Walk among one of Alaska's most significant collections of standing totem poles — 21 poles in a park setting overlooking Klawock Lake — guided by a local Tlingit cultural interpreter. Each pole is a chapter of living Indigenous history you won't find anywhere else on earth.
What to expect
Your interpreter meets you at the park's entrance and immediately grounds you in the history of the Tlingit people who have called this coastline home for millennia. Each of the 21 poles was either carved here or relocated from the original village of Tuxekan and restored by master carvers. You'll learn to read the stacked figures — ravens, bears, frogs, eagles — as a written language of lineage and legend. The backdrop of Klawock Lake and the spruce-draped hillside makes every photograph magazine-worthy.
Good to know
The park is a 5-minute walk or short drive from the dock. Allow 1.5–2 hours. Combine with a visit to the nearby Carving Shed (same tour loop) to watch active carvers at work. Light rain gear recommended — the old-growth canopy provides partial shelter.
Sail there
Luxury cruises that call at Klawock — book through us, the fare is identical and your concierge stays on your side.