
55 nightsFrom Buenos Aires22 ports of call
55-Day South Atlantic, West Coast of Africa & Spain
Seabourn · Seabourn Quest
Overview
A 55-night voyage aboard Seabourn Quest, departing Buenos Aires on 4 Mar 2028 and arriving in Lisbon, calling at 22 destinations along the way.
Buenos AiresTristan da CunhaNightingale IslandRichard's Bay, South AfricaMaputoDurbanMossel BayCape TownLuderitzWalvis BayLuandaSao TomeCotonouTakoradiDakarMindelo, Cape VerdeLas Palmas,Gran CanariaArrecife, Lanzarote, Canary IslandsCasablancaTangier, MoroccoCadizLisbon
Cabin prices
Live prices per person based on two sharing. Select a grade to see its fare options.
Loading live cabin prices…
Itinerary
55 nights · 57 ports of call- 1
Day 1 ·Buenos Aires, ArgentinaEmbark
4 Mar 2028Founded in 1536, Buenos Aires was administered by a Spanish viceroy for nearly three centuries before winning its independence in 1816. A sleepy port town for most of that time, it wasn't until the turn of the 20th century that the city finally emerged as an important shipping center. Today, Argentina's democratically elected government has made it South America's safest (and most expensive) country. This cosmopolitan city is characterized by broad boulevards with huge shade trees, beautiful residential districts, plazas containing monuments and fountains, interspersed with 20th-century high-rise buildings. It is a truly great walking city. - 2
Day 2 ·Buenos Aires, Argentina
5 Mar 2028Depart 17:00Founded in 1536, Buenos Aires was administered by a Spanish viceroy for nearly three centuries before winning its independence in 1816. A sleepy port town for most of that time, it wasn't until the turn of the 20th century that the city finally emerged as an important shipping center. Today, Argentina's democratically elected government has made it South America's safest (and most expensive) country. This cosmopolitan city is characterized by broad boulevards with huge shade trees, beautiful residential districts, plazas containing monuments and fountains, interspersed with 20th-century high-rise buildings. It is a truly great walking city. - 3
Day 3 ·At Sea
6 Mar 2028 - 4
Day 4 ·At Sea
7 Mar 2028 - 5
Day 5 ·At Sea
8 Mar 2028 - 6
Day 6 ·At Sea
9 Mar 2028 - 7
Day 7 ·At Sea
10 Mar 2028 - 8
Day 8 ·At Sea
11 Mar 2028 - 9
Day 9 ·Scenic Cruising Inaccessible Island
12 Mar 2028 - 9
Day 9 ·Tristan da Cunha, Saint Helena
12 Mar 2028Arrive 08:00Depart 18:00Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha is a British Overseas Territory located in the South Atlantic and consisting of the island of Saint Helena, Ascension Island and the archipelago of Tristan da Cunha including Gough Island. - 10
Day 10 ·Nightingale Island, St Helena
13 Mar 2028Arrive 07:00Depart 17:00Nightingale Island is an active volcanic island in the South Atlantic Ocean, 3 square kilometres in area, part of the Tristan da Cunha group of islands. They are administered by the United Kingdom as part of the overseas territory of Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha - 11
Day 11 ·At Sea
14 Mar 2028 - 12
Day 12 ·At Sea
15 Mar 2028 - 13
Day 13 ·At Sea
16 Mar 2028 - 14
Day 14 ·At Sea
17 Mar 2028 - 15
Day 15 ·At Sea
18 Mar 2028 - 16
Day 16 ·At Sea
19 Mar 2028 - 17
Day 17 ·Richards Bay, South Africa
20 Mar 2028Arrive 07:00Depart 17:00Richards Bay is in the province of KwaZulu-Natal, the traditional homeland of the Zulu people on the Indian Ocean coast. Not surprisingly, most visitors are attracted here by interest in the Zulu culture and the indigenous wildlife of the region. Richards Bay offers Seabourn guests opportunities to experience both. The Zulu Nyala Private Game Reserve is one option, for an evening including a game drive and a dinner on the reserve. The Dumazulu is a fascinating living museum of traditional Zulu life and culture, populated by members of the group and endorsed by the tribal authorities. Hluhluwe Umfolozi Game Reserve is famous for its population of rare white rhinos, while a cruise on Lake St. Lucia gives visitors a view of two of South Africa’s most notorious animals: hippopotamus and crocodiles, on the iSimangaliso Nature Reserve, a UNESCO World Heritage Site. - 19
Day 19 ·Maputo, Mozambique
21 Mar 2028Arrive 12:00Depart 21:00The interests of the Portuguese in Africa were the earliest of any European power. And the independence of Africa’s Lusophone colonies was invariably the most bitterly disputed during the revolutions of the mid-20th century. As elsewhere, the departing colonials took much of the value and the skills with them when they fled. Maputo has been slowly rebuilding itself into a city worthy of its setting along the Indian Ocean coast, and you will be among only a few travelers to see the architectural treasures of its past and the spirit of its future. - 19
Day 19 ·At Sea
22 Mar 2028 - 20
Day 20 ·Durban, South Africa
23 Mar 2028Arrive 07:00Depart 21:00At its founding in 1835, the city was named in honor of the then Governor of the Cape, Sir Benjamin D'Urban. Sugar cane transformed Durban into a vital port city, and its attractive parks and meticulously groomed gardens continue to testify to the land's richness. Today, the city sprawls along the coast, its golden beaches hugging the ice-blue Indian Ocean. - 21
Day 21 ·At Sea
24 Mar 2028 - 22
Day 22 ·Gqeberha (Port Elizabeth), South Africa
25 Mar 2028Arrive 06:00Depart 17:00 - 23
Day 23 ·Mossel Bay, South Africa
26 Mar 2028Arrive 09:00Depart 20:00South Africa’s Garden Route is among the world’s most attractive destinations, and Mossel Bay will welcome Seabourn guests to the heart of it. Those interested in wildlife will be thrilled with a visit to the Botlierskop Private Game Reserve for the chance to spot a rare white rhino and interact with huge, gentle African elephants at a feeding. The Diaz Museum Complex is named for Bartolomeu Diaz, the Portuguese explorer who was the first European to set foot in South Africa right here. It contains historical displays including the famous Post Office Tree that served as the message station for early sailors, a maritime museum and an aquarium. Another option is to travel along the coast to the famous seaside resort community at Knysna Heads and up into the arid, scenic Outeniqua Mountains. - 24
Day 24 ·At Sea
27 Mar 2028 - 25
Day 25 ·Cape Town, South Africa
28 Mar 2028Arrive 06:45Nestled at the foot of Table Mountain and flanked by Devil's Peak and Lion's Head, Cape Town is known by South Africans simply as 'the Cape,' an acknowledgment of its uniqueness and its status as the Mother City. The first area to be settled by Europeans in the 17th century, it is today a major seaport and the legislative capital of South Africa. The feeling here is not African but cosmopolitan, and a sense of history remains. - 26
Day 26 ·Cape Town, South Africa
29 Mar 2028Depart 22:00Nestled at the foot of Table Mountain and flanked by Devil's Peak and Lion's Head, Cape Town is known by South Africans simply as 'the Cape,' an acknowledgment of its uniqueness and its status as the Mother City. The first area to be settled by Europeans in the 17th century, it is today a major seaport and the legislative capital of South Africa. The feeling here is not African but cosmopolitan, and a sense of history remains. - 27
Day 27 ·At Sea
30 Mar 2028 - 28
Day 28 ·Luderitz, Namibia
31 Mar 2028Arrive 08:00Depart 17:00In 1883, a German businessman, Adolf Luderitz, purchased a parcel of land enclosing a small bay for purposes of speculation. The so-called Skeleton Coast had limited potential in many ways, being largely made up of the shifting sands of the Namib Desert. Then, in 1906, a local railway worker noticed an oddly sparkly stone beside the tracks. It proved to be a diamond, and it became clear that there were many like it lying literally on the surface of the sands. By 1909 a diamond rush was in full sway, and a thriving, German-styled town called Kolmanskop sprouted out of the desert to house the gem-seekers. When the easy pickings ended, the townspeople simply walked away, and the desert climate preserved the town as it was slowly engulfed by the shifting sands. Today it makes an evocative and haunting place to visit. The bay still hosts a bounty of wildlife as well, including seals, whales and flamingos. Other endeavors have started, too, such as the culture of delicious oysters in the clean, cold ocean waters. - 30
Day 30 ·Walvis Bay, Namibia
1 Apr 2028Arrive 12:00Its name in Afrikaans means "Whale Bay," but those days are long gone. Today its dramatic setting is inseparable from any impression of this deep-water port on Namibia's desolate, but beautiful "Skeleton Coast." Here the undulating dunes of the Namib Desert meet the sea, and its lagoon is spangled with white pelicans, pink flamingos and other seabirds. Up the coast road is Dune Seven, the highest along Namibia's coast, and a great place to take off your shoes and feel some sand between your toes after your Atlantic crossing. - 30
Day 30 ·Walvis Bay, Namibia
2 Apr 2028Depart 17:00Its name in Afrikaans means "Whale Bay," but those days are long gone. Today its dramatic setting is inseparable from any impression of this deep-water port on Namibia's desolate, but beautiful "Skeleton Coast." Here the undulating dunes of the Namib Desert meet the sea, and its lagoon is spangled with white pelicans, pink flamingos and other seabirds. Up the coast road is Dune Seven, the highest along Namibia's coast, and a great place to take off your shoes and feel some sand between your toes after your Atlantic crossing. - 31
Day 31 ·At Sea
3 Apr 2028 - 32
Day 32 ·At Sea
4 Apr 2028 - 33
Day 33 ·Luanda, Angola
5 Apr 2028Arrive 08:00Depart 18:00Luanda looks to be booming. Development and construction is fueled by extractive industries such as petroleum and diamonds. However over half the city’s residents live in poverty. It has for several years dominated the chart of the most expensive cities in the world for expatriates, outstripping such notorious places as Hong Kong and London. Like the rest of Portugal’s African colonies, Angola won its independence under force of arms in the mid-1970s. But the country immediately descended into a disastrous civil war that lasted decades, severely stunting development. Sites of interest include the 16th century Fortess of Sao Miguel, which looms over the harbor. Any visitor will assuredly be directed to the towering monument at the mausoleum of Agostinho Neto, the hero of the revolution. The National Museum of Anthropology is a good place to learn about the folkloric traditions, including a collection of exemplary masks. - 34
Day 34 ·At Sea
6 Apr 2028 - 35
Day 35 ·At Sea
7 Apr 2028 - 36
Day 36 ·Sao Tome, Sao Tome & Principe
8 Apr 2028Arrive 07:00Depart 18:00 - 37
Day 37 ·At Sea
9 Apr 2028 - 38
Day 38 ·Cotonou
10 Apr 2028Arrive 07:00Depart 18:00Cotonou is a large port city on the south coast of Benin, in West Africa. At the eastern end of central Boulevard St. Michel is the huge Dantokpa Market, which features religious items and spices alongside everyday objects. To the southwest, the 19th-century Cotonou Cathedral has a striking red-and-white striped facade. Nearby, in the Haie Vive district, the Fondation Zinsou museum shows contemporary African art. - 39
Day 39 ·Tema (Accra), Ghana
11 Apr 2028Arrive 08:00Depart 18:00 - 40
Day 40 ·Takoradi, Ghana
12 Apr 2028Arrive 08:00Depart 17:00Takoradi is a very important and busy West African seaport on Ghana’s Cape Coast, a main transport depot for container ships and oil tankers. Two of the main tourist sites near Takoradi are the village of Nzulemo and the old Portuguese slave depots called “castles.” The village of Nzulezo, on Lake Tadane, is a stilt community inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site for its unique architectural and cultural characteristics. At Akatekyi, crocodiles play part in the activities of a fetish priest. Elmina Castle is about an hour away, and one of the best preserved slave barracoons on the coast. - 41
Day 41 ·At Sea
13 Apr 2028 - 42
Day 42 ·At Sea
14 Apr 2028 - 43
Day 43 ·At Sea
15 Apr 2028 - 44
Day 44 ·Dakar, Senegal
16 Apr 2028Arrive 08:00Depart 18:00One of the most vibrant and cosmopolitan African cities, the Senegalese capital bears many visual reminders of its past as a French colonial outpost. Despite the Parisian-style boulevards and buildings, however, there is a distinctly African feel to the city. Bankers and executives can be seen going about their businesses dressed in the flamboyant traditional Grand Boubou costume, and women wear the feminine version with an equally striking headpiece. The common language is French, although many citizens may also speak as many as five or six ethnic languages, since the whole coast of West Africa has been steeped in a heritage of mutual trade for centuries. Among the many sights and sounds greeting visitors, none is more evocative and sobering than a visit to Goree Island and its House of Slaves. This fortress, just offshore of the city waterfront, displays many reminders of the brutal trade in human beings, including an unimposing doorway, set just above the waterline in the seaside wall, identified simply as the “Door of No Return.” - 45
Day 45 ·At Sea
17 Apr 2028 - 46
Day 46 ·Mindelo, Cape Verde
18 Apr 2028Arrive 08:00Depart 18:00The most important city on the Cape Verde island of São Vicente, Mindelo originally thrived as a coal depot for steamships plying the Atlantic. With the advent of diesel engines, its importance waned, although it is still an important port for the maritime trade. The island is volcanic, dry and mostly low. The town has replica of Lisbon’s Belem Tower, located near the fish market, in an interesting part of the city. The late Cape Verdean singer Cesaria Evora started her career singing in the taverns of Mindelo, and later brought the uniquely lilting Cape Verdean form of fado music to the world through her bestselling records and concert tours. - 47
Day 47 ·At Sea
19 Apr 2028 - 48
Day 48 ·At Sea
20 Apr 2028 - 49
Day 49 ·Las Palmas, Spain
21 Apr 2028Arrive 08:00Depart 18:00Las Palmas is a large Spanish city, which just happens to be on the island of Gran Canaria. That fact adds the exotic, slightly African and international flavor to the place. It played an important part in the early exploration and exploitation of Africa and the New World, some of which is recounted in the Casa de Colon Museum. Columbus may have slept there, but it was never his house. It was actually the mansion of early governors. Other museums of note are the Museo Canaria with a number of Cro Magnon skulls, and the fascinating Elder Museum of Science and Technology. For shopping, strolling and general local interest, head to La Vegueta, the oldest quarter and a UNESCO World Heritage Site, and the adjacent Triana high street shopping district. Most visitors are here for the beaches, and the municipal Playa de Las Canteras is a long, clean and safe option if that is your intention. The Canaria in the name of the islands refers to the indigenous Presa Canaria breed of dogs, which are large, strong and made quite an impression on the earliest Spanish visitors. - 50
Day 50 ·Arrecife, Canary Islands
22 Apr 2028Arrive 08:00Depart 18:00Lanzarote is the northernmost of the Canary Islands, often known as "volcano island." Its capital is Arrecife, a quiet town of about 30,000 inhabitants. Present day Lanzarote consists of two quite distinct massifs: Famara in the north, and Los Ajaches in the south, where centuries of erosion have sculpted abrupt cliffs and deep ravines, contrasting sharply with the smoothly rounded hills of the island's central region. - 51
Day 51 ·At Sea
23 Apr 2028 - 52
Day 52 ·Casablanca, Morocco
24 Apr 2028Arrive 06:00Depart 20:00Casablanca, located on the Atlantic coast, is with 4 million inhabitants Morocco's largest city, and at the same time the largest port in Africa. Built on the site of ancient Phoenician Anfa, it remained a small fishing village for many centuries until the French arrived in 1912. Since then Casablanca has become a vast modern city, ever on the increase since Morocco's independence from France in 1956. A successful blend of oriental-style, white cubic dwellings with modern Moroccan quarters gives the city an interesting flair. Lovely beaches and attractive hotels make for a popular year-round holiday resort. To help understand Moroccan culture a visit to the Medina, the quaint old Moorish quarter, is a must for all visitors. - 53
Day 53 ·Tangier, Morocco
25 Apr 2028Arrive 09:00Depart 19:00Situated just across the narrow Strait of Gibraltar from Europe, Tangier has long comprised a hybrid culture that is nearly as European as it is African. Standing atop Cap Spartel, one can gaze down on the place where the Atlantic meets the Mediterranean. The “Hollywood” district where the foreign embassies have traditionally been located reflects the European influence. But ascending the hill above the waterfront, one enters the narrow, winding alleys of the Kasbah, the city’s oldest, most Moroccan section. Down the coast, nearby Tetouan retains a nearly untouched walled medina, with sections originally occupied by Andalusian, Berber and Jewish populations. It is small enough that visitors can explore it without risking becoming lost, making it a perfect choice as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. - 54
Day 54 ·Cadiz (Seville), Spain
26 Apr 2028Arrive 07:00Depart 23:00To taste the true flavor of this ancient port city, one should stroll its seaside promenade, pausing to rest beneath the huge banyan trees. The narrow, winding streets of the old town fan out from the port, leading you to sunny, palm-lined plazas. Visit the Catedral Nueva (New Cathedral), begun in the early 1800s but not completed for 116 years. Its dramatic, golden dome rises over a striking interior. For those who enjoy people-watching as much as sightseeing, the seafood restaurants along the eastern edge of the port provide the ideal setting. - 55
Day 55 ·At Sea
27 Apr 2028 - 56
Day 56 ·Lisbon, PortugalDisembark
28 Apr 2028Arrive 07:00The great period of "the Discoveries" accounted for phenomenal wealth brought back from India, Africa and Brazil by the great Portuguese navigators. Gold, jewels, ivory, porcelain and spices helped finance grand new buildings and impressive monuments in Lisbon, the country's capital city. As you sail up the Tagus River, be on deck to admire Lisbon's panorama and see some of the great monuments lining the river. Lisbon is one of Europe's smallest capital cities but considered by many visitors to be one of the most likeable. Spread over a string of seven hills, the city offers a variety of faces, including a refreshing no-frills simplicity reflected in the people as they go unhurriedly through their day enjoying a hearty and delicious cuisine accompanied by the country's excellent wines.
Your ship: Seabourn Quest

Explore Seabourn Quest's cabins, dining and onboard facilities.
