
Bears larger than bison, national parks the size of  nations, and glaciers bigger than other US states. The word ‘epic’ barely does  Alaska justice.
 
Wondrous Wilderness & Outdoor Playground
Wilderness – land free of strip malls, traffic jams and  McDonald’s restaurants – is the best attraction Alaska has to offer. Within  Alaska is the largest national park in the country (Wrangell-St Elias), the  largest national forest (Tongass), and the largest state park (Wood-Tikchik).  This is where people play outdoors. During 20-hour days, they climb mountains,  canoe wilderness rivers, strap on crampons and trek across glaciers. In July  they watch giant brown bears snagging salmon; in November they head to 
Haines to see thousands of bald eagles gathered at the Chilkat River. They hoist a  backpack and follow the same route that the Klondike stampeders did a century  earlier or spend an afternoon in a kayak, bobbing in front of a 5-mile-wide  glacier continually calving icebergs into the sea around them. In Alaska these  are more than just outdoor adventures. They are natural experiences that can  permanently change your way of thinking.
The Biggest State of Them All

Alaska is big and so is everything about it. There are  mountains and glaciers in other parts of 
North America, but few on the  same scale or as overpowering as those in Alaska. At 20,320ft, Mt McKinley is  not only the highest peak in 
North  America, it’s also a stunning sight when you catch its alpenglow in Wonder  Lake. The Yukon is the third-longest river in the USA, Bering Glacier is larger  than Switzerland, and Arctic winters are one long night while Arctic summers are  one long day. The brown bears on 
Kodiak  Island have been known to stand 14ft tall; the king salmon in the Kenai  River often exceed 70lb; in 
Palmer they grow cabbages that tip the scales at 127lbs. A 50ft-long humpback whale  breaching is not something easily missed, even from a half mile away.
 
Far, Far Away
The 49th state is the longest trip in the USA and probably  the most expensive. From elsewhere in the country it takes a week on the road,  two to three days on a ferry, or a $700 to $900 airline ticket to reach Alaska.  Once there, many visitors are overwhelmed by the distances between cities,  national parks and attractions. Alaskan prices are the stuff of legends. Still,  the Final Frontier is on the bucket list of most adventurous travelers,  particularly those enamored of the great outdoors. Those who find the time and  money to visit the state rarely regret it.
 Meet the People
Meet the People
Isolation fosters peculiarities. A trip into the Alaskan  wilderness can be as much about the off-beat people as the off-the-beaten-track  location. Take tiny Chitina with its handful of subsistence-hunting locals, or  the crusty boom-and-bust town of 
Nome,  or the jokey gold-mining punch line that is Chicken. Ever since the US bought  Alaska for 2 cents an acre in 1867, the land that styles itself as America’s  last frontier has attracted contrarians, rat-race escapees, wanderers, dreamers,  back-to-the-landers and people imbued with the spirit of the Wild West. In a  land of immense natural beauty, the Alaskan people are an oft-forgotten part of  the brew.
The Call of the Wild

Pure, raw, unforgiving, and humongous in scale, Alaska is  a place that arouses basic instincts and ignites what Jack London termed the  'call of the wild’. Yet, unlike London and his gutsy, gold-rush companions,  visitors today will have a far easier time penetrating the region's vast, feral  wilderness. Indeed, one of the beauties of the 49th state is its accessibility.  Nowhere else in 
North  America is it so easy to climb an unclimbed mountain, walk where – quite  possibly – no human foot has trodden before, or sally forth into a national park  that gets fewer annual visitors than the International Space Station.
 
 Animal Magic
People-watching takes second place to wildlife-spotting in  a state where brown bears snatch leaping salmon out of angry waterfalls and  curious moose pose majestically on national park roadsides. But the real thrill  for wilderness purists is to go off in search of fauna in its natural habitat.  Fly out into unguarded backcountry and you'll quickly get the sense of swapping  your seat on a bush plane for one in the food chain. The landscapes of the far  north might be the domain of musk oxen, gray wolves and bears, but, keep your  wits about you, and they’ll quietly accept you as a guest.
Just do it
Alaska is, without a doubt, America’s grittiest outdoor  playground where skilled bush pilots land with pinpoint accuracy on  crevasse-riddled glaciers, and backcountry guiding companies take bravehearts on  bracing paddles down almost virgin rivers. With scant phone coverage and a  dearth of hipster-friendly coffee bars to plug in your iPad, this is a region  for 'doing' rather than observing. Whether you go it alone with bear-spray and a  backpack, or place yourself in the hands of an experienced ’sourdough’ (Alaskan  old-timer), the rewards are immeasurable.
 
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