Anchorage is your gateway to Alaska’s great outdoors. Find the best hiking trails, fishing spots, wildlife viewing areas, glacier tours, and backcountry adventures. See our full guide to things to do in Anchorage for how outdoor time fits into a broader trip.
Kenai Fjords glacier cruises from Seward offer tidewater glaciers calving into the sea, humpback whales, puffins, and sea lions in one spectacular day.
Exit Glacier is the only road-accessible part of Kenai Fjords NP — easy glacier walks and the strenuous Harding Icefield Trail, 2.5 hours from Anchorage.
Palmer Hay Flats hosts thousands of sandhill cranes each fall and dense moose year-round — all viewable from the roadside near Palmer, Alaska.
Eklutna Lake is Anchorage's water sports hub — motorboats, kayaks & paddleboards with glacier views. Where to rent, what to wear, and tips for 2026.
Alaska's craft spirits scene starts in Anchorage and extends to Wasilla — birch vodka, permafrost spirits, and tasting rooms worth the drive.
Reed Lakes Trail leads to two vivid alpine lakes in Hatcher Pass — one of the best day hikes near Anchorage, about 75 miles from downtown.
Charter fishing from Anchorage covers halibut in Seward, king and silver salmon on the Kenai River, and trophy halibut from Homer Spit.
Anchorage has 1,500 resident moose. Where to spot them, how to photograph safely, what to do if one charges — and why moose injure more Alaskans than bears.
A chain of calm lakes near Palmer for kayaking, fishing, and camping — Kepler-Bradley Lakes State Recreation Area is an easy Mat-Su Valley day trip.
The Kenai River is Alaska's premier salmon fishery — world-record kings, double sockeye runs, and accessible guided fishing 2.5 hours south of Anchorage.