OT: Denali National Park

RAC’emUp

All-Conference
Jul 20, 2011
2,134
2,465
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We are set for a cruise in Alaska this summer and are going to add a Denali Ntational Park leg. We are trying to figure out how much time to book there as I do have some work limitations. The plan so far is to take the scenic train from Anchorage to Denali, getting in late day one. On day 2 we will take the tundra bus tour and an evening float trip. We are trying to determine if a 3rd day is warranted. We like to hike (moderate) but grizzly encounters are worrisome. We do not do helicopter rides. We enjoy park ranger activities. We are looking for insight from anyone who has been there. Thanks..
 
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RUich

All-Conference
Aug 2, 2001
13,552
4,003
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We went on Princess and did the combo cruise/land deal in June a few years ago. The part of visiting Denali was a bit of a disappointment since we were pretty much on a school bus with a remote camera that showed close ups of whatever animals we did encounter. Mostly mountain sheep and the Grizzlies we did see were really far away. Not much out of the bus to speak of. My guess is that you want to make sure you get off the main road in the park. Good luck.
 

brgRC90

Heisman
Apr 8, 2008
34,957
15,858
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Denali is very strictly regulated due to the fragile nature of the environment there. You have to take the bus, at least past a certain point, as far as I recall, and that point is way before almost anything worth seeing.

The buses can fill up days in advance. I was last at the park in 1999 but I would imagine even in the days of cell phone apps you probably have to be at the park to sign up for seats and cannot do it remotely, though you might want to check with the Park Service to verify.

If you intend to hike at all you are required to watch a video on grizzly encounters--and the park is full of grizzly bears. Earlier in the summer they might not be at lower altitudes but later in the summer, when I was there, they come down to lower elevations to gorge on berries for the winter, so you see them constantly out of the bus windows, just off the road.

I was lucky when I went to Denali. The weather was bad when I arrived, so I signed up for a slot on the bus for 3 days down the road, went to Fairbanks for a few days, and then came back in time for a rare clearing of the weather. The view of McKinley was FANTASTIC and I rode the bus all the way to the end of the road. But what I saw with the clear weather is that Denali is not an easy or great place to hike from the main road. You are on one side of a large, flat, treeless valley. If you climb the hills to your north (just above the perilously high road you are riding on in a school bus) you might get a better view but they don't go very high above you so I don't think there's much to do there. If you want to hike towards the Alaska Range you will simply be plunging down into a giant valley filled with grizzly bears and it's a long, trail-less distance to the mountains, more than a day's hike. There are small hikes closer to the entrance of the park but you won't see McKinley or the other snow-covered peaks of the Alaska Range. It actually takes quite a bit of time on the road to get to the point where you can even see them. It's a very big park.
 

brgRC90

Heisman
Apr 8, 2008
34,957
15,858
0
Be sure to bring cold/wet weather gear for Denali. If it's rainy it will be raw and chilly. I camped for a couple days in a campground in the park, and came prepared for 30s or 40s over night. Instead it got down into the teens--in August. August is a rainy month--it rained on me every day for two weeks--so if you go in August be prepared. By the end of my trip snow was falling and that was in Anchorage. I think it was September 1.

Alaskan scenery is a little different from what you might expect. Much of it is tedious and not particularly beautiful, but the high points are about as high as any place you will ever visit. On the train you might not get a particular sense of wilderness but driving through Alaska I was struck by looking around me and looking on the map that I was so often on the edge of real wilderness, places where there were no human settlements for literally hundreds of miles. There is a rawness to Alaska that you won't find any place else, at least not in the United States.
 

Chris95

Redshirt
Jul 31, 2001
602
49
0
2 years ago, we did the Royal Carribesan cruise with the additional 4 day land tour which included glass domed train to Anchorage for a night, then coach bus to Telkeeetna where we stayed at the foot of Mt. McKinley. The next day we did a full day tour of Danali by bus. The park is immense so you can really only see the very beginning of the park. If your daring enough, there are plenty of walkable trails. We did the triple lakes trail which was amazing, but takes you on a very demanding 7 hour hike, but through the most beautiful breathtaking sceney you will find. My advice would be to spend at least 2 days at Denali. Enjoy!
 

c_husk

Senior
Nov 11, 2012
1,526
987
113
Take time for a airplane trip that lands on the glaciers. The trips take off from Talkeetna, which is only a 2 hour drive from Denali. I was not on a cruise but my wife and I rented a car after arriving in Anchorage. I night Anchorage, 5 nights Seward, 2 nights Homer and 5 nights in Denali. We drove from Denali to Talkeetna and did the plane trip. Alaska was on of the greatest vacations we had, and we take a trip every year.
 

RUBigFrank

All-Conference
Jun 9, 2003
2,812
1,715
113
princess may have the wrangel st Elias option. I been to Denali twice and find wrangel more appealing as the weather is signicantly better. Also McCarthy and the abandoned copper mine is a great stop. The problem with Denali is the limited access and you may never see the mountain- most summer visitors don't get to see the mountain.