Paddle a stable sea kayak through the mirror-calm inlets of Prince William Sound, ghosting past iceberg fragments and otter-draped kelp beds to the face of a tidewater glacier. One of the most viscerally immersive ways to inhabit the Alaskan wilderness.
What to expect
After a brief dry-land paddle instruction, you're fitted with a dry suit and launched from Whittier's protected waters. Your guide leads you through a sequence of sheltered bays, pointing out tidal zones, identifying bird species, and reading the ice. Paddling toward a glacier on your own power creates an intimacy with the landscape that no motor vessel can replicate — the creak of ice, the drip of meltwater, the occasional boom of calving are your soundtrack. The return paddle offers a gentle cool-down as you process the scale of what you've seen.
Good to know
No kayaking experience is required; the Sound's inner bays are well-sheltered. Dry suits are provided. The tour runs approximately 3–3.5 hours, leaving comfortable time before all-aboard. Layers are essential — temperatures in the Sound feel markedly colder on the water.
Sail there
Luxury cruises that call at Whittier — book through us, the fare is identical and your concierge stays on your side.