A Journey of Ancient Roots & Colourful Charm

From $11,100 per person

12 days

Ship: EXPLORA III

A Journey of Ancient Roots & Colourful Charm
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Journey Summary

  • Day 1 - Nov. 5, 2027, Fri. - Tokyo
  • Day 2 - Nov. 6, 2027, Sat. - Nagoya
  • Day 3 - Nov. 7, 2027, Sun. - Kochi
  • Day 4 - Nov. 8, 2027, Mon. - At Sea
  • Day 5 - Nov. 9, 2027, Tue. - Shanghai
  • Day 6 - Nov. 10, 2027, Wed. - At Sea
  • Day 7 - Nov. 11, 2027, Thu. - Naha, Okinawa
  • Day 8 - Nov. 12, 2027, Fri. - Miyako Islands
  • Day 9 - Nov. 13, 2027, Sat. - Ishigaki
  • Day 10 - Nov. 14, 2027, Sun. - At Sea
  • Day 11 - Nov. 15, 2027, Mon. - Hong Kong
  • Day 12 - Nov. 16, 2027, Tue. - Hong Kong

Detailed Itinerary

Day-by-day description of your cruise and cruise activities.

Day 1 - November 05, 2027

Tokyo

Lights, sushi, manga! Sprawling, frenetic, and endlessly fascinating, Japan’s capital is a city of contrasts. Shrines and gardens are pockets of calm between famously crowded streets and soaring office buildings. Mom-and-pop noodle houses share street space with Western-style chain restaurants and exquisite fine dining. Shopping yields lovely folk arts as well as the newest electronics. And nightlife kicks off with karaoke or sake and continues with techno clubs and more. Whether you seek the traditional or the cutting edge, Tokyo will provide it.

Day 2 - November 06, 2027

Nagoya

Day 3 - November 07, 2027

Kochi

Day 4 - November 08, 2027

At Sea

Day 5 - November 09, 2027

Shanghai

Shanghai is a city of two faces. It is home to some of the world’s tallest skyscrapers, miles of luxury goods shops, and scores of trendy bars and restaurants. But look just beyond the main streets and you’ll find narrow alleyways packed with traditional lane houses, where laundry billows from bamboo poles, and local communities are alive and well.Shanghai has always been China’s most Westernized city. In its heyday, Shanghai had the best nightlife, the greatest architecture, and the strongest business in Asia. Nearly a century later, after extreme tumult and political upheaval, it’s back on top.Shanghai’s charm lies not in a list of must-see sites, but in quiet, tree-lined streets, the Bund’s majestic colonial buildings, sweet boutiques, and a dizzying array of places to eat and drink, from literal hole-in-the-walls to celebrity chef restaurants.Today, Shanghai has nearly 24 million people, the skyscrapers keep getting taller, the metro keeps getting longer, and the historical buildings continue to evade the wrecking ball. For how much longer is anyone’s guess.

Day 6 - November 10, 2027

At Sea

Day 7 - November 11, 2027

Naha, Okinawa

Day 8 - November 12, 2027

Miyako Islands

Day 9 - November 13, 2027

Ishigaki

Day 10 - November 14, 2027

At Sea

Day 11 - November 15, 2027

Hong Kong

The Hong Kong Island skyline, with its ever-growing number of skyscrapers, speaks to ambition and money. Paris, London, even New York were centuries in the making, while Hong Kong's towers, bright lights, and glitzy shopping emporia weren't yet part of the urban scene when many of the young investment bankers who fuel one of the world's leading financial centers were born. Commerce is concentrated in the glittering high-rises of Central, tucked between Victoria Harbor and forested peaks on Hong Kong Island's north shore. While it's easy to think all the bright lights are the sum of today's Hong Kong, you need only walk or board a tram for the short jaunt west into Western to discover a side of Hong Kong that is more traditionally Chinese but no less high-energy. You'll discover the real Hong Kong to the east of Central, too, in Wan Chai, Causeway Bay, and beyond. Amid the residential towers are restaurants, shopping malls, bars, convention centers, a nice smattering of museums, and—depending on fate and the horse you wager on—one of Hong Kong's luckiest or unluckiest spots, the Happy Valley Racecourse. Kowloon sprawls across a generous swath of the Chinese mainland across Victoria Harbour from Central. Tsim Sha Tsui, at the tip of Kowloon peninsula, is packed with glitzy shops, first-rate museums, and eye-popping views of the skyline across the water. Just to the north are the teeming market streets of Mong Kok and in the dense residential neighborhoods beyond, two of Hong Kong's most enchanting spiritual sights, Wong Tai Sin Temple and Chi Lin Nunnery. As you navigate this huge metropolis (easy to do on the excellent transportation network), keep in mind that streets are usually numbered odd on one side, even on the other. There's no baseline for street numbers and no block-based numbering system, but street signs indicate building numbers for any given block.

Day 12 - November 16, 2027

Hong Kong

The Hong Kong Island skyline, with its ever-growing number of skyscrapers, speaks to ambition and money. Paris, London, even New York were centuries in the making, while Hong Kong's towers, bright lights, and glitzy shopping emporia weren't yet part of the urban scene when many of the young investment bankers who fuel one of the world's leading financial centers were born. Commerce is concentrated in the glittering high-rises of Central, tucked between Victoria Harbor and forested peaks on Hong Kong Island's north shore. While it's easy to think all the bright lights are the sum of today's Hong Kong, you need only walk or board a tram for the short jaunt west into Western to discover a side of Hong Kong that is more traditionally Chinese but no less high-energy. You'll discover the real Hong Kong to the east of Central, too, in Wan Chai, Causeway Bay, and beyond. Amid the residential towers are restaurants, shopping malls, bars, convention centers, a nice smattering of museums, and—depending on fate and the horse you wager on—one of Hong Kong's luckiest or unluckiest spots, the Happy Valley Racecourse. Kowloon sprawls across a generous swath of the Chinese mainland across Victoria Harbour from Central. Tsim Sha Tsui, at the tip of Kowloon peninsula, is packed with glitzy shops, first-rate museums, and eye-popping views of the skyline across the water. Just to the north are the teeming market streets of Mong Kok and in the dense residential neighborhoods beyond, two of Hong Kong's most enchanting spiritual sights, Wong Tai Sin Temple and Chi Lin Nunnery. As you navigate this huge metropolis (easy to do on the excellent transportation network), keep in mind that streets are usually numbered odd on one side, even on the other. There's no baseline for street numbers and no block-based numbering system, but street signs indicate building numbers for any given block.

Dates and Prices

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Nov 05, 2027

Ship

Your cruise ship

The EXPLORA III ship by Explora Journeys glides through calm waters under a beautiful, cloudy sky.
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About this ship

EXPLORA III

Explora III marks the next evolution in Explora Journeys’ vision of luxury ocean travel—where design, wellness, and curated discovery come together in harmony. As the first ship in the fleet powered by liquefied natural gas (LNG), Explora III reflects a bold step toward more sustainable cruising, offering an eco-conscious voyage without compromise on comfort or elegance.

Guests aboard Explora III will enjoy all-suite accommodations with private terraces, immersive destination experiences, refined dining venues, and serene wellness spaces—all thoughtfully designed to evoke a sense of relaxed European sophistication. Whether sailing to iconic cities or hidden harbors, each journey is crafted to invite connection, curiosity, and calm.

Explora III delivers a modern interpretation of ocean luxury—intimate, responsible, and deeply enriching.

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