Columbia Glacier and Wildlife Tour

blog31

Somehow we had managed to reach Valdez without purchasing our Tour Saver booklet. Along with the Milepost, the Tour Saver is considered a “must-have” when visiting Alaska. It has coupons for many tours, activities, cruises, flights, etc. basically at half price, or BOGO: By one, get one. Take one cruise, and it pays for itself. When we got to Safeway in Valdez, we snagged one, $99.95.

IMG_6423

We walked to the small boat harbor to check out the tour boats. The one we saw in the harbor was the Valdez Spirit, a beautiful gigantic catamaran, with a gleaming logo, “Stan Stephens Glacier & Wildlife Cruises”. It looked like an awesome boat to cruise around on, so we booked our tour, using our first coupon. Unfortunately, on the day of our cruise, that gleaming catamaran was nowhere to be found. Turns out it had been booked by a Korean reality show, whose contestants we later saw along the shores of an island. Who knows what they were up to. And in any case, our particular tour was never going to be on that big, shiny boat. Ours was always scheduled for the unmarked “Glacier Spirit”, the one with no company logo.

blog26  boat09
What we thought we were going to get (yeah, baby!) and what we actually got.

The “Glacier Spirt” is a monohull capable of running at around 18 knots. Even though it wasn’t a full cruise and we had lots of places to move around, it wasn’t a very comfortable boat. The seating reminded me of church pews, only not as cushy. By the end of our seven-hour cruise, I was knackered.

IMG_6337  blog39

The Prince William Sound, the Columbia Glacier and points in between have so much to offer, comfort is really not a factor. We cruised on a gorgeous and warm day, and saw one humpback whale feeding near shore, numerous sea otters and harbor seals, some with babies, and a ton of Stellar Sea Lions.  We saw Kittiwakes, Marbles Murrelets, Pigeon Guillemots, Murres, Eagles, Cormorants, Surf Scoters and Arctic Terns. Sadly, no Puffins. We will be taking another cruise out of Seward, so there is still a chance we might see them!

blog09  blog08
This small humpback whale was quite a distance from the boat so we didn’t get to see much of him.

clouds02  blog04
The sea otters won the prize for the cutest animal of the day!

seals49  seals03

seals01  seals02
Harbor seal acrobatics! There were hundreds of them along the water’s edge.

As if the wildlife wasn’t enough, the real star of this cruising show was the stunning Columbia Glacier. Starting about 15-20 miles away, the waters filled with all kinds of floating ice. From a distance, as we approched, I thought, “What are all those sailboats doing out here?” Duh, it was icebergs! From cocktail-sized ice cubes, to the larger growlers, and my favorite, Bergie Bits, to massive icebergs, the fjord was choked with ice. Some were clear, some were glacier blue, and all had interesting shapes. Our able captain maneuvered the Glacier Spirit right through the ice until we reached the Columbia, where we parked about 1.5 miles away. It was breathtaking.

blog06  blog07
It was a perfect day to be out on the water with not a cloud in the sky!

blog13  blog14

blog15  blog22

blog40
The captain brought us close to icebergs of every shape and size.

blog27

blog29  blog36
The Columbia Glacier is breathtaking to experience. The wind was icy cold outside for these photos.

blog32
A bonus wildlife viewing at the glacier. This mother and baby were doing some human spotting!

fish05

fish06  fish07

fish04
When we arrived back at Valdez, fisherman were bringing in the day’s catch – Halibut and Rockfish.

We felt like the length of the tour was just about right. We dragged our stiff bodies out of the boat after 7 stimulating hours but, despite the uncomfortable seating, we would do it again in a heartbeat!


UP NEXT: Chitina, McCarthy and Kennicott


Previous Post
Next Post

10 Comments

  1. Jeff, this was a great cruise, but it was long at nearly 7 hours. Most folks fell right asleep after we left the glacier. The other cruise (the big boat!) was 9 hours. Even in comfort, I'm not sure I would have lasted that long!

Comments are closed.