Set foot on the legendary Chilkoot Trail — the brutal 'meanest 33 miles in history' that 1898 stampeders climbed — then float the glacial Taiya River through the Dyea valley rainforest, watching for bald eagles, all in a port-sized loop. It's the hands-on, walk-where-the-prospectors-walked counterpart to the train, with none of the cruise crowds. Boots, poles, ponchos and life jackets included; pier pickup available.
What to expect
You'll start with pier pickup and guided hiking on the actual Chilkoot Trail route through the Dyea valley, retracing the steps of the 1898 gold-rush stampeders along this legendary "meanest 33 miles in history"—except you'll cover the port-friendly section, not the full multi-day trek. After boots-on-ground exploration, you'll transition to the Taiya River for a 35–45 minute float through glacial waters and temperate rainforest, scanning the shoreline for bald eagles and soaking in the untouched landscape. The entire experience keeps you in a compact loop, delivering both the prospector-era authenticity and the pristine Alaskan scenery in roughly 4–4.25 hours, with none of the cruise-line crowds.
This locally owned hike-and-float isn't a standard re-sold ship excursion; the closest cruise-line equivalents are guided Dyea history/float tours that run higher. Booking direct gets you the small-group Chilkoot specialist at a fair fixed rate rather than a marked-up coach version — direct wins on both access and price.
Good to know
Pier pickup is included, so no need to arrange your own transport from the dock—Skagway Float Tours will collect you and return you directly. Budget 4–4.25 hours total (2 hours of guided hiking plus the river float), leaving a comfortable 2–3 hour buffer to get back and reboard your ship on a typical 6–8 hour port window. Boots, trekking poles, ponchos, and life jackets are all provided, so bring only weather-appropriate layers, water, and a camera; booking direct with this locally owned operator locks in the $141.75 fixed rate and small-group access rather than paying cruise-line markups on the same tour.