|
About our trips: On all our trips, the emphasis is on garnering the most from your particular experience. Significant attention has been given to provide a comfortable camp and excellent cuisine to complement the day's discoveries. Our mission is to provide you with a relaxing atmosphere so you can most enjoy your great Alaskan odyssey. All inquiries receive our prompt attention. Full trip descriptions, route details, suggested equipment list, orientation information, plus answers to any related questions are rapidly provided following receipt of a deposit. Wilderness Alaska's former guests (there are likely some in your area) are also available to answer any "What's it really like?" questions.
Float
trips
comprise of two 14' white water rafts. Each boat has a knowledgeable guide
and most boats are rigged as paddle boats with a crew of 3 or 4. Trip size
is normally limited to 8 to insure you the highest quality trip with the less
distractions possible. All the trips are casual in nature. Each day is an adventure, we are more responsive to weather and wildlife to determine individual day's activities than prescribed programs developed during the off season. With 24 hours of daylight, we have extreme flexibility to accommodate this opportunistic schedule. Most of the floats are 40 to 50 miles in length. We normally spend an average of 2 1/2 - 6 hours in the boats which leaves plenty of time to explore or watch wildlife. Most days we spend only half the day in the boats and the other half is either spent on a longer afternoon dayhike or by stopping several times for shorter hikes up knolls or side valleys and to watch the animals spotted along the way. At least two days (usually more) are set aside exclusively for dayhiking. The boats haul enough gear that we can serve up three hearty meals a day comprised of foods that most of us eat at home. Ask the pilots, our coolers are the heaviest in the business! This is clearly the platinum way to go. No experience is necessary though one should feel comfortable around water. Water safety and instruction is provided and practiced. Folks ranging from 8 to 75 have enjoyed these trips in past. As we expand the range of rivers we explore, we are increasingly choosing canoes. Some experience is recommended for these trips. Hiking
trips, which are limited to 5 people, are clearly more demanding,
because we all are responsible for carrying our own gear and part of the community
gear (food, pots, fuel, etc.). On a 10 day trip, packs can weigh around 60
pounds. Of all our trips, Below,
you will find a key beside all hikes to try to reference them in relative
terms of difficulty and demand within our system, remember even easy off trail
trips can rival long distance trail hiking for intensity. A Our
Southcentral sea kayaking trips
are very much like our float trips, though we are slightly limited in what
we carry by the size of our boats, however there is still room for coolers
of delicious food and small boxes of hardwood for environmentally All itineraries are relatively flexible, adjustable to the group's ability and endurance. Rarely are any of the days long marathon paddles (most days are less than 8 - 12 miles), but rather mixed days of paddling, beach combing, eating and hiking. Familiarity with the country enables us to establish cozy beach camps even in inclement weather. Walking is usually limited to shoreline or along creeks and waterfalls, but there is an abundance of time to peer into the forest to examine the inner workings of the rain forest. Customized group trips have always been an important part of our business. Every year we organize trips for families, camps or friends. If you have specialized goals or would like to alter scheduled trips dates, please contact us about designing a trip for you. We also can design an itinerary and provide support for you to conduct a trip 'bareback', ask for the 'NO GUIDES, NO GEAR' option.
Experience: As
with any endeavor, the better prepared you are, the more you will enjoy it.
The Brooks Range, due to its remoteness, is unforgiving. Wilderness Alaska
groups traverse some of the most remote areas on the continent and help is
always a long way Previous experience is not required, however it does help one make more informed choices before and after the trek begins. Similarly, an adventuresome spirit and tolerant attitude are also quite helpful. Prince William Sound, on the other hand, is a great place to 'get your feet wet' so to speak. A more immediate support network exists here. The shorter length trips provide an excellent platform to develop outdoor skills that can be tested and built upon on more rigorous trips later. The boats enable us to ride in style with an extra level of comfort. Upper body preconditioning and a tough backside pay large dividends. Please consult with us for suggestion on how best to prepare for your outing.
Equipment: Quality
equipment will help assure that a trip is safe and enjoyable. Equipment failures
in remote areas are frustrating at best and can be dangerous. Particular attention
should be given to older gear that may be in need of some important maintenance
and footwear that may either be too old to
What to expect: Plan
to arrive in the host city the day before your trip departs. A Wilderness
Alaska representative will meet with you there to insure that all has arrived
well and intact, provide orientation regarding the following days logistics
and offer help with last minute equipment adjustments as well as WHAT'S
INCLUDED The quoted price includes all community equipment, boats and
Weather: The
Arctic So what's it like? Technically the Arctic is a desert receiving less than 15" of precipitation annually. Unfortunately most of it comes in the summer. The compensation for this is the ceaseless sunshine with no sunsets from May 2 to August 1 and long hours of twilight afterwards. July can be like June only some days the temperature is higher. The bugs will be at peak hatch during the first three weeks. Toward the end of the month it is more common to see weather systems moving from the west and having less intense precipitation over longer periods of time. These systems can be on three day cycles punctuated with periods of clearer weather. The lagoons and near shore break up. During August these cold fronts from the west are more common and temperatures begin to drop. Of the three months, this is the coolest and wettest. Even at its wettest, the precipitation is intermittent and there are windows when we can break and set camp with relative ease. This weather also dampens the bugs and accelerate the autumn colors. Late in August the skies tend to clear and there is an "Indian Summer". Daytime temperatures can return to the mid sixties and the precipitation switches back to the briefer orographic storms. Night time temperatures are coldest during clear optimum aurora viewing evenings and we frequently find frost awnings in the morning. With luck the Indian Summer continues through the first week of September. When this bubble bursts freeze up and shattered snow showers are the order of the day.
Prince
William Sound As long as you have an effective rain management plan this is fairly benign environment. We suggest that you bring two sets of clothes, paddling garments and camp gear. During the clear weather (we do have this, its not completely uncommon) these two sets can be integrated. But if you experience wet weather, it is nice to have a layer of fleece that you wear in the boat under your paddling jacket and rain pants. And when we set camp you can remove these garments if they have gotten damp and put on a dry layer. We will have a cozy screened camp kitchen tent and suggest that you bolster your tent with an additional tarp to insure that you remain comfortable on land. I bring a paddling jacket and a rain coat for shore. The equipment list you receive will cover all of this. April and May are the driest months in the Sound Prince William Sound . Unfortunately shore don't clear of snow until mid May. May and early June can have sensational weather with relatively warm dry days. As the summer progresses expect more rain and by late August the weather can be come quite tempestuous. Make sure that your rain gear works. Trips near glaciers are obviously colder than boreal or island locations. Daily breezes or wind are also quite common, thus a good wind or paddling jacket is a great garment to have. Early in the summer weather tends to be more orographic and predictable. In fact late evening can be the best time to travel to avoid wind and waves By mid August, the winter storm track returns and weather turns cranky and unpredictable quickly and for extended periods. This is why our trips retreat to the more protected fiords later in the summer. During May and June it will be virtually daylight the entire time. Sometime in July night returns, but not really in earnest until the end of the month and artificial light is mandatory. Bugs begin to hatch in mid June and are worst in July. By August mosquitoes are all but gone, but gnats persist.
|