Step aboard full-scale replicas of the ships that changed world history — Magellan's Victoria, Darwin's Beagle, and Shackleton's James Caird — then explore Punta Arenas's extraordinary Salesian Museum chronicling the lost cultures of Patagonia's indigenous peoples.
What to expect
Begin at the Nao Victoria Museum on the Punta Arenas waterfront, where you board three meticulously crafted full-scale ship replicas at anchor. Your historian guide narrates the voyages with cinematic detail — the terror of the strait, the survival of Shackleton's crew. A short transfer brings you to the Salesian Museum, whose vaulted halls hold natural history collections, indigenous textiles, ceremonial objects, and photographic archives of the now-vanished Fuegian peoples. The final stop is the iconic Plaza de Armas and the gilded Braun-Menéndez mansion, testament to the extraordinary wool-baron wealth that built this city.
Good to know
Easily achievable in 3–4 hours, making it perfect for shorter port calls. The Nao Victoria Museum is a short walk or taxi from the pier. Book a private guide through a local operator such as Tangol or tourHQ for a curated narrative experience rather than self-guided. Open daily in the austral summer season.
Sail there
Luxury cruises that call at Punta Arenas — book through us, the fare is identical and your concierge stays on your side.