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Kenai Fjords National Park Kayaker in Kenai Fjords.
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Kenai Fjords National Park
Kayaking
 
Kayakers in Kenai Fjords

© Peter Fitzmaurice

Kayaking gets you up close and personal with the marine environment at Kenai Fjords

Traveling with a guide is strongly recommended for inexperienced paddlers. The Kenai Fjords are exposed to the Gulf of Alaska, with only a few protected coves. These are not waters for beginners! Landings often involve surf, particularly when afternoon breezes kick up from the south. Wind and rainfall can be excessive, and summer storms often push an ocean swell of three feet or more into the fjords.

Most kayakers access the park by water taxi or charter boat from Seward and get dropped off in Aialik Bay or Northwestern Lagoon. Another alternative is to fly in to the less-visited Nuka Bay area from Homer. Paddling directly from Seward is okay for day trips in Resurrection Bay or overnight visits to Caines Head or Bear Glacier, but rounding Aialik Cape in a kayak is not recommended. There are long stretches of exposed coastline with no landing sites between Callisto Head and Aialik Cape, and the waters around the Cape can be extremely treacherous.

Kayaker in Kenai Fjords
Kayak Outfitters
Guides and equipment for your kayak adventure in Kenai Fjords
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McMullen Cove
Kenai Fjords Backcountry
Planning your wilderness adventure
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North Arm Public Use Cabin © Ron Niebrugge--www.wildnatureimages.com
Public Use Cabins
Backcountry lodging along Kenai Fjords remote coastline
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The Harding Icefield in Kenai Fjords National Park

Did You Know?
The Harding Icefield accumulates 400-800 inches of snow each year. It takes between 30-50 years for that snow to compress into glacial ice.

Last Updated: February 06, 2007 at 14:46 MST