Skip to content

Another Tuesday Cruiseday

This is Chapter Four. Thank you for returning. Today we will visit Icy Strait Point, a made up destination for cruise ships.

In 1999, the Tlingit folks in the town of Hoonah on Chichagof Island decided to turn an old cannery into a tourist destination. They spent the next 5 years planning, buying property, spiffing it up, learning about the cruising industry, courting cruise lines and turning a former factory into a terrific place to spend a day, with things to do and see, places to eat and shop, and all of it staffed by very genuinely friendly and helpful people.

cannery

 

They only allow one ship in port at a time. The ship uses its lifeboats to go ashore. We had only noticed these while walking underneath them on Deck 7, the Promenade Deck.

life-boats

cannery

 

 

We spent some time walking along the shore, looking at the water and then walking a trail. I was amazed to see the same flowers as we have in Mineral King – fireweed (above), columbine, cow parsnip were among the familiar wildflowers.

columbine cow-parsnip

 

 

Trail Guy and I had the unique privilege of meeting one of the people who had the vision for this wonderful destination, the son of a Norwegian captain and his Tlingit wife, a native of Hoonah.

johann

 

Johann spent some time explaining how it all came about, and he showed us the house where he grew up. He also showed us the retaining wall that looked as if it was made of layers of rock or old wood. Nope! Look at this: (hint – think cannery)

 

cansWe walked the 1-1/2 mile into the town of Hoonah. The town is only participating in the tourist thing at a small level, but we enjoyed the rainy walk along a nice sidewalk that followed the water.

img_2799

 

Look at the size of that ship!

img_2791 img_2792 img_2797 big-ship

 

No, really, look at that! Can you see the tiny orange dealies on the side all in a row? Those are the life boats.

 

We didn’t mind the rain, and with that nice sidewalk, it wasn’t muddy. In spite of the exploring, the trip recount keeps being all about the ship. You have to be careful on these cruises to thoroughly enjoy your brief stops, because it really is all about the ship.

 

Next time, I think I will go by ferry, part of the Alaska Marine Highway. I bet the folks traveling that way look at our giant ship and sneer. They might be every so slightly envious, but they are probably seeing much more of Alaska than we did. (P.S. I just talked to someone familiar with the Alaska Marine Highway and that would be a SUPERB way to see Alaska!)

6 Comments

  1. Jana, how interesting that you saw some of the very same wildflowers that you have there in Mineral King. Amazing! I’ve enjoyed taking photos of wildflowers the past few years when we’ve gone on vacation. Maybe I’ll eventually begin to remember their names. I forget from year to year! 🙂

    • Cheryl, it has taken me YEARS to learn them. I finally resorted to carrying around a wildflower books so I could look for the names while I was out hiking.

  2. Hi Jana!

    Loved the cannery buildings. Glad the town was able to use capitalism and not government to give them their livelyhood! Cute place, adventure walks in places you have never been are so fun, love to do that exploring. Yes, cruise ships are ALL about the cruise. Glad you had lots of shore excursions!! The only cruise I have ever been on, I won it in a lottery at a place I used to work. They paid, Randy and I went. Works for me!! Thanks for sharing your life, it is wonderful!
    Hugs,
    Melissa

    • Thanks for caring about my sharing, Melissa. Sometime I hope we get to talk about your cruise. Isn’t it grand when someone else pays? 😎

  3. … and you are going again when? Just beautiful …

    • Diane, it was so very beautiful every single day. I’ll be going again when someone else pays again!


Comments are closed for this article!