7 day Itinerary
3 Beautiful Ports including Tracy Arm Inlet and Glacier Bay

Cruising at it's finest! 3 exciting ports for all the fun you can handle with 2 sea days to unwind. This cruise is the complete package!

Pricing Details
*Price is per person, based on double occupancy

Cabins:

Oceanview - Category E - $2426.80

Oceanview - Category D - $2470.80

Oceanview - Category C - $2513.80

Oceanview - Category FB - $2600.80

Oceanview - Category FA - $2644.80

Balcony - Category VE - $3115.80


*Prices include all taxes and fees. Rates are in Canadian Dollars. 


DEPOSIT: $510 per person, due at the time of booking. 


**Please inquire for other staterooms, occupancies and kids rates. Pricing is for cruise only**

Tracy Arm Inlet

Steep cliffs and glacier-covered mountains flank this fjord, fringed by the largest intact coastal temperate rain forest in the United States. Old-growth trees colonized Tracy Arm's mouth long ago as the Ice Age retreated. But further up the sinuous 48-kilometer (30-mile) waterway, its icy grip lingers a little. There, the twin Sawyer Glaciers flow from the peaks down to the sea, sloughing off stories-high chunks of water frozen decades or even centuries before. Even more glorious than nearby Glacier Bay, Tracy Arm is part of the 5.7 million acres (or around 23,000 square kilometers) of pure wilderness sheltered by the Tongass National Forest (America's biggest). Visitors often see bears, whales and mountain goats roaming across various corners of this pristine area—not to mention chubby baby seals resting on the ice floes. Summer temperatures average 35 to 60 degrees Fahrenheit (0 to 16 degrees Celsius), so pack warm clothing. And don';t forget waterproof gear, even when traveling by cruise ship: More than a meter and a half of rain falls here each year! We also recommend a water bottle, thermos or reusable coffee cup: On scenic cruising days, cruise ships ban paper and disposable plastic products that could litter this unsullied environment.

Glacier Bay

On your cruise to Glacier Bay, close your eyes and take in the sounds—the creaks and groans of “living” ice, the shrill cries of gulls and soaring eagles, the splash of a breaching humpback whale. Frosted peaks towering over mossy forests, wide tidewater glaciers (there are seven in the park), and marine wildlife are givens on Glacier Bay cruises, but every experience in this changing biosphere is unique.

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