Ketchikan
Cruise Ship Visitor Information
Misty Ketchikan, the rainiest town in southeast
Alaska, is known as the "Salmon Capital of the World." The
town offers the perfect blend of activities: spend the morning
kayaking in Misty Fiords or hiking up Deer Mountain, then spend
the afternoon poking in and out of fantastic galleries and shops.
You're bound to visit Creek Street, a row of wooden
buildings perched over the water on pilings. Today's brightly painted
boutiques once catered to gentlemen seeking the company of "sporting
women." The museum at Dolly's House gives you a glimpse into
the bawdy ways of frontier life, though Ketchikan's red-light district
wasn't shut down until 1953.
Legends of a different sort are recorded on totem
poles. Boasting the world's largest collection of Northwest totems,
Ketchikan has plenty of places to see these fascinating works of
art.
Best Souvenir in Ketchikan:
A hand-carved totem pole
Where The Cruise Ships Dock:
Ships dock in the center of town. On crowded days, some ships may be required
to anchor -- and tender passengers into Ketchikan. Small ships sometimes
dock a mile south of town.
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Getting Around:
Ketchikan is located on Revillagigedo Island. The airport, on Gravina Island,
is a five-minute ferry ride away.
Right at the dock there's a low-slung green building
where numerous excursion operators have set up booths offering
kayaking, floatplane rides, bicycling tours, or simply transportation
to just-out-of-town attractions.
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Don't Miss Shore Excursion: The
Great Alaskan Lumberjack Show celebrates Ketchikan's logging heyday.
Watching pros compete at log rolling, axe throwing and pole climbing
makes even a rainy day entertaining. The bleachers, thankfully,
are covered. The sometimes corny show lasts 1-1/4 hours, leaving
plenty of time for shopping -- the port's shore activity of choice.
Ketchikan museum hopping: The Southeast
Alaska Discovery Center (50 Main Street) has an interactive rain-forest
gallery and a terrific gift shop for informational buys, from maps
to guidebooks. Also check out the Totem Heritage Center (601 Deermount
Street) and the Tongass Historical Museum (629 Dock Street).
Outside of Ketchikan, two must-sees are Totem Bight
State Park (10 miles north), and Saxman Native Village (2 miles
south), where you can watch Native carvers at work.
Shopping in downtown Ketchikan: The
most interesting area -- both for historic value and good shopping
-- is Creek Street. Not a street at all, this boardwalk winds along
Ketchikan Creek and was once the locale for all the area's brothels.
Now it's home to artsy galleries like Soho Coho (5 Creek Street),
which sells a variety of higher-end crafts, from gorgeous velvet
scarves to watercolors to soaps; adjacent is the Alaska Eagle Art
Gallery where Pendleton blankets with Indian themes are a standout,
as are silver pendants and bronze sculptures. Upstairs is Parnassus,
an interesting book store with a great selection of Alaska-oriented
tomes. Try Sam McGee's A Taste of Alaska (18 Creek Street) for
regionally made foodstuffs, from honey to barbecue sauce to soaps,
lotions and ulu knives.
Another interesting "shopping" area is
a line of galleries along Stedman Street such as Blue Heron (123
Stedman Street), which has Alaskan crafts, including locally carved
totem poles, and Golden Eagle Gifts (123 Stedman Street) for state-made
coffees and teas.
Right in the heart of downtown, the Eagle Spirit
Gallery (310 Mission Street) and Scanlon Gallery (318 Mission Street)
have interesting native Indian arts, from ivory carvings to cedar
bark baskets and masks.
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To do in Ketchikan:
See black bears catch and eat their fill of salmon at Neets Bay in Tongass
National Forest. Sign up on board your ship for this floatplane and bear
watching thrill (late July through September).
Serious hikers should traverse Deer Mountain, a
3 mile-long trail that begins in Ketchikan (Fair and Deermount
Streets).
Go sea kayaking, deep-sea fishing, and tour the
Misty Fjords by air (at the pier there's a tourism center where
local operators have booths -- you can sign up there).
Catch a great view of Ketchikan and beyond from
the WestCoast Cape Fox Lodge; you can access this hilltop resort
from a funicular that operates on Creek Street ($2 roundtrip).
Quick Lunch Tips:
Casual, in-town joints: New York Cafe (207 Stedman, all day).The pub at Annabelle's
Keg and Chowder House (326 Front Street, all day).
Ketchikan Dining: Annabelle's Keg
and Chowder House (in the Gilmore Hotel, 326 Front Street, 11:30
a.m. to 2:30 p.m.), which celebrates the 1920s, has two sections
-- a somewhat formal linen tablecloth dining room and, across,
a boisterous, atmospheric pub.
Keeping in Touch:
Seaport Cyber (on the pier, upstairs at #216 Salmon Landing) offers Internet
access. You can buy a card that works in three ports -- Ketchikan, Skagway
and Juneau. |