Svalbard is closer to the North Pole than to Oslo. The archipelago sits at seventy-eight degrees north, and everything about it operates at extremes — four months of total darkness, four months of total light, glaciers covering sixty percent of the land, and a polar bear population that exceeds the human one. You cannot leave Longyearbyen, the main settlement, without a rifle. This is not a suggestion.
The town itself is unexpectedly colourful — bright-painted houses against white mountains, a university, surprisingly good restaurants, and the Global Seed Vault buried in the permafrost nearby. Boat trips to glacier fronts where ice calves into the sea, snowmobile expeditions across frozen plains, and the chance to see Arctic foxes, walruses, and reindeer in their element make Svalbard unlike any other destination on Earth.
When to go: March and April for returning light and snowmobile expeditions on stable snow. June through August for boat trips, midnight sun, and wildlife. The polar night from November to February is extraordinary but demanding. Dress for the Arctic in every season.