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Abashiri Drift Ice Icebreaker
✨ Experience

Abashiri Drift Ice Icebreaker

📍 Hokkaido, Abashiri

Board a bright-orange icebreaker and crunch out into the frozen Sea of Okhotsk, where for a few weeks each winter the ocean itself turns into a shifting white plain of pack ice.

For most of the year Abashiri is an ordinary port on Hokkaido’s northeast coast. Then, in deep winter, the Sea of Okhotsk freezes — drift ice born off Siberia floats south and packs against the shore until the ocean becomes a groaning white plain. And the way to experience it is to break through it on a ship.

Why It’s Interesting

This is the southernmost place on the planet where sea ice reliably forms, and the spectacle is genuinely strange: an orange-and-white icebreaker noses out from the harbor and crunches through floes that stretch to the horizon, the hull grinding and booming as it goes. Out on the white expanse you might spot seals lounging on the ice or a giant Steller’s sea eagle perched on a floe. It’s loud, freezing, and unforgettable.

Best Time to Visit

The ice usually arrives late January through March, but it’s at the mercy of the wind — some days the floes blow in thick, other days the sea is open. Check the drift-ice forecast before you commit.

Getting There

Cruises depart from the Abashiri waterfront, reachable by bus or taxi from Abashiri Station. Layer up: the open deck has the best views and the worst windchill.

📸 Mon-chan's camera roll

Snapshots from our very good boy on the road.

A red-and-white icebreaker ship crunching through a white plain of sea ice
The whole sea froze, so we got a boat to break it. Hokkaido!
Mon-chan and Cinnamon the squirrel on the bow of the icebreaker in the sea ice
A cold metal ship smashing ice — it hummed like my metal mother. Comforting, honestly.

Where it is

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