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Helicopter Dog Sledding on a Glacier

A triple-stacked only-in-Alaska day: a helicopter flight onto the icefield, boots on a glacier, and then driving a real sled-dog team across the snow at a working summer mushing camp run by Iditarod-pedigree kennels. There is nowhere else on a mainstream cruise itinerary where you can mush dogs on a glacier reached only by helicopter. If money is no object, this is the signature regret-if-you-miss-it Juneau experience.

What to expect

You'll ride a helicopter out to a pristine icefield, where you'll step directly onto the glacier with boots and flotation gear provided. After instruction from your guide, you'll take the reins of a real sled-dog team and mush them across roughly two miles of snow at an active summer camp run by Iditarod-pedigree kennels—a working operation that exists nowhere else on a cruise itinerary. The experience moves from airborne views of Alaska's wilderness to intimate contact with the glacier beneath your feet to the pure adrenaline of commanding dogs across pack ice.

Who to call — book direct
NorthStar Trekking
$739 per person; ~3.25 hrs total with ~30 min flight time and ~1 hr on the glacier, including overboots, flotation, guide instruction, and a ~2-mile mush. (TEMSCO runs a comparable Mendenhall dog-sled-by-helicopter tour from $699.)
Book direct →
Beats the ship · vs the cruise line

Cruise lines list the glacier dog-sled flightseeing tour around $769-$849, so direct at $739 saves roughly $30-$110 per person. The savings are modest because the helicopter seat is the cost driver, not the markup; book direct mainly for the early departures and the guaranteed seat the ship blocks may not have.

Good to know

The 3.25-hour tour includes roughly 30 minutes of flight time, so plan for a full morning or afternoon window; booking direct with NorthStar Trekking at $739 per person gets you earlier departure slots than the ship's $769–$849 pricing, with guaranteed helicopter seating. Confirm flight departure times in advance—weather delays are common in Southeast Alaska—and allow at least an hour buffer to return to the pier given helicopter scheduling variables. Bring warm layers, a waterproof jacket, and gloves (overboots are provided); the helicopter flight is unheated and winds on the glacier are real even in summer.

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