The Riverside Press-Enterprise

ALASKA’S SHIP COMES IN

The destinatio­n expects another record-setting year for cruises

- Story and photos by David Dickstein

Alaska is home to more than 30,000 grizzlies, but the state’s cruise industry is experienci­ng anything but a bear market as the momentum of last year’s recordbrea­king season is expected to continue in 2024.

Let’s look at the most-visited Alaskan port as a proxy for the shipshape southeaste­rn side of the state: Juneau set a high a year ago, with 1.65 million passengers descending on the capital city during cruise season, which generally runs from early April to late October. That figure from the Juneau Chamber of Commerce is a Denali-size jump of 30% over the previous mark, set in pre-pandemic 2019.

Coinciding with Alaska’s 65th anniversar­y of statehood, the upcoming cruise season appears to be just as robust, with 19 cruise lines sending 43 ships to the Last Frontier. Kicking things off for the second straight year is the 4,008-passenger Norwegian Bliss, which is scheduled to dock in rustic Skagway on April 8. With four mainstream-category ships home-ported in Seattle or Vancouver, British Columbia, Norwegian Cruise Line (ncl.com) has nearly 100 more after that. Impressive, but two competing companies have staked out larger claims in this modern-day, maritime Alaskan gold rush: Holland America Line (hollandame­rica. com) is sending seven premium-class ships for 141 total cruises, and at the top of the totem pole is Princess Cruises (princess.com), which is celebratin­g its 55th year in these waters with seven premium ships sharing 158 departures.

Not counting grand voyages with itinerarie­s so rich that they make a visit to Alaska seem more like a pit stop, this cruise season will see more than 800 trips of mostly seven to 10 days starting or ending on this side of the Pacific. Where they’re all going is a destinatio­n rich in unparallel­ed wilderness, wildlife and native culture. In other words, bucket list stuff.

“Alaska is one of those places that draws you in and sets the hook right away,” said Kristi Switzer, destinatio­n marketing manager for Travel Juneau (traveljune­au.com). “Visitors come for the otherworld­ly experience of being in the presence of glaciers and fjords, seeing whales and bears, and finding the balance of Alaska Native cultural heritage with the rustic sophistica­tion found in the capital city and other places within this magnificen­t state.”

Although Switzer recommends visits lasting several days instead of several hours, the city’s destinatio­n evangelist hopes that a partial day in Juneau and each major Alaskan cruise port has over 1.5 million passengers wanting more.

“This magical corner of the world has so much to offer beyond being a checkmark on people’s bucket lists,” she said. “Make time to enjoy the fascinatin­g culture, spectacula­r outdoor recreation, unique shopping, amazing restaurant­s and artist galleries that Juneau and all of Southeast Alaska have to offer.”

Alaska is a checkmark for about three-quarters of all passengers headed there, according to the Alaska Tourism Industry Associatio­n, and the same can be said for two ships this season.

Starting with a six-day sail out of Vancouver on May 11, the namesake of Celebrity Cruises’ (celebrityc­ruises. com) popular Edge class will make her Alaskan debut with other weeklong round trips from Seattle through Sept. 13. The 2,918-passenger vessel features a unique “outside-in” architectu­re that provides more floor-toceiling glass on the exterior and expanded outdoor spaces to soak up the Alaskan coastlines.

Edge will be joined by a pair of fleetmates for the

season, although Summit’s seven-day round trips are turnaround­s out of Anchorage or Vancouver, and Solstice’s weeklong jaunts are solely based in the British Columbian seaport. Celebrity, a premier-category cruise line, meaning it’s between the economical mainstream class and pricey luxury level, has 57 departures to Alaska scheduled this year.

The other new recruit is Silver Nova, the youngest Silversea Cruises (silversea.com) ship in the luxury fleet to ever service Alaska. Capped at 728 guests, Silver Nova was launched last year and has the goods to do justice to a dreamlike place that captures the imaginatio­n of wilderness lovers and history buffs.

“Silver Nova is the ideal ship for Alaska cruising,” said company spokesman Brad Ball. “Her innovative design, which prizes openness over symmetry and incorporat­es an unpreceden­ted use of approximat­ely 4,000 square meters of glass, immerses guests into the incredible scenery of Alaska from virtually all venues and suites, with far-reaching views at every turn.”

The ship’s reimagined pool deck, which overlooks the water on her starboard side, and all-new outdoor venues — the Dusk Bar and the Marquee — allow unique openness to view spectacula­r Alaskan glaciers and wildlife. Those who want to experience an older and smaller, Evolution-class Silversea vessel can book the Silver Muse, which also will sail mostly seven- to 14day trips between Anchorage and Vancouver.

Because nearly every Alaskan cruise includes the staples — Juneau, Skagway, Ketchikan, Inside Passage and Denali (with a land add-on) — some cruise lines like to

shake things up with unusual itinerarie­s.

Holland America has a round trip that makes it easy to visit the 49th and 50th states without a long flight. A new “Glaciers & Volcanos: Alaska to Hawaii” cruise, part of the premium line’s Legendary Voyages collection of journeys from 25 to 59 days, departs Aug. 31 from Seattle or Sept. 1 from Vancouver aboard the 1,916-passenger Westerdam. The nearly four-week itinerary includes seldom-visited Kodiak and Dutch Harbor before heading down to the tropics to make four calls to three Hawaiian islands.

Seabourn (seabourn.com) strives to offer a more tasteful Alaskan cruise, and not only because it’s an ultra-luxury cruise line. “Caviar on the Ice” is a savory and swanky soiree on every Alaskan voyage, and when the 450-passenger Odyssey is in Sitka, a town originally built by Russian traders in the early 1800s, Seabourn guests can enjoy a culinary adventure that includes a scenic drive to a taproom for a sampling of local brews and a few eateries to try Siberian-rooted pelmeni dumplings and hot dogs made with caribou that the locals call “reindeer dawgs.” Sorry, vegetarian­s and friends of Santa, but Blitzen on a bun is da bomb.

Carnival Cruise Line (carnival.com) is staying with a three-ship deployment in Alaska this season. Sharing the workload of 55 round trips generally lasting seven to 11 days are Carnival Spirit (2,610 passengers) and Carnival Luminosa (2,260) out of Seattle, and Carnival Miracle (2,667) from San Francisco. Another mainstream cruise line, Royal Caribbean (royalcarib­bean. com), has four ships making 85 runs to Alaska from Seattle, Vancouver and Anchorage: Ovation of the Seas (4,905) and older sister Quantum of the Seas, Brilliance of the Seas (2,543) and Radiance of the Seas (2,466).

Disney Cruise Line (disneycrui­se.com) is sending its 2,700-passenger Disney Wonder out of Vancouver for 15 weeklong round trips, one five-day spin leaving July 24 and an extended nine-day voyage July 15.

Other cruise lines showing passengers a whale of a time in Alaska include Crystal, Cunard, Hurtigrute­n, Lindblad/national Geographic, Oceania, Ponant, Regent Seven Seas and Viking.

 ?? ?? Glaciers are among shore excursions in Alaska, which expects 43cruise ships from 19lines this season.
Glaciers are among shore excursions in Alaska, which expects 43cruise ships from 19lines this season.
 ?? ?? Red Onion Saloon, a former bordello built in 1898, is a top attraction in historic Skagway.
Red Onion Saloon, a former bordello built in 1898, is a top attraction in historic Skagway.
 ?? ?? Rafting alongside Mendenhall Glacier is a chance-of-a-lifetime adventure for many.
Rafting alongside Mendenhall Glacier is a chance-of-a-lifetime adventure for many.

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