Skip to main content

The Falkland Islands Experience

There is nowhere else in the world like the Falkland Islands. This archipelago is a remote, wind-swept place of stunning landscapes, dazzling white sand beaches, magnificent wildlife, and a rather gregarious mix of people. Over 200 islands surround the two main islands of West and East Falkland. These isolated and treeless shores are home to an overwhelming abundance of birdlife: albatross, penguins, caracaras, geese, and many others. Perhaps it was the very remoteness of the islands; the allure of its barren landscapes, pure in their austerity and colorful in their details, and the immensely large open skies that attracted settlers to its shores long ago, the islands have an accumulated a wealth of maritime and military history. More than three hundred shipwrecks litter its shores, while the stark white crosses of both British and Argentine soldiers stand as a silent reminder to the war of 1982. Numerous claims for the islands have been put forward in the course of their history. Nowadays the Falkland Islands are a self-governing British Overseas Territory.

Featured Ports

Carcass Island — West Falklands

Carcass Island lies to the northwest of the Falklands. It is a wildlife haven, as the island has been kept free of mice and rats. The coastline of formed by large sandy bays, beaches, tidal rock point to the north-west and cliffs and slopes along the north-eastern coast. 

West Point Island — West Falklands

Meet the Napiers, the island’s only occupants, and visit the rockhopper penguins, black-browed albatrosses and other wildlife that share the island with the family’s sheep.
71711175

Port Stanley — East Falklands

With a population of over 2,000 people, Stanley is the largest settlement on the islands. Its gardens, tea rooms, brightly colored houses and hotels lend it a slightly Victorian feel, seemingly suspended in time.