Thanks, Craig. Good morning, everyone, and thanks for joining us today. Not long ago, I wrote our annual report letter to shareholders and described 2022 as a year of resurgence for our company. It was a year with many highlights, returning to full operations on all our ships, the first full-year and brilliant performance at both poles of our new Bluewater ships, the National Geographic Endurance and the National Geographic Resolution. In the Galapagos, the extremely positive reception of our guests to the Islander II and the securing of 20 more years of coupos to operate there. And the record-setting financial performance of our land companies were all reasons for celebration. Most importantly, we experienced a change in guest focus with COVID becoming less and less of a topic. The desire to once again explore the world's most amazing geographies returned and bookings started to meaningfully increase. This backdrop is one which created momentum into our first quarter performance, and I'm pleased to say that Q1 2023 results represent all-time highs for Lindblad Expeditions in both revenue and EBITDA. Craig will give some additional color on our financial results in a few minutes, but our first quarter performance demonstrates the earnings power inherent in the increased capacity of our fleet as well as the fast-growing land companies. I for one, and extremely grateful to the hardworking and dedicated team of people who fought steadfastly over the last three years to ensure Lindblad Expeditions emerged from the pandemic as a strong and vibrant company and who are now working diligently to push it to new heights. A centerpiece of the Q1 2023 performance was the increased guest count as we broadened the usage of our expanded fleet and achieved 81% occupancy fleet-wide. All of our ships were fully deployed during the quarter and the occupancy bump from 66% a year ago was due to a variety of factors. First, as noted a moment ago, the world is opening up again to travel, and the confidence among guests continues to grow as they consider travel on expedition ships to remote places. Second, our modern marketing machine is starting to yield powerful results, and I want to tell you a bit more about that now. Prior to the pandemic, the company had been predominantly utilizing a historically successful marketing approach, which centered around brochures, letters from our Founder and now Board Co-Chair, Sven-Olof Lindblad, targeted e-mails and smaller direct mail pieces, which focused on specific geographies and itineraries. Over the last two years, we have invested heavily in transitioning to an omnichannel marketing approach that evolves our past practices and adds meaningful digital marketing components. So today, we are developing an ever-growing capacity to source guests through search engine optimization and SEM. We are active on social media platforms. We also have a growing set of capabilities around the analytics, which allow us to gauge the effectiveness of our various digital marketing efforts and also to understand the relative performance of all these different approaches and channels from a customer acquisition cost standpoint. The largest result thus far of the growing proficiency of this new omnichannel marketing approach is that we are attracting a higher number of first-time guests than ever before, coupled with the ongoing strength of our repeat guest business, which continues to be on average more than 35% of each voyage, we are booking higher guest volumes than ever before. At this time, our bookings for 2023 are 45% higher than pre-pandemic bookings in 2019 for the year 2020. I'm also happy to report that cancellations, which had more than doubled as a percentage of booked revenue late last year, are settling down significantly. While still higher than in 2019, they have dropped due to a number of factors. First, the threat of COVID meaningfully impacting a voyage continues to diminish, and indeed, the incidence of COVID ownership is increasingly rare. Secondly, we have now reinstituted a more industry norm cancellation policy, which drive guests to think more critically before booking or canceling a trip. During the pandemic, we had reduced penalties for canceling a trip even on short notice to very low levels, recognizing that our valued guests wanted and needed flexibility due to illnesses and the quarantine requirements that nearly all countries had imposed for anyone who tested positive for COVID. We expect cancellations to continue to drop as a percentage of booked revenue and are encouraged by the current trends. A big step forward in our marketing and sales efforts occurred earlier this week with the launch of our new Seaware reservations and booking platform. The Seaware platform is one which will allow guests and eventually travel advisor partners to book, select the cabin and access any special offers online. I'm quite excited about the fact that it will also allow guests who are on a voyage with us to book a future trip in real time. We have found historically that guests who love seeing whales in Alaska expressed interest in seeing the whales in Baja. The same is true for our polar explorers who once they have experienced one of the poles on a Lindblad ship have a great desire to travel to the other pole in the same fashion. Seaware will also allow us to implement modern dynamic pricing practices, enhancing our ability to reach higher levels of revenue yield on voyages across the globe. Just as importantly, we're building connectivity between the Seaware platform and our marketing technology and CRM stack. This will give us better and faster access to customer data and enable us to be more effective in our guest generation and customer service efforts. The Seaware implementation is a major milestone in these digital transformation efforts and enables a leap forward towards a more powerful future. Back in 2002, our Founder, Sven, pulled a group of leaders together within the company and established Lindblad Expeditions guiding principles. Our first guiding principle is, ensure that everything we do must add value to the guest experience. I'm really grateful to our team for the guest feedback we are seeing across our fleet, both new and old, with regards to the quality of expedition content, food and beverage and the onboard hotel and amenities aspects of these expeditions. The other thing that is improving as each month goes by is the reliability of the network of partners, which we enjoy, including airlines and the many land and port operations partners that we have built relationships with over decades of working together. They are returning to more normal operations, which has a great impact on the enjoyment of our guests traveling the world with us. Delivering amazing experiences for our guests remains our primary focus. And as we do so, we are equally committed to pushing booking levels higher and higher to once again achieve the occupancy levels that we had attained prior to the pandemic. At this particular time, we have seen the best performance in the geographies, which are the historical strongholds for the company. The Antarctic season, which just finished was extremely strong. Our newest ships demonstrated their polar Class V capabilities in the ice and enabled voyages to areas that were previously unreachable. The abundance of wildlife and remarkable scenery observed further south than ever before in the Amundsen Sea created unforgettable experiences for our guests. We also continue to generate bookings strength in the Galapagos while experiencing some of the highest guest feedback scores in our history there. Our Alaska season, which begins in May, is showing strong guest demand across all four of our U.S. flagged vessels and we're expecting another strong season in the Arctic when the polar ships move further north for the Arctic summer. As we continue to ramp occupancy levels, we are focused on fine-tuning marketing for some of our more esoteric or shoulder season itineraries, including where the ships are in transition between the poles or repositioning before and after very popular destinations such as Baja. I mentioned the performance of our land companies earlier, but their progress deserves more detailed description. As you may recall, our strategy is to develop a best-in-class platform company, which can provide adventure travel options across multiple types of experiences and with different thematic focuses for our guests. Famously, Sven Lindblad describes our guest as omnivorous in their desire to experience the world broadly from a travel and expedition standpoint. Q1 is a seasonally quiet quarter for all of our land companies, but they delivered positive earnings and are poised for another year of record results. Key drivers behind their performance include the quality of their offerings and strong consumer demand for premium experiential travel. They are also benefiting from the sharing of best practices and greater infrastructure and marketing support resident in our larger organization. Our ability to grow these land companies once they join the Lindblad family of companies is demonstrated by the success of Natural Habitat, which has more than tripled its EBITDA contribution since joining Lindblad in 2016. As I near the end of my comments, I feel it is important to mention our continued focus related to environmental sustainability and our mission to educate guests about what they can do to support the health of our planet. In addition to our now long-time commitment to being carbon neutral and having zero single-use plastics in our system, we continue to push forward on many other efforts. We sponsored the 2023 Planet Forward Storyfest, relaunched our support for the Kampong Tralach Green School in Cambodia and launched the Visiting Scientist Program for the 2022 and 2023 Antarctic and Southern Ocean season. The scientists onboard our ship will study snow algae, DNA in the oceans waters and baleen whales. A personal highlight for me was welcoming 50 elementary, middle school and high school teachers to our 2023 class of Lindblad National Geographic Society, Grosvenor teaching fellows who will take expeditions with us and then translate their experiences to future generations in their classrooms across America. As we look forward, I want to share my belief that the future will be bright for our segment of this industry and for Lindblad Expeditions individually. The rise in environmental consciousness and the consumer trends indicating that people are desiring experiences rather than being more focused on material goods, provide secular tailwinds for our business. Within the industry, Lindblad Expeditions has the deepest and widest history related to expedition travel, including the many firsts our company recorded such as being the first company to take tourists to places such as Antarctica and the Galapagos. We are building on that great tradition by continuing to advance the technologies and depth of expertise within our ranks, which will allow us to maintain the preeminent position in this exciting field. And with that, I will turn the call over to Craig.