1. The net walk ice boat can't see the ice! Ice has gone to know the bed. 2. The original price is 4,000 yen, 192 yuan, and Ctrip 215 yuan. I charged an extra 23 yuan for the booking fee (but Japan called 20 yuan, and the date I chose was not set online. It's also very cost-effective) 3. The service attitude is very good.
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1. The net walk ice boat can't see the ice! Ice has gone to know the bed. 2. The original price is 4,000 yen, 192 yuan, and Ctrip 215 yuan. I charged an extra 23 yuan for the booking fee (but Japan called 20 yuan, and the date I chose was not set online. It's also very cost-effective) 3. The service attitude is very good.
It is worthwhile to see the flow of ice. This ticket was bought a bit early, and the information I found later was repeated. For a time, I wanted to give up this plan. Fortunately, it snowed a few days ago and the wind was up. I saw the spectacular flow of ice today. I am still worthy of the fear of these days. When taking pictures on the boat, you must hang your mobile phone around your neck. You can see that the mobile phone with a beautiful woman has fallen. And don't bring gloves, gloves are slippery, and the mobile phone will slide into the sea.
The icebreaker was only a vast sea when it went offshore. After a period of sailing, you could see the shadow of the ice, and gradually the ice came closer to the ship. As if you were in the polar, surrounded by only the ice and our Aurora.
It is worth going, pretending to be in the Arctic, 3300 yen is still quite worth it. No need to book in advance, in fact, go directly to buy a ticket no problem. The icebreaker is very fun, the ice layer is quite thick, the trip is 1 hour.
Today we are lucky that the ice from Russia is surging. At 44 degrees N. Okhotsk sea experience icebreaker wind breaking ice, thick ice several meters thick, washed off the sea, tumbling, shaking. Down the ship's first corridor, you can see the huge ice tumbling up close, as if within reach. Looking around, it is an unforgettable and unique experience like being in the Arctic ice and snow.