Latitude Luxury Travel

Signature Experiences

Sixteen carefully curated journeys. Each one requires specific knowledge, genuine supplier relationships, and the kind of planning attention that most travel agencies don't offer. These are the experiences we build — and build properly.

Every itinerary is built from scratch. Nothing is templated. Prices shown are starting points — your journey is priced on enquiry.

BC Grand Wilderness Circuit

You've probably flown over this coastline a hundred times. Most people never land. Nimmo Bay sits at the base of a 5,000-foot mountain in the Great Bear Rainforest — nine cabins, a family who's been welcoming guests for 45 years, and helicopter adventures over glaciers most people will never see. Then Clayoquot: a Three Michelin Key kitchen inside a canvas tent, bears and orcas as neighbours, and a seaplane landing that announces you've arrived somewhere genuinely extraordinary. Both in one trip. Both 90 minutes from home.

Heli Ski BC - Private Lodge

No lift lines. No tracked-out groomers. No one else. CMH has been running heli-skiing in the Bugaboos since 1965, and nothing has come close to replacing it. You'll ski terrain that resort skiers will never access — 3 million acres of it — and come home to a lodge that feels like the world's best secret. If you've been saying you'll do this for years, this is the year.

Yukon Aurora & Dogslead

Two hours north of Vancouver, the sky puts on a show that will stop your heart. You'll sleep in a glass chalet and wake up to the aurora dancing overhead. By day, you'll mush your own husky team through the boreal forest. In the evening, geothermal hot springs under open skies. No passport. No long-haul flight. Just Canada at its most magical — and most people have no idea it exists.

Japan Powder Odyssey

You've heard about Japow. What you haven't fully understood yet is how different it actually feels — snow so light it barely registers on the scale, terrain so untouched it's almost disorienting. Six days in Niseko with a guide who knows every backcountry gate, then five days in the Japanese Alps at Hakuba. Evenings in a private onsen at Zaborin Ryokan, kaiseki dinners that make every other ski trip meal feel ordinary. Japan doesn't just reset your powder benchmark — it eliminates it.

The Atlas Project

Only 100,000 people visit Antarctica each year. The planet has eight billion. There's a reason it stays on the list — it asks something of you. The planning, the commitment, the crossing. What you get on the other side is a continent of silence, penguin colonies within arm's reach, and the specific clarity that only comes from standing somewhere genuinely untouched. We've built this trip properly. If Antarctica is on your list, let's actually put it on your calendar.

Patagonia Explorer

Everyone knows the photograph — the granite towers, the turquoise lake, the sky doing something improbable behind it all. What most people don't know is that you can do the W-Trek and sleep inside Torres del Paine every night, in a geodesic dome, with a kitchen producing food that would hold its own in any city restaurant. No driving back to town. No generic hotel. Just the park, the weather, the wildlife, and the kind of exhausted satisfaction that only Patagonia delivers.