Hiking in Alaska

Listing
[1 - 31 of 31]

Alagnak Wild River (King Salmon)

Alagnak Wild River is located in the beautiful Aleutian Range. The river provides unparalleled opportunities to experience the wilderness of the Alaska Peninsula.

Aniakchak National Monument & Preserve (King Salmon)

The Aniakchak Caldera, is the result of a series of eruptions, the latest in 1931. Nearly six miles in diameter and covering some ten square miles, it is one of the finest examples of dry caldera in the world.

Kobuk Valley National Park (Kotzebue)

Kobuk Valley National Park is encircled by the Baird and Waring mountain ranges.

Noatak National Preserve (Kotzebue)

As one of North America's largest mountain-ringed river basins with an intact ecosystem, the Noatak River environs features some of the Artic's finest arrays of plants and animals.

Bering Land Bridge National Preserve (Kotzebue)

The Bering Land Bridge National Preserve is one of the most remote national park areas, located on the Seward Peninsula in northwest Alaska. The Preserve is a remnant of the land bridge that connected Asia with North America more than 13, 000 years ago.

Cape Krusenstern National Monument (Kotzebue)

Cape Krusenstern National Monument is a treeless coastal plain dotted with sizable lagoons and backed by gently rolling limestone hills.

Denali National Park & Preserve (Denali Park)

It's more than a mountain. Denali National Park & Preserve features North America's highest mountain, 20, 320-foot tall Mount McKinley. The Alaska Range also includes countless other spectacular mountains and many large glaciers.

Gates Of The Arctic National Park & Preserve (Bettles)

By establishing Gates of the Arctic National Park & Preserve (GAAR) in Alaska's Brooks Range, Congress has reserved a vast and essentially untouched area of superlative natural beauty and exceptional scientific value - a maze of glaciated valleys and gaun

Glacier Bay National Park & Preserve (Gustavus)

The marine wilderness of Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve provides opportunities for adventure, a living laboratory for observing the ebb and flow of glaciers, and a chance to study life as it returns in the wake of retreating ice.

Katmai National Park & Preserve (King Salmon)

Katmai is famous for volcanoes, brown bears, fish, and rugged wilderness and is also the site of the Brooks River National Historic Landmark with North America's highest concentration of prehistoric human dwellings (about 900).

Kenai Fjords National Park (Seward)

Sweeping from rocky coastline to glacier-crowned peaks, Kenai Fjords National Park encompasses 607, 805 acres of unspoiled wilderness on the southeast coast of Alaska?s Kenai Peninsula.

Lake Clark National Park & Preserve (Port Alsworth)

Lake Clark National Park and Preserve is a composite of ecosystems representative of many regions of Alaska. The spectacular scenery stretches from the shores of Cook Inlet, across the Chigmit Mountains, to the tundra covered hills of the western interior.

Sitka National Historical Park (Sitka)

Alaska's oldest federally designated park was established in 1910 to commemorate the 1804 Battle of Sitka.

Wrangell - St Elias National Park & Preserve (Copper Center)

The Chugach, Wrangell, and St. Elias mountain ranges converge here in what is often referred to as the "mountain kingdom of North America.

Yukon - Charley Rivers National Preserve (Eagle)

Located along the Canadian border in central Alaska, the preserve protects 115 miles of the 1, 800-mile Yukon River and the entire Charley River basin.

Kenai National Wildlife Refuge (Soldotna)

Alaska's Kenai Peninsula is, in geologic terms, still quite "young, " since its entire land mass was covered by glacial ice as recently as 10, 000 years ago.

Kodiak National Wildlife Refuge (Kodiak)

Today, Kodiak National Wildlife Refuge covers two thirds of Kodiak Island, all of Ban Island, and part of Afognak Island, and includes 1, 932, 953 acres, all of it accessible only by float plane or boat.

Tetlin National Wildlife Refuge (Tok)

Tetlin National Wildlife Refuge is a dynamic landscape made up of forests, wetlands, tundra, lakes, mountains and glacial rivers bounded by the snowy peaks of the Alaska Range.

Becharof National Wildlife Refuge (King Salmon)

Becharof National Wildlife Refuge is a land of contrasts. From its rugged coastline to the 4, 835-foot summit of the Mt.

Dall Sheep Viewing Area (Fairbanks)

Crossing the Brooks Range is one of the true motoring adventures available in North America. One of the best places to see Dall sheep in Alaska is on the rocky slopes of Atigun Pass (mile 240, elevation 4, 739 feet) along Dalton Highway.

Beaver Creek (Fairbanks)

Beaver Creek NWR is a Class I, clear water river, that flows past jagged limestone peaks in the White Mountains and through the Yukon Flats National Wildlife Refuge before joining the Yukon River. It may be the longest road-to-road float in North America.

Fort Egbert (Fairbanks)

The Fort is a former Yukon River U.S. Army post, which was established in 1899 to bring law and order to the Fortymile country during the Klondike gold rush.

Gulkana National Wild and Scenic River (Glennallen)

The Gulkana is one of the 5 most used rivers in Alaska, primarily because of its easy access at the put-in and take-out points.

Dalton Highway Recreation Management Area (Fairbanks)

Crossing the Brooks Range is one of the true motoring adventures available in North America. One of the best places to see Dall sheep in Alaska is on the rocky slopes of Atigun Pass (mile 240, elevation 4, 739 feet) along Dalton Highway.

Kuskokwim Bay - Carter Spit (Anchorage)

The Carter Spit site includes 4 spits and the intertidal mudflats within Kuskokwim Bay and north of Goodnews Bay, on the southwest coast of Alaska.

White Mountains National Recreation Area (Fairbanks)

This 1-million-acre area is used primarily from February to April, when dog-mushers, snowmobilers, and skiers come to take advantage of the winter solitude and northern lights.

Campbell Tract Recreation Management Area (Anchorage)

The Campbell Tract is a 730-acre natural area used mostly by urban recreationists seeking a piece of Alaska wilderness in the heart of the Anchorage.

Chena River Lakes (North Pole)

The Chena Project offers a host of recreational opportunities and a variety of Alaskan scenery to enjoy throughtout the year.

Tongass National Forest (Ketchikan)

You can camp in a campground - or in a cabin. You can hike through dense forest, alpine meadow, or on a wooden trail through marshland called muskeg. You can explore world-class caves.

Chugach National Forest (Anchorage)

The mountains and waters of the Kenai Peninsula, the islands and glaciers of Prince William Sound, and the wetlands and birds of the Copper River Delta make this forest a prime destination for adventurers the world over.

Misty Fiords National Monument (Ketchikan)

2.3 million acres of undeveloped wild land on the mainland and adjoining islands of southern Southeast Alaska.