More Alaska Parks | Alaska National & State Parks

Kenai Fjords National Park

The Kenai Fjords are coastal mountain fjords whose placid seascapes reflect scenic icebound landscapes and whose salt spray mixes with mountain mist. Located on the southeastern Kenai Peninsula, the national park is a pristine and rugged land supporting many unaltered natural environments and ecosystems. The land boasts an icefield wilderness, unnamed waterfalls in unnamed canyons, glaciers that sweep down narrow mountain valleys, and a coastline along which thousands of seabirds and marine mammals raise their young each year.

Kenai Fjords National Park derives its name from the long, steep sided, glacier carved valleys that are now filled with ocean waters. The seaward ends of the Kenai Mountains are slipping into the sea, being dragged under by the collision of two tectonic plates of the Earth's crust. What were once alpine valleys filled with glacier ice are now deepwater mountain flanked fjords. The forces that caused this land to submerge are still present. In 1964, the Alaskan Good Friday earthquake dropped the shoreline another 6 feet in just one day. As the land sinks into the ocean, glacier carved cirques are turned into half-moon bays and mountain peaks are reduced to wave beaten islands and stacks.

Though the land is subsiding, a mountain platform 1 mile high still comprises the coast's backdrop. The mountains are mantled by the 300 square mile Harding Icefield, the park's dominant feature. The icefield was not discovered until early this century when a mapping team realized that several coastal glaciers belonged to the same massive system. Today's icefield measures some 35 miles long by 20 miles wide. Only isolated mountain peaks interrupt its nearly flat, snowclad surface. These protruding nunataks -- this Eskimo word means "lonely peaks" -- rise dramatically from the frozen clutches of the Ice Age.

The mountains intercept moisture laden clouds, which replenish the icefield with 35-65 feet of snow annually. Time and the weight of overlying snow transform the snow into ice. The pull of gravity and the weight of the snowy overburden make the ice flow out in all directions. It is squeezed into glaciers that creep downward like giant bulldozers, carving and gouging the landscape. Along the coast eight glaciers reach the sea, and these tidewater glaciers calve icebergs into the fjords. The thunderous boom of calving ice can sometimes be heard 20 miles away.

The park's wildlife is as varied as its landscape. Mountain goats, moose, bears, wolverines, marmots, and other land mammals have reestablished themselves on a thin life zone between marine waters and the icefield's frozen edges. Bald eagles nest in the tops of spruce and hemlock trees. A summer burgeoning of life occurs in the fjords. Steller sea lions haul out on rocky islands at the entrances to Aialik and Nuka Bays. Harbor seals ride the icebergs. Dall porpoises, sea otters, and gray, humpback, killer, and minke whales ply the fjord waters. Halibut, lingcod, and black bass lurk deep in these waters, through which salmon return for inland spawning runs. Thousands of seabirds, including horned and tufted puffins, black-legged kittiwakes, common murres, and the ubiquitous gulls, seasonally inhabit steep cliffs and rocky shores.

Exit Glacier, remnant of a larger glacier once extending to Resurrection Bay, is one of several rivers of ice flowing off the icefield. Active, yet retreating, it provides the perfect setting to explore. Here are found newly exposed, scoured, and polished bedrock and a regime of plant succession from the earliest pioneer plants to a mature forest of Sitka spruce and western hemlock.

Humans have had little lasting impact on this environment, although the park includes a few Native American archeological sites and isolated gold extraction locations. The park's overwhelming significance is as a living laboratory of change. Plants and wildlife subsist here amidst dynamic interactions of water, ice, and a glacier carved landscape relentlessly pulled down by the Earth's crustal movements. The Harriman Expedition, a steamship borne venture visiting the fjords in 1899, predicted this area's future value as a scenic tourist attraction. To protect this life and landscape, a national monument was proclaimed in 1978, and the 580,000 acre Kenai Fjords National Park was established in 1980.

General Information

Getting There - The park lies south and west of Seward and 130 miles south of Anchorage via the Seward Highway. Bus and commuter flight services connect Seward and Anchorage. The Alaska Marine Highway (ferry) connects Seward with Homer and Seldovia via Kodiak, providing service to Valdez and Cordova. The Alaska railroad servers Seward from Anchorage during the summer. The park's headquarters and visitor center is in Seward's small boat harbor. In summer, Exit Glacier can be reached by road. The Harding Icefield can be reached by air or trail. Air and boat charters provide access to the fjords.

Visitor Center - The visitor center in Seward offers exhibits, slide programs, maps, publications, and information. It is open weekdays year round and also weekends from Memorial Day to Labor Day, with extended hours. There is a ranger station at Exit Glacier.

Weather and Clothing - Overcast and cool days are frequent in this maritime climate of abundant rain. May is the driest month: successive months see increasing precipitation. Summer daytime temperatures range from the mid-40's to low 70's degree F. September initiates the wet, stormy fall. Wool or synthetic clothing and sturdy rain gear -- pants, coat, and hat -- are essential.

What to See and Do - Authorized commercial guides provide camping, fishing, and kayaking services. Air charters, available in Seward or Homer, fly over the coast for sightseeing and access to the fjords. Boat tours and boat charters are available from Seward. In summer, boat tours ply the coast observing calving glaciers, seabirds, and marine mammals. Boat charters offer overnight fjord trips and fishing trips to the fjords and Resurrection Bay. Saltwater fish include halibut, lingcod, and a variety of rockfish; freshwater fishing includes Dolly Varden and silver, red, chum, and pink salmon.

Accommodations - There are no lodging or food services in the park. Seward provides full tourist services, including campgrounds. Exit Glacier has 10 walk-in summer camping sites. Four backcountry public use cabins for summer visits along the park's coastline are located in the fjords at Holgate Arm, Aialik Bay, Delight Spit, and North Arm. The cabins are accessible by boat, kayak, or small plane. In winter, a public use cabin at Exit Glacier is available. Cabin stays are limited to 3 days. You must obtain reservations and permits in advance.

Backcountry Travel - This rugged wilderness requires good physical condition, proper equipment, and reasonable precautions. If planning a backcountry trip without a guide, get current specific information from the park staff before setting out. To challenge the Harding Icefield, be prepared to face sudden storms, high winds, blinding sunlight, and extreme temperature changes. Winter travelers to Exit Glacier may face deep snow and cold temperatures. Know the symptoms of hypothermia and their treatment.

Bears are dangerous. Keep a wide distance from black bears and brown/grizzly bears. Make noise when hiking, so you don't startle them. Keep food supplies separate from your campsite and equipment. Food and scented items, such as toothpaste, must be hung or stored in bear-proof containers. Feeding wildlife is unsafe and sets up behavior patterns that may endanger future travelers.

Visiting Exit Glacier - Exit Glacier is the most accessible park area. A gravel road at mile 3.7 of the Seward Highway leads 9 miles to the Exit Glacier Ranger Station. The area offers exhibits on the glacier and Harding Icefield, interpretive programs, and hikes. Rangers provide information daily in the summer. An easy 1/2 mile walk will take you to the glacier's terminus: the first 1/4 mile is fully accessible. A steeper trail continues across moraines and bedrock. You may return to the ranger station by a nature trail. Exit Glacier descends 2,500 feet over its nearly 3 mile length. The 3 mile Harding Icefield trail, which follows the glacier's flank to an overlook of the icefield, is day-use only: overnight backpacking is prohibited. Check bulletin boards for trail conditions. Heavy rains may result in trail closures. Check at the ranger station to understand safety measures to follow when near glaciers.

Winter travel to Exit Glacier and the cabin is by cross-country ski, snowmobile, dogsled, or snowshoe. Scenic flights give views of the vast Harding Icefield. Landings can be arranged for day skiing or expeditions. Obtain Park Regulations for more information on Exit Glacier.

Sea Kayaking - Kayak travel in the fjords is recommended for experienced paddlers. The area is subject to rough seas and strong tidal currents. Although most experienced paddlers can travel to the fjords from Seward, most kayakers arrange drop-off and pick-ups with charter boats. Never go within 1/4 mile of tidewater glaciers. Glaciers Calve without warning, posing extreme danger from falling ice and cresting waves.