Top destinations in Yukon and Alaska

Discover Denali National Park, Alaska

Denali National Park is world-renowned for wildlife sightseeing and sweeping panoramic views of distant glaciers.

On a clear day, Mount Denali (formerly Mount McKinley, and the tallest peak in North America), soars above it all.

A National Park shuttle bus offers to take you deep into one of the most scenic landscapes in North America, where, in good weather, the road offers spectacular views of the 20,310 ft tall mountain.

Weather permitting, you might see Dall sheep, moose and caribou, grizzly bears, foxes, coyotes as well as many birds and eagles along the scenic loop.

Denali landscape

Best-selling tours featuring the Denali National Park:

Kenai Fjords National Park, Alaska

Kenai Fjords National Park landscape

Alaska’s most popular wildlife and glacier cruise destination, Kenai Fjords National Park boasts abundant wildlife, alpine and tidewater glaciers and breathtaking scenery. Along the shorelines of this all-marine park, seabirds abound, including bald eagles, kittiwakes and the loveable puffins, and you can often spot moose and black bears. You’ll also discover breathtaking views of the Kenai Mountains that seemingly rise directly from the sea, and, at the Bear Glacier, you’ll see massive waves as calving ice plunges into the ocean.

Once ashore, our guides will take you across the Kenai Peninsula, stopping at the Portage Glacier – a drive-up glacier – and you’ll be surrounded by the beautiful pine forests of the Kenai Peninsula. Don’t miss this opportunity to see the untouched beauty of Alaska’s coastal waters and wilderness!

Best-selling tours featuring the Kenai Fjords National Park:

Dawson City, Yukon

Popularized by the Klondike Gold Rush, the colourful boomtown of Dawson City is a great destination for all those who truly want to experience Canadian history. A national historic site, Dawson city is home to many restored gold-rush houses and false-fronted buildings. During the long days of subarctic summer, the town holds on to its turn-of-the-century flavour with festivals, live music, and contemporary art. A drive to the top of the Midnight Dome, the mountain that dominates the town, will lead you to extraordinary panoramas of Dawson City, the distant Ogilvie mountains, and the Yukon and Klondike rivers.

The gold fields and the active goldmines of the region are also worth a visit if you’re in Dawson City, and many of our tours let you try your hand at panning for gold. At night, a raucous can-can floor show in Diamond Tooth Gertie’s Gambling Hall will liven spirits like it’s 1898.

Dawson City architecture and buildings

Best-selling tours featuring Dawson City:

Dempster Highway, Yukon

Landscape at Dempster Highway

One of the world’s Northernmost Highways, the Dempster is the only all-season highway that crosses the arctic circle to reach Inuvik, where you can dogsled even in the summer. The landscapes seen along this 750km stretch of gravel road are truly breathtaking: from the jagged, black, Tombstone Range to broad open tundra and the vastness of the Arctic Ocean, the beauty and wilderness of the lands have remained untouched to this day. The road takes its travellers back to the days of indigenous hunters and trappers trailing through the Ogilvie Mountains, where great herds of caribou migrate hundreds of miles each year. The spectacular landscapes at the heart of the immense Yukon wilderness are always a truly humbling place to be.

To enjoy an unforgettable experience on this beautiful highway, several of our tours include a road trip from Dawson City, through panoramic Tombstone Territorial Park, all the way to quiet Engineer Creek. In the wintertime, we also offer a tour that takes you all the way to coastal Tuktoyaktuk, where the local Inuvialuit residents will teach you about life in this extreme northern environment.

Best-selling tours featuring Dempster Highway: