The Best Places to See the Northern Lights in March 2018Jamie CarterSun, January 28, 2018 at 12:00 PM UTCTaking place in late March, the annual Festival of the North is a 10-day festival for towns and villages across Russia's' remote Kola Peninsula, located at 69 degrees north. The line-up of events includes reindeer-sled races, ski marathons, ice hockey, and snowmobile contests, and it's followed by the Murmansk Ski Marathon, held on the first Sunday in April.iStockphoto/Getty ImagesEver built a snow castle? If not, come to Snow King's Winter Festival, an annual celebration of all things snow, ice, and winter. Now in its 23rd year, it takes place March 30, 2018 in Yellowknife — the capital of Canada’s Northwest Territories, which lie at 62 degrees North latitude.Una Zhu/EyeEm/Getty ImagesIt can be bitterly cold during the winter, but Saariselk?, at 68 degrees north in Finnish Lapland, starts to thaw in March. Nightly aurora borealis hunting by mini-bus begins at 8:00 p.m., while your days are filled with skiing, ice-fishing, snowmobile rides to Raja-Jooseppi, on the Russian border.iStockphoto/Getty ImagesThe Iceland Winter Games (IWG) return to Akureyri, in northern Iceland, for the fifth year in a row. The competitions, which include ski and snowboard competitions, as well as Icelandic dog sledding championships, run from March 24 to 27. When evening falls, head out of the city for your best chances of seeing the Northern Lights. Arctic-Images/Getty ImagesHave you ever traveled on an ice road? The frozen Mackenzie River, in the Northwest territories of Canada, stretches from Inuvik to the Beaufort Sea and over to Tuktoyaktuk (an Inuvialuit village on the Arctic Ocean). It's one of the world's longest ice roads, and it's best traversed from February through mid-April.iStockphoto/Getty ImagesDepartures through March are available for this trip to glimpse 'ice-cap auroras' at Kangerlussuaq, a tiny community on the west coast of Greenland. Here at 67 degrees north latitude, where skies are said to be clearer than anywhere else in the Arctic Circle, you can spend three days seeking musk oxen and herds of reindeer — and three nights aurora-hunting.Uriel Sinai/Getty ImagesIf waiting patiently for the skies to clear doesn't give you the workout you wanted, get to Jokkmokk, in Swedish Lapland, on March 24. This is when the Red Bull Nordenski?ldsloppet begins. This 137-mile race dates back to 1884, and remains the world's longest ski run.Folio Images/Getty ImagesFirst held in Inari in 1959, the annual Reindeer Championships from March 31 to April 1 will see racers on skis behind their reindeer competing in heats, and a final on Sunday to crown the Champion of Finland.Stephan Rech/Westend 61/Getty ImagesLate March is the last chance of the year to go on a guided Northern Lights-spotting hike through Sweden's wild Abisko National Park, at 68 degrees north latitude. For four hours, travelers will walk along the Abisko River, using only a hand-held oil lamp on your way to a campfire where coffee and dried reindeer meat will be waiting for you. (And with any luck, the Northern Lights.)Roberto Moiola/Robert Harding World Imagery/Getty ImagesThe capital of Finnish Lapland, Rovaniemi (at 66 degrees north) often sees the Northern Lights. On March 23, it's also home to the Rovaniemi Reindeer Sprint Race, which takes place at 6:00 p.m. on Koskikatu Street in the city center. It's a knockout between teams consisting of two reindeer and a skier, with the winning pair of reindeer then facing-off for the crown.Yoann Jezequel/Getty ImagesWhile you're waiting for darkness to fall, why not spend the day in Russia? On March 1, a fjord cruise will welcome passengers in Longyearbyen (in Svalbard, Norway), before traveling to the Esmark Glacier and Barentsburg, in Russia. Lunch features marinated whale meat, baked salmon, and pork rib. After dark, all eyes will turn upward to see the Northern Lights.Matt Pain/iStockphoto/Getty ImagesMarch 25 is your last chance to join the Northern Lights photo tour in Kiruna, in Swedish Lapland. The hunt begins at 8:00 p.m. and goes until 1:00 in the morning, if necessary. Warm boots, windproof pants, and a cozy cape will be provided, as well as all photography equipment. Just bring your personal SD card.Julia Kuznetsova/iStockphoto/Getty ImagesIf you've got kids with you, waiting patiently outdoors for the Northern Lights probably isn't an option. So put them in a SnowCastle made from frozen seawater. This seasonal construction of ice and snow, near Kemi's city center, is open from the end of January until mid-April, and includes a SnowRestaurant, SnowChapel, and a SnowHotel.De Agostini/Getty ImagesIt can take a lot of patience to see the Northern Lights, but you don't have to spend all night out in elements waiting for them to appear. At Hotel Rangá, in southern Iceland, guests can be called when the auroras appear — whatever time of night that may be. Some guests might opt to watch the sky from one of the geothermal hot tubs behind the hotel. Luís Henrique Boucault/Getty Images1 of 151 of 15Murmansk, Russia2 of 15Taking place in late March, the annual Festival of the North is a 10-day festival for towns and villages across Russia's' remote Kola Peninsula, located at 69 degrees north. The line-up of events includes reindeer-sled races, ski marathons, ice hockey, and snowmobile contests, and it's followed by the Murmansk Ski Marathon, held on the first Sunday in April.iStockphoto/Getty ImagesYellowknife, Canada3 of 15Ever built a snow castle? If not, come to Snow King's Winter Festival, an annual celebration of all things snow, ice, and winter. Now in its 23rd year, it takes place March 30, 2018 in Yellowknife — the capital of Canada’s Northwest Territories, which lie at 62 degrees North latitude.Una Zhu/EyeEm/Getty ImagesSaariselk?, Finland4 of 15It can be bitterly cold during the winter, but Saariselk?, at 68 degrees north in Finnish Lapland, starts to thaw in March. Nightly aurora borealis hunting by mini-bus begins at 8:00 p.m., while your days are filled with skiing, ice-fishing, snowmobile rides to Raja-Jooseppi, on the Russian border.iStockphoto/Getty ImagesAkureyri, Iceland5 of 15The Iceland Winter Games (IWG) return to Akureyri, in northern Iceland, for the fifth year in a row. The competitions, which include ski and snowboard competitions, as well as Icelandic dog sledding championships, run from March 24 to 27. When evening falls, head out of the city for your best chances of seeing the Northern Lights. Arctic-Images/Getty ImagesInuvik, Canada6 of 15Have you ever traveled on an ice road? The frozen Mackenzie River, in the Northwest territories of Canada, stretches from Inuvik to the Beaufort Sea and over to Tuktoyaktuk (an Inuvialuit village on the Arctic Ocean). It's one of the world's longest ice roads, and it's best traversed from February through mid-April.iStockphoto/Getty ImagesKangerlussuaq, Greenland7 of 15Departures through March are available for this trip to glimpse 'ice-cap auroras' at Kangerlussuaq, a tiny community on the west coast of Greenland. Here at 67 degrees north latitude, where skies are said to be clearer than anywhere else in the Arctic Circle, you can spend three days seeking musk oxen and herds of reindeer — and three nights aurora-hunting.Uriel Sinai/Getty ImagesJokkmokk, Sweden8 of 15If waiting patiently for the skies to clear doesn't give you the workout you wanted, get to Jokkmokk, in Swedish Lapland, on March 24. This is when the Red Bull Nordenski?ldsloppet begins. This 137-mile race dates back to 1884, and remains the world's longest ski run.Folio Images/Getty ImagesInari, Finland9 of 15First held in Inari in 1959, the annual Reindeer Championships from March 31 to April 1 will see racers on skis behind their reindeer competing in heats, and a final on Sunday to crown the Champion of Finland.Stephan Rech/Westend 61/Getty ImagesAbisko National Park, Sweden10 of 15Late March is the last chance of the year to go on a guided Northern Lights-spotting hike through Sweden's wild Abisko National Park, at 68 degrees north latitude. For four hours, travelers will walk along the Abisko River, using only a hand-held oil lamp on your way to a campfire where coffee and dried reindeer meat will be waiting for you. (And with any luck, the Northern Lights.)Roberto Moiola/Robert Harding World Imagery/Getty ImagesRovaniemi, Finland11 of 15The capital of Finnish Lapland, Rovaniemi (at 66 degrees north) often sees the Northern Lights. On March 23, it's also home to the Rovaniemi Reindeer Sprint Race, which takes place at 6:00 p.m. on Koskikatu Street in the city center. It's a knockout between teams consisting of two reindeer and a skier, with the winning pair of reindeer then facing-off for the crown.Yoann Jezequel/Getty ImagesBarentsburg, Russia12 of 15While you're waiting for darkness to fall, why not spend the day in Russia? On March 1, a fjord cruise will welcome passengers in Longyearbyen (in Svalbard, Norway), before traveling to the Esmark Glacier and Barentsburg, in Russia. Lunch features marinated whale meat, baked salmon, and pork rib. After dark, all eyes will turn upward to see the Northern Lights.Matt Pain/iStockphoto/Getty ImagesKiruna, Sweden13 of 15March 25 is your last chance to join the Northern Lights photo tour in Kiruna, in Swedish Lapland. The hunt begins at 8:00 p.m. and goes until 1:00 in the morning, if necessary. Warm boots, windproof pants, and a cozy cape will be provided, as well as all photography equipment. Just bring your personal SD card.Julia Kuznetsova/iStockphoto/Getty ImagesKemi, Finland14 of 15If you've got kids with you, waiting patiently outdoors for the Northern Lights probably isn't an option. So put them in a SnowCastle made from frozen seawater. This seasonal construction of ice and snow, near Kemi's city center, is open from the end of January until mid-April, and includes a SnowRestaurant, SnowChapel, and a SnowHotel.De Agostini/Getty ImagesHella, Iceland15 of 15It can take a lot of patience to see the Northern Lights, but you don't have to spend all night out in elements waiting for them to appear. At Hotel Rangá, in southern Iceland, guests can be called when the auroras appear — whatever time of night that may be. Some guests might opt to watch the sky from one of the geothermal hot tubs behind the hotel. Luís Henrique Boucault/Getty ImagesFestivals and events in the Arctic Circle are just a few ways to spend March days waiting for the aurora borealis at night.About Our Ads