Alaska
9 Close-Knit Towns to Visit in Alaska
Big in the wilderness and formidable in landscape features, Alaska also contains small, tight-knit communities where history, culture, and nature remain perfectly preserved. Because the formidable Alaskan landscapes have fewer than one person per square mile, towns and villages in the state have residents that forge relationships as enduring as the mountain chains and rivers here. Beyond the big towns, name any other city in Alaska, and it has something unique to say, be it about the Gold Rush, Native Alaskan’s heritage, or just plain everyday survival. From the end of the Iditarod in Nome to the artist haven of Ester, tradition, regard for the land, and welcome hospitality abound.
Nome
Rich history, Gold Rush charm, and exuberant community spirit set Nome apart as one of the most uniquely different towns. Located on the southern Seward Peninsula along the Bering Sea, Nome is designated as the finish line to the internationally famous Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race, the longest-running dogsled race anywhere in the world, running 1,049 miles.
Polar Café presents a warm, country-like atmosphere, while the Bering Sea Bar & Grill offers fresh catches of the day and typical Alaskan dishes representing Nome hospitality. During summer, the community embraces the absence of night with an annual event appropriately labeled the Midnight Sun Festival, centered around music, food, and cultural events.
The village is proud of its roots, which are fully displayed in The Carrie M. McLain Memorial Museum. This site enables guests to seek out the Gold Rush past of Nome, significant exhibitions about early pioneers, and Native Alaskan cultures that shaped the area. Outdoorsy folks might also want to try Anvil Mountain for views over Nome, providing a glimpse into its significance in the Cold War – with four massive “White Alice” antennas still standing here.
Haines
Placed at the northern end of the Lynn Canal, Haines is known for its spectacular natural beauty and incredible array of wildlife, all combined with a unique, small-town atmosphere. It is one of the most preferred destinations for North American eagles in the continent, where each November, Haines hosts the Alaska Bald Eagle Festival. This is a nature lover’s confluence to marvel at up to 3,000 eagles congregating in the Chilkat Valley.
The Haines Sheldon Museum and Cultural Center offers detailed insight into the town’s rich Tlingit heritage, as brought into view by artifacts and art representative of stories of tradition from the area’s indigenous people.
Local businesses such as the Port Chilkoot Distillery offer handcrafted spirits in small batches inspired by the region. When it is open, Sarah J’s Espresso Shop is a haven where residents can connect over coffee and fresh pastries. The Chilkat Valley, with its virgin beauty, is somehow a statement of the town’s efforts of preservation and attachment to nature and relationships within its community.
Juneau
A scenic view of Juneau, Alaska. Editorial credit: Darryl Brooks / Shutterstock.com
Juneau is one of the most recognized municipalities in Alaska. As its capital, it is also one of the most heavily visited locations in the state. Alongside the Gastineau Channel and against mountains and wilderness, few towns have the natural appeal that Juneau has. Mendenhall Glacier is an excellent example: a nearly 14-mile expanse of ice offering recreation for tourists and locals year-round.
The Alaska State Museum features interactive exhibits on Native Alaskan cultures, early Russian colonies, and indigenous artwork that showcase the true history of The Last Frontier. Other local businesses, such as the Alaskan Fudge Company (best known among the town’s folks for its handmade sweets) and Salt Restaurant, for its inventive take on Alaskan food, offer a warm and inviting experience.
Every even-numbered year, tribes of Tlingit, Haida, and Tsimshian gather for Celebration in a big event of dance, music, and art; such an occasion gives Juneau pride in its indigenous culture, instilling respect in unity within the community.
Homer
Dubbed the “Halibut Fishing Capital of the World,” Homer boasts world-class sport fishing, stunning scenery, and small-town hospitality. Outdoorsy types can head down the Homer Spit: 4.5 miles of real estate jutting into Kachemak Bay, lined with galleries, shops, restaurants, and eateries reflecting Homer’s individual and creative spirit. The Alaska Islands and Ocean Visitor Center features exhibits and educational programs on local marine ecology, allowing visitors to learn about the numerous ecosystems surrounding Homer.
Local businesses include hot spots such as the Bunnell Street Arts Center, which rotates exhibits throughout the year featuring Alaskan artists, and Two Sisters Bakery, which serves homemade pastries and many quirks.
Seward
Seward is often considered to be one of the prettiest communities in Alaska, both for the tightness of its neighborly spirit and its access to the fantastic sights of Resurrection Bay and Kenai Fjords National Park. This national protected space offers much to the outdoor enthusiast, including spectacular views of the native wildlife here, like otters, whales, and puffins.
Although smaller compared to other towns like Juneau, Seward has its set of local businesses that travelers love: Zudy’s Café for fresh baking and The Cookery, which has fresh soul foods and plenty of choices for the visitors.
If all this was not enough to keep Seward going, it also hosts the Mount Marathon Race, a yearly grueling running event up and down Mount Marathon.
Ester
Ester is a quaint little town just outside Fairbanks with a personality all its own. Rooted in Alaska’s gold mining history, it’s a place where the past and creativity seemingly blend effortlessly. The locals like to make a stop or two at places like the Golden Eagle Saloon, a dive with an appealingly rustic quality, home to live music and greasy food. You also want to visit the Ester Community Market, a locale filled with handmade crafts, fresh produce, and friendly faces.
The summer’s high point is the Ester Funk Festival, which colorfully unites artists, musicians, and makers from all over to enjoy the free-spirited vibe in town. This is a great place for anyone to see the real, quirky Alaska.
Hoonah
Hoonah is the biggest Tlingit village in Southeast Alaska and offers visitors a real plunge into Alaskan Native culture and hospitality. On Chichagof Island, Hoonah has the tourist destination of Icy Strait Point, which includes whale-watching excursions, Native American heritage learning packages, and natural beauty exploration. The architectural genius of Huna Tribal House, with all the intricate carvings, showcases the strength of the community and pride in their culture.
Businesses like Hooked Adventures, offering fishing tours, and the renowned gift shop The Fishermen’s Daughter contribute toward making Hoonah welcoming. Hoonah Harbor Days are annual events bringing together residents and visitors for the town’s nautical history and Native traditions that develop pride and camaraderie among the people.
Talkeetna
Talkeetna lies right at the foot of Denali and offers a little Alaskan attitude mixed with adventure and humor. People come from around the state to the annual Moose Dropping Festival, aptly named for its games, contests, and light-hearted fun. The festival celebrates Talkeetna’s pride in its unique community.
For those who want to know more about the community, the Talkeetna Historical Society Museum is a place that will show you how the settlement was started as a supply station for expeditions through Denali.
Converse with locals about the culture; visit the Denali Brewing Company, which serves fine crafts in beers, or Talkeetna Roadhouse, which is famous for feasts combined with friendliness. Vibrant residents and the richness in history make Talkeetna a warm, inviting stop in any Alaskan adventure.
Wrangell
Wrangell is a tiny town on Wrangell Island, Southeast Alaska, full of small-town charm and community spirit. The Wrangell Museum features great exhibits on the Tlingit heritage of this area, Russian influences, and logging history, thus offering a very interesting perspective on the past life in town.
Meanwhile, the annual Wrangell Bearfest celebrates the remarkable population of bears in the area. This is where locals and guests join in for educational presentations, guided tours, and a community barbecue.
With water-view hangouts like the Stikine Inn and Stik Cafe, it’s easy to converse with locals over a hot drink. The beautiful natural surroundings and friendly residents make Wrangell the perfect town for visitors who enjoy its history and nature with a side order of hospitality.
Discover the Heart of Alaska’s Tight-Knit Towns
Alaskan small towns are more than beautiful getaways – they are communities within which residents have family bonds and preserve traditions that still reverberate with the state’s pioneering spirit. From Homer’s bustling halibut fishing docks to Hoonah’s busting cultural festivals, every place opens some panoramic view of the unique tapestry of Alaskan life. In venturing through these tight-knit towns, visitors are afforded a genuinely authentic experience that far outstrips the awe-inspiring landscapes and provides a much deeper insight into what it’s like to live, work, and celebrate in America’s Last Frontier.
Alaska
Record cold temperatures for Juneau with a change to Western Alaska
ANCHORAGE, AK (Alaska’s News Source) – Overnight lows in Juneau have hit a two streak for breaking records!
Sunday tied the previous record lowest high temperature of 10 degrees set back in 1961, with clear skies and still abnormally cold temperatures to kick off Christmas week. Across the panhandle, clear and cold remains the trend but approaching Christmas Day, snow potential may return to close out the work week.
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In Western Alaska, Winter Storm Warnings are underway beginning as early as tonight for the Seward Peninsula. Between 5 to 10 inches of snow are forecasted across Norton Sound from Monday morning through midnight Monday as wind gusts build to 35 mph. In areas just slightly north, like Kotzebue, a Winter Storm Warning will remain in effect from Monday morning to Wednesday morning. Kotzebue and surrounding areas will brace for 6 to 12 inches of possible snow accumulation over the course of 3 mornings with gusts up to 40 miles per hour.
Southcentral could potentially see record low high temperatures for Monday as highs in Anchorage are forecasted in the negatives. Across the region, clear skies will stick around through Christmas with subsiding winds Monday morning.
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Interior Alaska is next up on the ‘changing forecast’ list as a Winter Storm Watch will be in effect Tuesday afternoon through Thursday morning. With this storm watch, forecasted potential of 5 to 10 inches of snow will coat the North Star Borough. For those in Fairbanks, 1 to 3 inches of snow will likely fall Tuesday night into Wednesday, just in time for Christmas Eve! Until then, mostly sunny skies will dominate the Interior with things looking just a bit cloudier past the Brooks Range. The North Slope will stay mostly cloudy to start the work week with some morning snow likely for Wainwright.
The Aleutian Chain is another overcast region with mostly cloudy skies and light rain for this holiday week. Sustained winds will range from 15 to 20 miles per hour with gusts up to 35 mph in Cold Bay.
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Alaska
Alaska is awash in oil but lies on an even more valuable resource — Switzerland has just started to produce it in a frenzy
Alaska’s energy realm has been dominated by oil resources, but with the state awash in oil, Alaska is relying on another valuable resource. Buried beneath the layers of snow lies one of the most underestimated sources of clean power. Since Switzerland has set the tone of relying on solar power enhanced by snow itself, the country is offering some light on how snowy regions can depend on this valuable resource as well. With Alaska being filled with snow, the state could even become fossil fuel independent by relying on solar potential and its snow.
Swiss solar invention considering the strength of snow power
Switzerland has considered solar energy technology created for snow climates. Researchers as well as engineers have seen that solar panels in the Alps do benefit so much from the snow that their performance is improved. Shocking enough, solar panels perform well during the winter months when energy demand tends to be high.
The discovery of solar panels’ feat is because sunlight reflected off snow improves the radiation that reaches the panels. The best way this effect is reflected is through the AlpinSolar Project on the Muttsee Dam. The site can produce 3.3 GWh every year, which is rather similar to the energy generated by solar systems at low elevation levels. These alpine-based panels generate three times more electricity than installations in Switzerland’s lower regions, and this is mainly the case due to the snowy reflected layer.
It has been found that perhaps steep angles and panel spacing optimize sunlight absorption, as this placement enables snow to slide off panels easily whilst ensuring sunlight capture from reflective panels.
Alaska is looking at relying on the snow’s potential
According to research, the bifacial solar panels, which collect sunlight on both sides, can capture more reflected energy and show better solar output in comparison to traditional single-sided panels. This will be a great idea in Alaska, where snow cover exists for many months.
Tests conducted in Alaska were promising, and snow build-up on panels was effectively managed. Teams at the University of Alaska and Sandia National Laboratories created transparent ice- and snow-phobic coatings, where panels could shed snow and ice and improve solar energy production. In fact, energy production was improved by 85% during tests. While there is hope of solar success, the challenge seems far harder in Alaska in comparison to the Swiss Alps. With low sun angles being a reality in winter months, energy storage needs to be improved, should solar be a reliable clean energy source for Alaska.
Three lessons learnt from Switzerland that can be used in Alaska
Switzerland’s successes in alpine solar technology provide an incentive for Switzerland to tap into underrated clean energy sources, too. However, the lessons learnt in Switzerland can be used in Alaska as well:
- Installation design matters considerably: Steep panel angles and higher frames enable snow shedding while ensuring better reflection of surfaces.
- Adapted technologies, including bifacial panels and those with special coatings, optimize solar capture: In high latitude and snow conditions, such innovations tend to improve solar power capture.
- The solar system must be integrated with storage and grid systems: This ensures that solar becomes a strategic investment in places, like Alaska, where winter darkness seems to be apparent all year long.
If Alaska keeps these core solar lessons in mind, the state can tap into this form of renewable energy.
Alaska will be able to tap into its renewable energy potential
Alaska needs to consider the snow as an asset in its solar mission, as opposed to seeing snow as a foe to the renewable energy agenda. Alaska, like Switzerland, can move forward with this renewable energy resource. While Switzerland has been relying on this resource for a while with favorable results, Alaska, too, can embrace the snow. Soon, the Alps will be covered with solar panels with amazing results.
Alaska
There will be more nonstop flight options for Alaska travelers in 2026
When it’s time to plan a trip, there are a couple of key considerations: How do you get there and how much does it cost?
Alaska travelers take it for granted that most big trips include a stop and a layover in Seattle. That’s certainly true for more international journeys, unless the trip includes a flight to Frankfurt on Condor’s nonstop from Anchorage.
But that mandatory Seattle stop is changing, even though there will be 27 nonstop flights each day this summer.
While ticket prices change on the fly, the process of blocking out where a plane will fly takes time and effort. There are many moving parts, including crew, ground handling and maintenance.
So the airlines have been working on new summertime flights since earlier this fall. And the lineup is pretty good. There’s also some welcome news on the airfare front.
Just a few days ago. Alaska Airlines announced plans to fly nonstop from Anchorage to three new destinations this summer: Boston, Spokane and Boise. Travelers prefer to fly nonstop. It’s faster and there are fewer opportunities to avoid missed connections, lost bags and other possible trip interruptions along the way.
The flights to Boston start on Saturday, June 13, 2026. There’s just one flight per week this year, which is one way Alaska Airlines tests out a route.
Alaska Air plans two flights per week (on Wednesdays and Saturdays) between Anchorage and both Boise and Spokane, starting on Wednesday, June 10.
Two other nonstop routes from Anchorage that had once-a-week service last summer now will get two flights per week: Anchorage-San Diego, starting May 16, and Anchorage-Sacramento, starting June 13.
Three Alaska Air destinations will get one flight per day, starting May 13: Anchorage-San Francisco, Anchorage-Denver and Fairbanks-Portland. That’s the same date that Alaska upgrades its Anchorage-Las Vegas from two flights a week to daily service, in response to Southwest Air’s nonstops starting May 15. The Anchorage-Los Angeles schedule also increases on that date (May 13) from one to two daily flights.
More nonstops come online on June 10: Anchorage-Minneapolis and Anchorage-New York/JFK. Also on that date, the Anchorage-Chicago schedule increases from one to two daily flights.
Alaska Airlines also offers daily nonstops to Phoenix and Honolulu. Between Anchorage and Portland, Alaska offers five daily flights during the summer.
Delta Air Lines is resuming several popular nonstop flights from Anchorage in May: Anchorage-Detroit (May 21), Anchorage-Salt Lake City (May 16) and Anchorage-Los Angeles (May 22).
Delta offers year-round nonstops from Anchorage-Seattle (3-6 daily flights), Fairbanks-Seattle (1-2 daily flights), Anchorage-Minneapolis (1-3 flights per day) and Anchorage-Atlanta (Saturdays only).
Delta’s Anchorage-Atlanta flights feature a wide-body Boeing 767 plane with lie-flat “Delta One” suites, one of just a few domestic routes. Delta resumes daily Anchorage-Atlanta flights on May 21.
American Airlines’ nonstop flight from Anchorage to Dallas operates through Jan. 6, 2026. Then there’s a two-month gap before the flight start up again on March 8.
On May 21, American Airlines resumes daily service on two routes: Anchorage-Chicago and Anchorage-Phoenix.
United Airlines flies from Anchorage to Denver each evening year-round. On May 21, United will start flying three times each day, in response to Southwest Air’s new nonstop which starts on May 15. On June 26, Denver adds a fourth daily Anchorage-Denver nonstop, just in case Southwest didn’t get the message.
May 21 also is the day United resumes its daily nonstops to Newark, Washington, D.C., and Houston.
On March 5, United resumes its nonstop flight from Anchorage to Chicago. On April 30, United adds a second flight for the summer.
Up in Fairbanks, United resumes daily flights to Chicago on April 30 and to Denver on May 21.
[Workouts at the airport? Some fliers can already smell the sweat.]
Other airlines planning nonstops to Anchorage include Sun Country, with one to two daily flights to Minneapolis starting May 16, WestJet with two weekly nonstops from Anchorage to Calgary and Southwest, with daily flights to both Denver and Phoenix. Condor Airlines plans three flights per week from Anchorage to Frankfurt starting May 16.
A big driver for the additional flights is the cruise industry, which is on track for a robust 2026 season. There are several new entrants in the cruise market, including MSC cruises, Virgin Voyages, Windstar Cruises and Azamara.
Still, airline watchers speculate there will be plenty of capacity in the interstate jet market, which means fares will be cheaper.
One example right now: Delta offers Basic Economy fares between Anchorage and Seattle for $196 round-trip. Travel between Jan. 12 and March 31. The upcharge to Main Cabin for advance seat assignment and mileage credit is $80 round-trip. Alaska Airlines quickly matched the Basic fare, but Alaska charges more for the upcharge to Main: $100 round-trip.
United Airlines is getting in on the discount fares, offers cheap rates to three Florida destinations from Anchorage: Tampa, Orlando and Fort Lauderdale. All are available for $336 round-trip is Basic Economy. Remember, with United, you cannot even take a small carry-on aboard without getting charged extra. The upcharge to Main is $100 round-trip.
After Delta dropped the fare to Seattle, Alaska Airlines dropped its rates to Delta hubs in Salt Lake City, Atlanta and Detroit. But there’s a twist.
Between Anchorage and Atlanta, Alaska Air is offering Basic fares for as little as $343 round-trip. Fly between Jan. 21 and Feb. 14. But the upcharge to Main is crazy: $175 round-trip. The price from Anchorage to Detroit on Alaska Air is compelling: just $341 round-trip. But the upcharge to Main is a buzzkill: $198 round-trip.
The Basic rate on Alaska Air between Anchorage and Salt Lake is sweet: $264 round-trip. The upcharge to Main is sour: $169 round-trip.
[Smaller items don’t go in overhead bins. Flight attendants are cracking down.]
In fairness, Delta also is guilty of overcharging for the upcharge to Main.
Between Anchorage and Boston, Delta is offering Basic seats for $336 round-trip, traveling between Jan. 9-March 31. The upcharge to Main is $100 round-trip.
But it’s a different story with tickets to Washington, D.C. Delta dangles a great price for Basic: $344 round-trip. But then comes the sticker shock on the upcharge to Main: $180 round-trip.
There still are a couple of golden rules when it comes to shopping for airline tickets:
1. When airlines are mad at each other, the traveler wins.
2. The big print giveth and the fine print taketh away.
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