VISIT ICELAND
Sculpted by fire and ice, Iceland is a land of striking contrasts. Glaciers stretch across volcanic plains, waterfalls plunge into ancient canyons and geothermal energy rises from deep within the earth. It feels like another planet.
This Nordic island is working to balance the benefits of tourism with the need to protect its fragile ecosystems. Tools like the sustainability balance check help monitor both social and environmental impacts to ensure travellers can experience Iceland’s raw beauty in ways that actively support its preservation.
More considered ways to explore this remarkable landscape include small-scale whale-watching tours led by marine biologists, guided glacier walks prioritising safety and stewardship and bird-watching excursions along protected coasts.
Here, tourism and conservation are part of the same conversation. Iceland continues to face environmental challenges, including wildlife disturbance, wear and tear on natural sites and infrastructure strain. Through conscious travel, visitors help protect Iceland’s extraordinary landscapes while supporting the communities who call them home.
Iceland is raw, otherworldly and deeply humbling. It’s perfect for those who want to explore epic landscapes and meaningfully reconnect with the natural world.
Lottie Cameron, Impact Journey Specialist
Are you curious about our natural world? Bespoke journeys are entirely tailor-made to each guest, based on their interests, passions and practical travel plans. Speak to our specialist team to begin planning your private journey to South Africa.
Our Impact Pledge is our commitment to support the advancement of pioneering conservation projects through direct donations with every journey. In 2023, and our second calendar year, we raised and directed over $50,000 to grassroot conversation projects. We do this by created hosted and private conservation travel experiences in South Africa and around the world.
This extraordinary wetland, the largest in Argentina, is home to 30% of the biodiversity in the country including endangered species such as the pampas and marsh deer, the maned wolf and grassland birds like the strange-tailed tyrant.
In 2005, what was to become one of the largest rewilding programs in the Americas was started, with the goal of restoring keystone species that had been extirpated from Iberá through hunting and habitat loss and were extinct in the region, the Province or, in some cases, the country.
As the rewilding program developed, the cultural identity of Iberá began to recover alongside the ecosystems and natural processes, impacting a total population of 100,000 people who surround the park.
Today, Iberá stands as one of the world’s most successful ongoing conservation missions.
Exclusive access to the world’s top snow leopard trackers combined with an intimate photography masterclass by distinguished photographer, filmmaker and conservationist, Mattias Klum.
3rd – 14th December, 2025