One Shore Day at Beechey Island: What to Expect When You Anchor at One of the Arctic’s Most Haunting Historic Sites

Quick Facts: Beechey Island | Nunavut, Canada | No formal terminal โ€” zodiac/tender landing on gravel beach | Tender only | No city center (uninhabited island) | UTCโˆ’5 (Central Daylight Time in summer)

Beechey Island is not a port in any conventional sense โ€” there are no docks, no gift shops, no taxis waiting. It’s a remote, uninhabited island in the Canadian Arctic Archipelago that expedition cruise ships visit for one reason: it’s one of the most historically significant and emotionally powerful sites in all of Arctic exploration. Your single most important planning tip is this โ€” dress for severe weather regardless of the forecast, because conditions here change in under an hour.

Port & Terminal Information

There is no cruise terminal at Beechey Island. Expedition vessels anchor offshore and ferry passengers to the gravel beach via zodiac tender craft โ€” a process that typically takes 20โ€“40 minutes per group depending on ship size and sea state. Check Google Maps for general orientation to the island’s location in Erebus Bay, off the southwestern tip of Devon Island.

There are zero terminal facilities: no ATMs, no Wi-Fi, no luggage storage, no tourist information kiosks. Everything you need โ€” cash, warmups, snacks, medication โ€” must come from your ship. Your expedition team will give a mandatory pre-landing briefing; attendance is not optional, and it will include wildlife protocols for potential polar bear encounters.

The landing beach itself sits near the site of the Franklin Expedition wintering camp. From the zodiac drop point to the graves is roughly a 5โ€“10 minute walk over uneven, rocky terrain, so ankle-supportive footwear is essential.

Getting to the “City”

Photo by Putulik Jaaka on Pexels

There is no city. Beechey Island is entirely uninhabited. All logistics originate from your ship.

  • On Foot โ€” Everything on the island is accessed on foot from the zodiac landing point. The main historic sites are within 1โ€“2 km of shore, but terrain is rocky, boggy in spots, and unmarked. Poles help.
  • Bus/Metro โ€” Does not exist here.
  • Taxi โ€” Not applicable.
  • Hop-On Hop-Off โ€” Not applicable.
  • Rental Car/Scooter โ€” Not applicable.
  • Ship Shore Excursion โ€” This is the only way you’re getting ashore. Your expedition ship’s included landing is your excursion. Some lines offer guided Viator-listed expedition packages that incorporate Beechey Island as part of a broader Northwest Passage voyage, which is worth comparing before you book your cruise. Similarly, GetYourGuide has Northwest Passage expedition options that pass through this site โ€” booking through a specialist expedition company with naturalists and historians on board adds enormous value to what you’ll experience here.

Top Things to Do at Beechey Island

There are no restaurants or shopping streets here โ€” this is raw, windswept history and wilderness. Make every minute count.

Must-See

1. The Franklin Expedition Graves (free) โ€” The 4 headstones of John Torrington, John Hartnell, William Braine, and Thomas Morgan are the emotional center of any Beechey Island visit. These men died during Sir John Franklin’s doomed 1845โ€“1848 Northwest Passage expedition; their remarkably well-preserved bodies, later exhumed by researchers, transformed our understanding of Arctic survival and lead poisoning. Standing here in the silence is unlike anything else in expedition cruising. Book a voyage that includes an expedition historian via Viator for full context. Allow 30โ€“45 minutes.

2. Northumberland House Ruins (free) โ€” The crumbling remains of this 1850s Royal Navy resupply cache sit near the graves. Tins, wood fragments, and structural remnants are still visible and protected under Canadian Heritage law โ€” look, don’t touch. 15โ€“20 minutes.

3. Beechey Island Monument and Cairn (free) โ€” A simple but moving cairn and plaque mark the site’s significance in navigation history. This is where multiple search expeditions converged looking for Franklin’s lost ships, HMS Erebus and HMS Terror โ€” both later found in 2014 and 2016 respectively. 10 minutes.

Beaches & Nature

4. Gravel Beach Wildlife Watching (free) โ€” The shoreline around the zodiac landing is productive for Arctic wildlife. Ringed seals frequently haul out nearby, and glaucous gulls patrol overhead. Bring binoculars โ€” the light at this latitude in summer is extraordinary for photography. 30โ€“60 minutes.

5. Tundra Walk Toward Caswell Tower (free) โ€” The raised headland known as Caswell Tower offers panoramic views across Erebus Bay toward Devon Island’s ice cap. The walk is roughly 2 km return over stable but rough tundra, and the perspective you gain of just how isolated Franklin’s men were is genuinely chilling. 45โ€“60 minutes.

6. Coastal Bird Colonies (free) โ€” Thick-billed murres, black-legged kittiwakes, and northern fulmars nest in the island’s cliffs. Your ship’s naturalist will guide you to the best vantage points without disturbing nesting sites. 20โ€“30 minutes.

Day Trips

7. Devon Island Excursion (ship-dependent pricing) โ€” Some expedition itineraries combine Beechey with a landing on adjacent Devon Island, the largest uninhabited island on Earth and home to the Haughton-Mars Project research site. Check with your expedition company. Browse Northwest Passage options on GetYourGuide. Half day.

8. Polar Bear Watch from the Zodiac (included with ship) โ€” If conditions prevent landing or if time allows, zodiac cruises along Beechey’s coastline frequently yield polar bear sightings. This is arguably more exciting than a landing for wildlife-focused travelers. 1โ€“2 hours.

Family Picks

9. Expedition Briefing and History Talk (included) โ€” Most expedition ships run excellent on-board lectures about the Franklin Expedition before and after the landing. For children old enough to understand survival stories, the combination of lecture plus graveside visit creates a genuinely unforgettable educational experience. 1 hour.

10. Fossil Hunting (Looking Only) (free) โ€” The sedimentary rock around the island contains ancient marine fossils. Guides can point these out โ€” removal is illegal, but examining them in situ is perfectly fine and kids love it. 20โ€“30 minutes.

Off the Beaten Track

11. Erebus Bay Photography at Midnight Sun (free) โ€” If your ship arrives in the window of 24-hour daylight (typically late June through mid-July), the quality of light over the bay at “midnight” is staggering โ€” soft, golden, completely silent. Ask your expedition leader if a late evening zodiac cruise is possible. 1 hour.

12. Reading the Ice Conditions (free) โ€” Beechey Island is often approached through pack ice. Simply watching your ship’s bridge officers navigate ice from the bow is a visceral, memorable experience that connects you to what Franklin’s wooden ships attempted. Available during approach.

What to Eat & Drink

Photo by Surja Raj on Pexels

There are no restaurants, cafรฉs, or food vendors on Beechey Island whatsoever. All meals and refreshments come from your expedition ship, and most operators do an excellent job of providing hot soup, cocoa, and hearty lunches to fuel cold-weather landings.

  • Ship’s Mess/Dining Room โ€” Hot meals and snacks; included in your expedition package; eat a warm, substantial breakfast before landing
  • Thermos from the Ship โ€” Many ships offer passengers thermos fills of coffee or hot chocolate before tenders depart; take one, always
  • Packed Snacks โ€” High-calorie bars (Clif, Kind, etc.) are worth carrying in your pocket; cold burns energy fast
  • Post-Landing Warming Drinks โ€” Most expedition ships offer a warm debrief gathering with hot drinks after landing; this is not just nice, it’s necessary

Shopping

There is nothing to buy on Beechey Island itself. No stalls, no local crafts, no souvenirs of any kind. If you want authentic Inuit art, soapstone carvings, or Arctic-themed gifts, plan ahead for ports like Pond Inlet (Mittimatalik), Gjoa Haven, or Cambridge Bay that are often part of the same Northwest Passage itinerary.

Aboard your expedition ship, the onboard shop โ€” if the line has one โ€” may carry expedition-branded gear, polar maps, and books about the Franklin Expedition (Owen Beattie and John Geiger’s Frozen in Time is the essential read and makes a meaningful souvenir). Skip cheap branded trinkets; invest in a quality field guide to Arctic birds or geology instead.

How to Plan Your Day

  • 4 hours ashore: Zodiac landing โ†’ Franklin graves (45 min) โ†’ Northumberland House ruins (20 min) โ†’ cairn and monument (15 min) โ†’ beach wildlife watching (30 min) โ†’ zodiac return. This covers the historic core without rushing.
  • 6โ€“7 hours ashore: Add the Caswell Tower tundra walk (60 min return), extended bird and seal watching, a zodiac coastal cruise along the cliffs (60 min), and time for quiet reflection and photography at the grave site.
  • Full day (8+ hours): All of the above, plus a combined landing on Devon Island if your itinerary allows, a naturalist-led geology walk, a midnight sun zodiac cruise in Erebus Bay, and the evening on-board Franklin Expedition lecture with Q&A. Rare โ€” most ships allow 3โ€“5 hours on island โ€” but extraordinary if conditions and scheduling align.

Practical Information

  • Currency: Canadian Dollar (CAD, $) โ€” completely irrelevant here; bring cash for any port stops before or after
  • Language: English and

๐Ÿ“ Getting to Beechey Island, Nunavut Canada

Use the interactive map below to explore the port area and plan your route from the terminal.

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