as the end of the Alaska Rail Road which was built 1915-1923. The name of Seward was derived by Abraham Lincoln's secretary of state, who arbitrated the purchase of Alaska from Russia in 1867. The city of Seward suffered from 90% of the waterfront industry due to an earthquake in 1964. Due to this earthquake, six feet of the shoreline dropped along with the harbor and fuel docks.

Day 7 : Kodiak

8:00 AM - 5:00 PM

Day 8 : At Sea

Day 9 : Dutch Harbor

8:00 AM - 5:00 PM

Day 10 : At Sea

Day 11 : At Sea

Day 12 : At Sea

Day 13 : At Sea

Day 14 : At Sea

Day 15 : At Sea

Day 16 : Kushiro/JAPAN

7:00 AM - 5:00 PM

Day 17 : Hakodate/JAPAN

8:00 AM - 4:00 PM

Day 18 : Sendai/JAPAN

9:30 AM - 5:30 PM

Day 19 : At Sea

Day 20 : At Sea

Day 21 : Shimizu/JAPAN

7:00 AM - 4:00 PM

Day 22 : Kobe/JAPAN

12:00 PM - --

Famous for its succulent Kobe beef and cosmopolitan flair, this booming port town sits between the Rokko Mountains and Osaka Bay. It contains a remarkable cultural mix of Swiss chalets, Moslem mosques and Russian Orthodox churches tucked between traditional Japanese buildings. A cable car ascends to the summit of Mount Rokko, a national park.

Day 23 : Kobe/JAPAN

-- - 7:00 PM

Famous for its succulent Kobe beef and cosmopolitan flair, this booming port town sits between the Rokko Mountains and Osaka Bay. It contains a remarkable cultural mix of Swiss chalets, Moslem mosques and Russian Orthodox churches tucked between traditional Japanese buildings. A cable car ascends to the summit of Mount Rokko, a national park.

Day 24 : Kochi/JAPAN

7:00 AM - 4:00 PM

Day 25 : Hiroshima/JAPAN

7:00 AM - 4:00 PM

Set on a bay in the Inland Sea, Hiroshima was the infamous site of the first atomic bomb explosion of August, 1945. But perhaps the best reason to visit Hiroshima is the enchanting island of Miyajima with its famous Itsukushima Shinto shrine, considered one of Japan's three most beautiful sights. Its famous torii stands just offshore, a tall, vermilion-colored symbol of Japan, which appears to float during high tide.

Day 26 : At Sea

Day 26 : Kyongju/S. KOREA

10:00 AM - 8:00 PM

Korea''s "museum without walls" is akin only to China in its depth and cultural wonder. From Pusan, you can journey to the ancient Silla capital of Kyongju, a dynasty which reigned in Korea for almost a thousand years. Today this small provincial town is virtually a museum without walls, dotted with many splendid ruins. Nearby, the forested mountains and valleys shelter hundreds of beautiful Buddhist shrines including the renowned Sokkuram Grotto, and Tongdosa and Pulguksa Temples. Pusan is also a shopper''s mecca and Korea''s vital southern link to Japanese and American trade.

Day 27 : Nagasaki/JAPAN

8:00 AM - 6:00 PM

One of Japan's most historic cities, Nagasaki was a major port, trading with the Portuguese and Dutch in the 16th century. You can still see this colonial legacy in the brick buildings, old forts, canals and curving cobblestone streets. On a hill overlooking the bay, beautiful Glover Mansion, the setting of Madame Butterfly, is typical of the fine homes built by wealthy foreign residents. But Nagasaki's ties with Korea and China are equally apparent in the famous Chinese temple, a large Chinese colony and the numerous fine Korean and Chinese restaurants.

Day 28 : At Sea

Day 29 : At Sea

Day 30 : At Sea

Day 31 : Tokyo/JAPAN

7:00 AM - 7:00 PM

Huge department stores brim with shoppers, neon flashes from dusk to dawn, and the entire world pays heed to the slightest fluctuation on the Nikkei Index. From the Imperial Palace and Meiji Shrine to the fabled Ginza district, 20th-century Tokyo is an intriguing composite of East and West. Yuppies sporting Walkmen bow formally in greeting. Women in kimonos and Dior suits stroll side-by-side. Geishas play samisens while disc jockeys play the Top Forty. Japanese houses of wood and paper stand in the shadow of towering steel and mortar. Not far away, one of the world's most impressive sights soars 12,388 feet to its snow-clad peak: Mount Fuji, the majestic symbol of Japan.