| | | Add To Your Favorites | | Bedrooms: varys | Bathrooms: varys | Sleeps: varys | Type: Bed & Breakfast | | Voted 2003 Best B&B In Alaska! Full service B&B Inn with Suites, Rooms and private Cabins. Conveniently located near Palmer, Alaska. We offer the best hospitality you'll find and serve the best breakf .... Read More
| | Alaska Alaska is a land of adventure. It consists of five regions: Inside Passage, Southcentral, Interior, Far North and Southwest. The Inside Passage is shaped by the force of massive glaciers millions of years ago and has numerous wildlife-filled fjords and lush island scenery. It is home to Tlingit, Haida and Tsimshian Indians whose towering totem poles can be found in various places. Russian settlers left a legacy of onion-domed churches gleaming with icons. The Southcentral region is home to over half of Alaska’s population. With mountains and lakes, Southcentral offers the advantages of remote wilderness with links to civilization via roads. World-class rainbow trout and salmon are caught here. Southcentral serves as a gateway to the wilderness experience. The Interior region is Alaska’s heartland. You’ll see the continent’s tallest peak, Mt. McKinley, and wide expanses of tundra here. The forests are teeming with wildlife and bird life ranging from the grizzly to stately herds of caribou to the state bird, the Willow Ptarmigan. Experience summer’s midnight sun or the winter’s northern lights. Interior is the original home of Alaska’s Athabascan Indians. Gold miners, farmers and fur trappers later discovered the riches of this region. The Far North passes the Artic Circle. Alaska’s Arctic is home to the Inupiat Eskimos, many who still live a subsistence lifestyle. The Far North is filled with a rich history and natural wonders. Few places on earth compare with the wonders of Southwest Alaska. Brown bears amble along the hills and plains, and more than 240 bird species inhabit Alaska’s Southwest region. The region’s terrain ranges from a landscape of volcanoes in Katmai National Park to the windswept Aleutian Islands that make a 1,000-mile sweep toward Asia. For More Info See Alaska Travel Guide
| |