пятница, 1 ноября 2013 г.

This southeast Alaska town is now known more for tourism than for its once-thriving timber industry.


Log in Create account Newsletters Mobile E-edition Subscriber country inns and suites Services Subscription rates Print edition home delivery Sunday Pinch E-paper daily edition Online premium account RSS feeds TV Week Make a payment Vacation stops Customer service FAQ Service Agreement Shop Obituaries Jobs SpokesmanJobs.com country inns and suites Jobs at The Spokesman-Review Homes Cars Ads/Classifieds Get S-R Media Advertising Information View ads from print edition SpokesmanClassifieds.com Place a Classified Ad Engagement or Wedding country inns and suites Announcement Birthday/Anniversary Ads Spokesman-Review promotions Special advertising sections Contact us Comics Comics Corner Crossword Jumble Horoscopes
Topics News Local Idaho Nation/World News Quiz Education Topic pages Weather Opinion Letters Health LiveWELL Business Office Hours blog Money & Markets Investment Politics Spin Control WA politics ID politics Sports country inns and suites Local Scoreboard NW Preps Now SportsLink WSU football EWU football Spokane Indians Spokane Shock Gonzaga basketball WSU basketball EWU basketball Golf Outdoors Outdoors blog Features Boomer U Food Too Many Cooks blog Slice blog EndNotes blog Travel Green Living Community Spokane Voices Public records Announcements Weddings and Engagements Obits Births Idaho clubs Idaho support groups Entertainment Spokane7 Movies Restaurants TV listings Tech Calendar Today's events Blogs SportsLink Huckleberries Online Movies & More More blogs ... Today s news Archives Topics pages Tags Popular stories Columnists Newsroom staff Times Today's news Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Today in print Today's calendar Live stream of site activity Archives Site search Places Spokane Voices: Neighborhood news Idaho Handle Extra Nation/World Media Video Recent Popular Photos Recent country inns and suites Popular Galleries Picture stories Timelines Reprints Audio slideshows Recent Popular Audio Popular Stories Popular Most commented Data Projects Documents Comments 32 Spokane forecast
Cruise passengers who sign up for shore excursions can spend hundreds of dollars, if not more in the case of families, in each port they visit. Taking a helicopter to see Juneau-area ice fields can easily run $1,000 for a family of four for a one-hour trip. A nature tour near the tiny town of Ketchikan can run $89 for adults and $50 for kids.
Cruise passengers who sign up for shore excursions can spend hundreds of dollars, if not more in the case of families, in each port they visit. Taking a helicopter to see Juneau-area ice fields can easily run $1,000 for a family of four for a one-hour country inns and suites trip. A nature tour near the tiny town of Ketchikan can run $89 for adults and $50 for kids.
But there are many low-cost and even free things to do in Alaska port towns, from hiking to exploring glaciers country inns and suites to learning about Alaska and Native culture. Here are some ideas from some of Alaska's most visited ports.
This southeast Alaska town is now known more for tourism than for its once-thriving timber country inns and suites industry. But timber workers' skills can still be admired at the Great Alaskan Lumberjack Show, $35 (kids 3-12, $17.50) plus tax. Historic Creek Street, once a red-light district, now houses shops, galleries, restaurants and Dolly's House Museum, former home of madam Dolly Arthur, where visitors can learn about Ketchikan's bawdy past for a $5 admission. Off Creek Street along Married Man's Trail, you can catch the salmon running in the creek from mid-July into September.
A must-see in this stunning town is the Sitka National Historical Park. A national monument, it commemorates the 1804 Battle of Sitka between the Tlingit Indians and Russians. Totems – many of them replicas – are scattered along the park's 2-mile wooded trail. There's also a visitor center, where you can see Native artists working, and the Russian Bishop's country inns and suites House, which the park service says is one of the last surviving examples of Russian colonial architecture in North America. The house tour is $4 (free for kids under 16).
Alaska's capital has a walkable downtown with museums, shops, easy access to trails and the state Capitol, which offers free tours. The popular three-mile Perseverance Trail is within walking distance from the port, though it requires a jaunt up steep streets. The trail, which forms a spine for a network of trails, features scattered exhibits on the region's mining history, along with stunning views of rushing water, waterfalls and mountains. You'll likely see birds – possibly a bald eagle – and maybe even a mountain goat, black bear or porcupine. The trail is steep and narrow in sections and can be hot in the sun, so bring water.
Another popular destination is Mendenhall Glacier, reachable by bus. The $16 round-trip rides, offered by MGT Blue Glacier Express, run every half-hour, 9 a.m.-6 p.m. most days during the summer season. Hikes near the glacier include an easy stroll to Nugget country inns and suites Falls.
Seward is a final stop for some Alaska cruises, and many disembarking passengers head straight to Anchorage, 110 miles away, by bus or train. But there are plenty of reasons to spend a day or more here.
A free shuttle runs every day in summer, taking people along a circuit from the cruise ship terminal to the chamber of commerce country inns and suites office to downtown. If you have time, rent a car or hire a taxi to take you a few miles outside town to Exit Glacier, located within Kenai Fjords National Park, for spectacular up-close views of the glacier.
The downtown historic country inns and suites area offers shops, cafes, the Seward Community Library and Museum in a new building, and the Alaska SeaLife Center, which is Alaska's only aquarium ($20; $15 for ages 12-17; $10 for 4-11).
Chamber officials don't recommend hiking the city's famed Mount Marathon, site of an annual July 4 mad scramble up and down the 3,022-foot mountain. A runner disappeared during last year's race and several were injured. Instead, if you want to hike, try Jeep Trail. Locals say it's not too strenuous, and offers a view of the Anchorage Bowl.
But passengers beginning their Alaska cruises here arrive about 1 p.m. and have a few hours to spend in town before departure. Also this year, one company is making a port call here every other Monday, giving passengers a chance to look around town.
It's probably unlike any other they've seen. Whittier is the gateway to the fjords of Prince William Sound, but the U.S. Army saw another purpose. The Army saw Whittier's almost constant cloud cover as a perfect way to hide an almost ice-free port. The Army left in 1960, and most of the town's 180 year-round residents live in one of two former garrisons country inns and suites converted to condos.
There are a couple of souvenir shops, a few restaurants and cafes, a hot dog stand when lots of people are in town and a museum. Several fantastic hikes can be done in two or three hours. The Horsetail Falls hike doesn't disappoint, and offers views of waterfalls above the tree line. The Portage Pass hike affords country inns and suites views of Portage Glacier.
country inns and suites With nearly 300,000 residents, Anchorage offers attractions found in many big cities, as well as some that aren't. Think wildlife. Moose and bear coexist throughout the municipality, and moose are a common sight around town.
Downtown, you can rent bikes and enjoy a leisurely spin on the city's 135-mile country inns and suites plus trail system. That includes the Tony Knowles Coastal Trail, good for a bike ride, hike or run. It's accessible from many points downtown, but parts will be closed for renovation this summer. If that sounds like too much work, you can rent a Segway.
country inns and suites And if you prefer to see wildlife in a more secured setting, a free shuttle at Fourth and E streets downtown goes to the Alaska Zoo ($12; $6 for kids 3-17). The shuttle also stops at the Alaska Native Heritage Center, a cultural center and museum ($25; $17 for kids 7-16).
The Anchorage Museum at Rasmuson Center downtown features art, history and science country inns and suites ($15; $7 for kids 3-12). A timeline exhibit of Alaska history includes a cross-section of the trans-Alaska country inns and suites pipeline and a twisted beam from the 1964 earthquake. The magnitude-9.2 country inns and suites quake was the biggest ever recorded in North America.
If you are using IE 8 or greater and still cannot see comments, you can solve this problem by turning country inns and suites off "compatibility mode." To do so, click the torn page icon in the URL line as shown here . For more on why this happens, visit this page on disqus.com .
Please country inns and suites keep it civil. Don't post comments that are obscene, defamatory, threatening, off-topic, country inns and suites an infringement of copyright or an invasion of privacy. Read our forum standards and community guidelines .
Stories Popular Most commented Most emailed 01 New York attorney general seeks release of Attica riot files 02 Health care computer glitches blamed on government 03 Obama orders flags at half-staff in Foley's honor 04 Former Deaconess CEO Jeff Nelson found dead 05 Examiner: Man died from oxygen deprivation 06 Wind, frosty weather country inns and suites causing accidents, outages 07 Fall storm to batter region over weekend 01 Glitches hurt Obama's pitch on health reform (453) 02 Gail Gerlach talks about car thief shooting (324) 03 Fed judge: Texas abortion limits unconstitutional (254) 04 More money pours into Washington food labeling fight (214) 05 Davenport owner Walt Worthy pressed by firefighter union over ads (165) 06 Small liquor stores in Washington struggle with taxes (157) 07 Fairchild scare getting country inns and suites old (145) 01 Hello to history 02 Two men charged in attack with hatchet 03 In Washington Senate 7th District race, mud and money fly 04 WSU nursing receives $2 million in research grants 05 Millwood pastor keeps his faith despite lymphoma diagnosis 06 Fall storm to batter region over weekend 07 FDA testing shows spices twice as likely to be contaminated country inns and suites with salmonella Videos Popular Recent 01 Peter Rivera performance country inns and suites at Street Music Week 02 Looking back: Mount St. Helens comes to town 03 Lean Bean Robbery 04 Walgreens robbery suspect 05 Mobil Jifi Stop 06 pit crew 07 ISP shooting car camera 01 ISP shooting car camera 02 Walgreens robbery suspect 03 Car vs. motorcycle fatality 04 bad dolo 05 Dolo Dolo Dolo

Комментариев нет:

Отправить комментарий