Qoornoq Abandoned Village

5 hours

Easy

Explore the abandoned village of Qoornoq on a scenic boat tour through Nuuk Fjord, where Arctic silence, cultural history, and untouched landscapes come together.

Five hours to a village quietlywaiting for summer

Qoornoq is the most photogenic ghost in Nuuk Fjord — an abandoned fishing settlement on a

small peninsula, with colourful houses still standing where families once lived year-round.

The village emptied in the 1970s when the fishing economy shifted and Greenland's settlement

policy consolidated population in the larger towns. But its homes are now used as summer

cabins by the same families who left, and the village comes alive again every July.

The boat ride out is two hours of dramatic mountain coastline — granite cliffs, drifting bergs,

the wide quiet of the inner fjord. Once ashore, you have around an hour and a half to walk the

village, photograph the old fish factory, and absorb the quiet. The kind of silence that holds

shape only in places where something used to happen and no longer does.

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    Included in your tour

    • Local captain and guide.
    • Warm beverages and light snacks.
    • Heated indoor cabin, spacious outdoor deck, and onboard restroom.
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          • A windproof and waterproof jacket
          • Warm layers (wool or fleece)
          • A hat, gloves, and scarf
          • Comfortable, sturdy footwear (for walking around the village)
          • Sunglasses (the light reflecting off the water can be bright)
          • Mosquito net (during the summer period)

          Even in summer, the Arctic air can be cool and breezy, so it's always better to dress warmly.