Four routes.
Three weeks of immersion.
Five fully equipped vehicles.
Twelve guests at a time.
Unreasonable privilege - responsibly held.
The 4-Route Ecosystem
Tasman is not built as isolated journeys.
It is designed as a living system.
Four routes form a closed, geographically intelligent circuit — flowing across landscapes, seasons, and climates with natural continuity. Each route feeds the next, allowing movement without disruption and exploration without repetition.
There is no repositioning.
No dead miles.
No forced transitions.
The result is operational elegance — and an experience that feels both expansive and grounded. Guests move through terrain as part of a rhythm already in motion, not as an interruption to it.
This is how remoteness is preserved.
This is how rarity lasts.
Our Expeditions
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Lines of the Gods
Lima → Nazca → Andahuaylas → Cusco → Copacabana → Puno → Uyuni · 21 Days · Inca Spine
The Nazca lines. The Valle Sagrado. Machu Picchu. Lake Titicaca. The route that follows the geometry the ancients carved into the earth.
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Salt of the Cosmos
Uyuni → San Pedro de Atacama → Salta → Mendoza → Santiago · 21 Days · Altiplano
The world’s driest desert. The world’s largest salt flat. Bolivia’s beating heart. Where the sky meets the earth and both reflect each other.
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The Edge of the World
Santiago → Mendoza → Puerto Montt → Bariloche → Torres del Paine → Ushuaia → Buenos Aires · 21 Days · Ruta 40
Patagonia at its most raw. Wind, glacier, steppe, Andean peaks. The end of the world driven slowly northward along Argentina’s legendary Ruta 40.
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The Emerald Meridian
Buenos Aires → Montevideo → Iguazú → Florianópolis → São Paulo → Pantanal → Santa Cruz · 21 Days · Atlantic Arc
The world’s greatest waterfall. Brazil’s Atlantic coast. The Pantanal — earth’s largest tropical wetland and one of its most extraordinary wildlife ecosystems.
The Fleet StrategyTasman’s fleet is not aesthetic.
It is architectural.
Five expedition-grade vehicles form the backbone of the system — configured for safety, endurance, and presence across diverse terrain. Each vehicle has a defined role within the convoy, creating redundancy, resilience, and operational trust.
The fleet is developed and mastered during extended scouting phases, driven by the founders alongside the expedition tribe — the professional leaders who will later guide guests. This shared field time ensures deep route knowledge, aligned decision-making, and a system that functions independently of the founders’ presence.
When expeditions are live, leadership is carried by trained professionals whose sole focus is safety, flow, and guest experience. The founders step back. The system steps forward.
These vehicles are long-term hard assets, purpose-built to support years of route mastery and operation. They are not optimized for speed or volume, but for reliability, rhythm, and calm authority.
Guests feel this immediately — even if they cannot name it.
Experimental IP