Is this the coolest flight of the year? Antarctica and back – the 12-hour trip from Australia with Qantas regarded as a domestic flight, with social distancing at only US$860
Departing Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Adelaide and Perth these flights offer a four-hour viewing experience of the South Pole without touching the ice, and in case coronavirus travel restrictions continue it’s regarded as a domestic flight
Qantas is preparing to restart one of its most storied, and curious, routes: a 12-hour flight covering thousands of miles and then, landing right back where it started. As the world’s airlines struggle in a time of cratering travel demand, the Australian carrier is offering to fly passengers to Antarctica – and bring them home without touching the ground.
Tour company Antarctica Flights charters Qantas planes to operate the flights, which will spend about four hours flying over the continent during the South Pole’s summer daylight months, offering passengers a rare view of the icy expanse.
Between November and February (when the sun shines the longest) the company will run seven flights: two each from Sydney and Melbourne and one each out of Adelaide, Brisbane and Perth.
Although the flights may seem pedestrian to those who would rather explore on the ground for themselves, they have an undeniable appeal during a pandemic that has blocked most overseas travel for Australians, or anyone else for that matter.
Because these planes land back at their origin, they’re considered domestic flights so travellers have a chance to see someplace new, technically without leaving their home country. And for those worried about spending 12 hours sharing a cabin, Antarctica Flights has said it will block some seats to allow for a degree of social distancing.
In past years, these flights were operated by a Qantas Boeing 747-400. However, the airline retired that fleet this year, several years earlier than planned due to the pandemic. Instead, the airline will use a newer, more efficient Boeing 787 – a plane famed for its especially large windows.
The 787 is a relatively low-emission aircraft but for those who are uncomfortable about the disconnect between scenic flights over the icy continent and the role emissions play in endangering that ice, Antarctica Flights says that it offsets emissions from every flight to make them carbon neutral.
Flights can be booked now and start from US$860 for economy seats and US$4,670 for business class.
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This article originally appeared in Business Insider.