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TRAVEL Icy Strait Point AlaskA CRUISE PHOTOS
The creation of Alaska's newest cruise port, Icy Strait, represents a
win-win collaboration between local communities and the giant cruise
corporations who make big profits from visitors eager to experience
America's "last wilderness."
The new facility -- just down the road from Hoonah, Alaska's largest Huna
Tlingit village, and 22 miles southeast of Glacier Bay National Park -- has
been a lifeline for a community in crisis, providing a much-needed
alternative source of income for locals afflicted by a downturn in their
traditional businesses of fishing and logging. Millions of dollars have been
invested in creating a facility that offers cruise travelers an authentic
"wilderness experience" and a refreshingly non-commercialized alternative to
the usual run of Juneau, Ketchikan, Skagway and Sitka.

What they've created is an attractive new destination expressly for cruisers
that's man-made but not commercialized. Icy Strait offers pretty woodland
walks, an insight into Tlingit history and culture, a wide range of
back-to-nature adventures, and good-quality restaurants. Up-market craft
shops feature artisan crafts and locally made goods like woodland berry jam
and confectionery, rather than the "made in Taiwan" tat so prevalent in,
say, Juneau. Buildings are constructed from sustainable local woods and were
built by local Tlingit Indian workers in traditional style.

During its first full season in summer 2004, Icy Strait attracted 36 cruise
ship calls from Royal Caribbean and its up-market subsidiary Celebrity
Cruises. In 2006, Holland America Line will join RCCL and Celebrity in
adding the port to its schedules. But the Tlingit corporation Huna Totem --
which owns the majority share of Icy Strait Point -- has wisely decided not
to go overboard on cruise calls, confining the port's infrastructure to
handling one ship a day.

Best Souvenir
A commemorative "silver dollar" is offered free to every visitor on arrival,
embellished with Indian symbols and the local motto "Woosh-Jee-Een'"
("pulling together"). Visitors are also given a chip of cedar wood to throw
onto a constantly burning Ceremonial Fire, which represents welcome and
hospitality.
Souvenir hunters happy to dent their credit cards will find plenty of
temptation in the Warehouse Shops, which surround the Icy Strait Museum,
stocking everything from foodie treats (smoked Alaska salmon, preserves made
from local berries) to well-made craft goods (throws, paintings, wooden
carvings, glassware) and pretty jewelry with an ethnic twist.
Where You're Docked
Ships anchor off Icy Strait Point in Port Frederick Bay. At present, cruise
visitors tender onto a wooden jetty, but the port owners are seeking around
$8 million in federal funding to build a cruise ship dock so that vessels
can moor alongside.

Hanging Around
Icy Strait is not your "typical" sprawling cruise port with lots and lots to
do, other than excursions or a stroll around the main site. Due to Icy
Strait's compact nature, nothing on the main site is more than a 10- to
15-minute stroll away from the pier.
Getting Around
The immediate area around the tender dock is easily explored on foot and
nowhere is further away than a 10- to 15-minute walk. There are no taxis or
rental cars here -- yet. A few enterprising locals might start offering ad
hoc rides along the shoreline from Hoonah when there's a ship in town, but
that's about it. Otherwise, transportation is available only through cruise
lines' shore tours.

Clearly-marked walking trails will take you along the seashore, into deep
rain forest and around the edges of mist-wreathed lakes. A covered tram
takes visitors willing to pay about $42 per adult ($26 per child) further
afield on a two-hour Forest and Nature tour through the forest and along the
seashore.

Bike tours are also available, but heftily priced at about $65 for two
hours, irrespective of age. A bus tour around the distinctly unexciting
village of Hoonah -- the highlight of which is a visit to its cemetery! --
costs about $34, but don't waste cash on this as Hoonah is within walking
distance.
Don't Miss
Icy Strait provides a pleasant experience for cruise passengers who want to
explore the Alaskan hinterland a bit, browse a few decent shops and have a
light lunch. If folklore is your thing, spend an hour at the Native Heritage
Center Theater, watching traditionally costumed members of the Huna Tlingit
Dancers troupe enact their tribal story through song, dance and
storytelling.
Even if you don't want to see this, take a stroll over to the center
anyway; its elaborately carved totem poles are well worth a closer look. So,
too, is the free-to-enter Cannery Museum, which is crammed with various
historic bits of fish-processing paraphernalia. The best way to make sense
of the various machines is to take a Historical Cannery Tour (about $20), on
which you'll be given a souvenir timecard before donning a fish-cutter apron
and starting a factory worker's "shift" -- which will teach you every stage
of the canning process, including can-testing and filling.
More interesting -- to me, at any rate -- were the "fascinating Alaska
facts" cunningly concealed behind wall-mounted, "Alice in Wonderland"-style
wooden doors. Did you know Alaska's longest day starts on May 10 and lasts
three months, while its longest night starts on November 18 and lasts two
months? I discovered, too, that Alaska boasts 52 percent of the world's
earthquakes, 100,000 glaciers and 29 volcanoes. Astounding as it is to
visit, I wouldn't be keen to live here all year round.
The 2 1/2-hour Remote Bush Exploration and Wildlife Search, led by a native
guide, gives you far more of an insight into the wit, wisdom and forest lore
of the Tlingits than any number of heritage floor shows. Our tour was
escorted by Dennis, a cheerful half-Irish member of the Tlingit Eagle Clan
who makes his living from fishing and logging -- unless a cruise ship is in
town.

As our school trip-style bus rattled its way past Frederick's Bay, he
pointed out whales and harbor seals and told us sea otters and bald eagles
are also at home here, as well as four types of the Alaska salmon which
together with crab, halibut and black cod formed the mainstay of the Tlingit
community's fishing industry when the Hoonah Trading Company cannery was
founded in 1893. He had some entertaining tales to tell of Hoonah characters
and history. And when we left behind the clapboard houses of Hoonah's main
street and reached the rain forest for the start of our nature walk, his
knowledge of the woods and wildlife proved even more fascinating.
He gave us a taste of huckleberries, salmonberries and thimbleberries;
showed us the differences between deer and bear trails; and explained how
plants like the Devil's Club and the Skunk Cabbage are used in Tlingit
medicine and cookery. Best of all, he showed us deer feasting on kelp at the
borders of a tidal river, and as we headed back towards Hoonah, we spotted a
brown bear lumbering through the skyscraper-tall pines of Christmas Tree
Pass.

For a fabulous, back-to-nature experience, it was hard to beat.
Been There, Done That
Flightseeing over Glacier Bay: This tour lasts approximately 1 3/4
hours. Hour-long flights depart from Hoonah Airport and take passengers
across the whale-dense waters of Icy Strait to see the spectacular ice
fields, forests, lakes and waterfalls of Glacier Bay National Park.
Saltwater Salmon Fishing: This is a three-hour excursion to fish the densely
populated stretches of Icy Strait. Warm, waterproof clothing and deck or
rubber-soled shoes are essential, and the minimum age is 10. Caught fish
cannot be stored on your cruise ship but can be locally processed and
shipped to your home at extra cost, negotiable and payable on site.
Whale and Marine Mammals Cruise: This two-hour tour aboard a sightseeing
vessel takes passengers 17 miles out through Icy Strait to the Point
Adolphus area, a prime feeding ground for humpback and orca whales. An
onboard naturalist offers a commentary on the habitat and behaviors of
whales and other local wildlife, including stellar sea lions, bald eagles
and harbor seals. Wear warm, waterproof clothing and sturdy non-slip shoes
for the open-air observation deck.
 
Lunching
Don't expect anything too grand at down-to-earth Icy Strait Point. There are
currently two food outlets -- the cafe-style Cookhouse and the
wooden-benched Timberhouse Restaurant. The Timberhouse offers fine views of
Frederick's Bay and tasty, if basic, $10-a-head lunches of freshly caught
halibut burgers, beef burgers, chips and salad. Finishing off a local amber
beer after our lunch, we spotted three humpback whales in succession -- none
of them more than half a mile from the wood-carved bench we were sitting on.
But then, in this close-to-nature place, anything more elaborate would be
over-egging the pudding; the point is to eat hearty, get to know the
friendly locals and let them introduce you -- however briefly -- to their
world.


submitted by Willie Shoemaker (Fabens, Texas)
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