Continue Your Journey

9 Day Ireland & the Celtic Shores

Departure Date
May 17, 2027
Multiple Dates Available
Supplier
Adventure Canada
Destination
Europe
Ship
Ocean Victory
Multiple

14 Night Alaska CRAZY DEAL!

Choose your departure date

Wildlife, Culture & Coastal Wonder

Discover the Celtic shores of Scotland, Ireland, Wales, and the Isle of Man on this immersive expedition with Adventure Canada. Journey through rugged coastlines, ancient cultures, and spectacular natural wonders—from the dramatic cliffs of Pembrokeshire Coast National Park and the serene beauty of Killarney National Park to the iconic basalt columns of Giant's Causeway. Explore remote islands, charming seaside communities, and rich Celtic heritage on this unforgettable nine-day adventure.

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Ask About Great Single Pricing

*14 nights in the same stateroom: + $100pp (double occupancy) 

*14 nights in the same stateroom: +$200pp (single occupancy)

*There are only a limited amount of staterooms available on each sailing where moving is not going to be necessary.

Includes:

Your Cruise

  • 9 Day Ireland & the Celtic Shores Expedition Cruise
  • Taxes

Adventure Canada Booking Bonus

  • Passage aboard the Ocean Victory
  • Applicable taxes and credit card fees
  • Complimentary expedition jacket
  • Special access permits, entry, and park fees
  • Expert expedition team
  • Guided activities
  • Sightseeing and community visits
  • All Zodiac excursions
  • Port fees
  • Pre-departure materials
  • Educational program
  • Interactive workshops
  • Evening entertainment
  • All shipboard meals
  • Complimentary wine, beer, and soft drinks are served with dinner
  • Wi-Fi access (basic service included)
Not Included:
  • Commercial and charter flights
  • Program enhancements/optional excursions
  • Gratuities
  • Personal expenses
  • Mandatory medical evacuation insurance
  • Additional expenses in the event of delays or itinerary changes
  • Possible fuel surcharges and administrative fees
  • Pre- and post-trip hotel accommodation
  • Kayak program
  • Premium internet access available at an additional cost
CruisePlus Perks
Priority Access

» Priority check-in

» Priority access to specialty restaurant reservations

» Priority line at the Guest Services desk

» Priority line at the Shore Excursions desk

» Priority access to tenders ashore in select ports

» Priority disembarkation

Premium Dining

» Expanded 24-hour room service breakfast menu

» Pinnacle Class ships: Private dining venue for breakfast and dinner with an expanded menu

» All other ships: Priority seating in the Dining Room for breakfast and dinner with an expanded menu

Exclusive Amenities

» Complimentary stateroom upgrade

» Dedicated concierge service

» Welcome glass of sparkling wine on embarkation day

» Premium bathrobes

» Club Orange keycard

» Exclusive Club Orange tote bag (one per stateroom)

More information

Pricing
Call for pricing. 1.800.854.9664
Pricing is per person, based on double occupancy and in CAD. Additional terms & conditions apply.
Premium Suite Junior Suite Balcony Suite Superior Balcony Cabin Balcony Cabin French Balcony Cabin
Cruise Only 21,730 18,725 17,295 15,150 14,435 13,505
Highlights & Sightseeing

Glasgow Cathedral

The only cathedral in Scotland to have survived the Reformation intact, this 12th-century medieval church houses one of the finest post-war collections of stained glass windows in Britain.

Glasgow

Glasgow is a port city in the western Lowlands of Scotland, on the River Clyde. It is renowned for its Victorian and Art Nouveau architecture, a priceless legacy of the city's prosperity due to trade and shipbuilding from the 18th to the 20th centuries. The Scottish Opera, Scottish Ballet, and National Theatre of Scotland are among the cultural organisations that call it home today. There are also renowned museums and a lively music scene.

Itinerary

Day 1: Troon/Glasgow, Scotland

Setting Sail from the Clyde

Harbour lights shimmer in the distance as you embark in Troon, where ship and sea meet the spirit of Scotland’s west coast. Beyond the gangway, the rolling Ayrshire hills and echoes of Glasgow’s maritime past set the tone for a voyage shaped by music, story, and salt air. As the vessel slips from the pier, bagpipe strains and seabirds’ cries mingle—a prelude to the journey ahead, the first notes of a Celtic tune carried across the tide.

Day 2: Isle of Man

The Island of Ancient Rhythms

A solitary land rising from the Irish Sea, the Isle of Man hums with ancient rhythms—and holds a rare distinction as the world’s only entire nation designated a UNESCO Biosphere Reserve. Here, natural beauty and cultural heritage are deeply entwined: rolling hills meet rugged coastlines, and stories flow as freely as the tides.

Celtic crosses tilt in quiet churchyards, while the Manx language lingers in local song and story. Wander narrow cobbled lanes where brightly painted doors open onto tiny shops, children’s laughter drifts through the salt air, and the scent of fresh kippers mingles with baking and sea brine. There’s a music to the wind here—a low, steady drone beneath the flight of seabirds, a melody of independence and endurance.

Day 3: Pembrokeshire Coast National Park, Wales

Cliffs of Colour and Song

Explore the UK’s only coastal national park, where seaside cliffs blaze with wildflowers and waves pound against sandstone headlands. Seal heads bob in the surf, and the cries of choughs echo through the wind—a natural symphony shaped by sea and stone. Every turn reveals another view of raw beauty and living coastline, where the elements are in constant conversation.

Ashore, wander through harbour towns alive with the scent of salt and smoked fish, the hum of conversation in Welsh and English, and shop windows filled with handwoven wool and carved driftwood. Here, Welsh poetry and maritime craft endure. Beneath it all runs the quiet strength of place—steadfast, grounded, and proud, like the pulse of a harp’s deep string echoed in the lilt of Welsh voices and the bilingual signs that mark the streets.

Day 4: South Coast of Ireland

Harbours and Headlands

Along Ireland’s southern coast, rolling headlands give way to sheltered bays alive with seabirds and seals. We’ll cruise by Clear Island (Cape Clear)—the country’s southernmost inhabited island—where rugged cliffs, lighthouses, and green slopes reveal the wild heart of West Cork. Weather permitting, a Zodiac cruise may bring us closer to seabird colonies and quiet coves shaped by wind and tide.

Continuing into Bantry Bay, we’ll visit Ilnacullin (Garinish Island), home to one of Ireland’s most exquisite gardens. Here, subtropical blooms and sculpted terraces flourish in a sheltered microclimate. As we trace the shores of the Iveragh Peninsula—better known as the Ring of Kerry—the landscape unfolds in layers of beauty: sweeping coastlines, tranquil villages, and stone ruins that speak softly of Ireland’s deep and enduring past.

Day 5: Killarney National Park

The Jewel in Kerry’s Crown

Mist clings to the oak woods and high passes of Killarney, the Jewel in Kerry’s Crown. A UNESCO Biosphere Reserve, Killarney National Park stretches from the foot of the Macgillycuddy Reeks—the highest mountain range in Ireland—to the outskirts of town, encompassing lakes, mountains, and plains. Here, the land feels alive with myth—where red deer move through mossy glades, and lakes mirror the shifting light. The forest seems to breathe in rhythm, a quiet harmony between water, wood, and wind. You may wander beneath ancient yews or listen to the soft hush of water beneath the trees. In Killarney, time slows; the tune softens; the world feels older, gentler, profoundly green.

Day 6: Aran Isles

Stones, Stories, and Sea

On the edge of Ireland’s western sea lie the Aran Isles, windswept, enduring, and geologically unique. Set in Galway Bay, these limestone islands—Inis Mór, Inis Meáin, and Inisheer—enjoy a temperate climate and host an extraordinary diversity of plant and animal life. The Arans are bastions of Irish culture, where a large proportion of the population are Gaelic speakers. Stone walls run like script across the fields, and the Aran sweater, homespun of local wool in intricate patterns, remains a symbol of island identity. You might explore Dún Aonghasa, a prehistoric hill fort perched on a 100‑metre cliff edge on Inis Mór—an archaeological wonder and one of Ireland’s most significant ancient sites. Here, language, land, and sea are interwoven—a harmony as enduring as the Atlantic itself.

Day 7: Tory Island

Art and Community

Toraigh (Tory Island) lies nearly fifteen kilometres off the northwest coast of County Donegal, where Gaelic remains the main spoken language. Since the 1950s, the island has been home to a small community of artists and musicians, with its own art gallery and a tradition of warm hospitality. Conversations here feel like songs, and every visit carries the sense of being welcomed into something rare—a community defined by creativity, resilience, and warmth, its heartbeat kept in time with the sea’s quiet measure.

Day 8: Giant’s Causeway, Northern Ireland

Steps of Fire and Legend

A UNESCO World Heritage Site, the Giant’s Causeway is a geological wonder where about 40,000 interlocking basalt columns rise from the surf like steps built by legend. Formed by ancient volcanic eruptions, these stones lead from the coastal cliffs down into the North Sea. The Causeway invites both awe and reflection—its symmetry the work of time, fire, and the patient sea, and its myths tied to the hero Fionn mac Cumhaill. The air vibrates with the deep hum of the Atlantic, a bass note beneath the cry of kittiwakes. Nature’s artistry and human story entwine here, composing a quiet symphony—the harmony of earth and ocean.

Day 9: Troon/Glasgow, Scotland

Journey’s End

Returning to Troon, the coastline greets you like an old song revisited. There’s a fullness to the homeward passage—the sound of waves against hull, the camaraderie of new friends, and a deepened sense of familiarity with these Celtic shores. The voyage ends where it began, its melody resolved but still echoing with in—the refrain of sea, story, and kinship carried onward.

Pricing is per person, in CAD and based on double occupancy. Additional terms & conditions apply.
Travel Insurance
For your protection, we strongly recommend that you purchase trip cancellation and medical insurance through Manulife.

However, no representation or description of the protection made by CruisePlus Management Ltd to you, constitutes a binding assurance or promise about the protection. We (CruisePlus) are not an insurance company and we do not have the responsibility for ensuring adherence to the insurance terms & conditions, submission, payment or adjustment of claims.

We strongly suggest you read through the insurance information provided upon purchase and email us with any questions.

Covid-19 is considered a known event and exclusions apply for most, if not all policies.
Terms & Conditions

New bookings only. Fares are per person in the currency noted (CAD), based on double occupancy, are capacity controlled, subject to availability at the time of booking and may be withdrawn without notice. Optional supplier charges may apply and are not included. Amenities, if offered, are available for the first two in a stateroom only & based on double occupancy unless specifically stated otherwise.

Hotel inventory is capacity controlled, and this offer may be pulled at any time without notice; Future Cruise Credits may not be combinable or be only partially combinable with advertised promotion; cruise line insurance may not be available to purchase on advertised offer.

Please note, this website may not reflect changes to offers in real time. Therefore, it is important you contact us in order to receive to a quote.

CruisePlus reserves the right to correct any human or electronic errors throughout the website at anytime. Before you book, be aware of Covid-19 restrictions and clearly understand insurance terms and conditions.

Offer Last Updated: May 19, 2026

$
13,505
French Balcony Cabin
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1.800.854.9664
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