Guides, gear, and everything in between
Getting yourself to Greenland already takes some planning. Once you land, that’s where your job ends.
Your guides know this terrain inside out, whether that’s years spent leading expeditions across these exact fjords or a career built on Arctic trekking elsewhere. That knowledge isn’t a nice-to-have out here, it’s the whole reason things run smoothly. They’re the ones who know which river crossing to tackle at 7am while the current’s still gentle, where the musk oxen tend to graze, and how to rework a route on the fly when the weather turns, which, out here, it does more often than not.
From there, they take care of the rest of it too:
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- Tents, huts, or a boat cabin, depending on the route
- Meals, cooked over a camp stove or plated on deck
- Boat transfers between fjords that no road will ever reach
- Permits, safety gear, and satellite communication for the truly remote stretches
You show up. They handle the logistics of moving a group through some of the least forgiving terrain on the planet. All that’s left for you to do is hike.