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Fairbanks

Activities in Fairbanks

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of 2

  1. A

    Riverboat Discovery

    Cruise the calm Chena River with a 3½-hour tour on the historic stern-wheeler Riverboat Discovery.

    reviewed

  2. B

    7 Bridges Boats & Bikes

    Canoeing options range from afternoon paddles to overnight trips; ask at 7 Bridges Boats & Bikes, at 7 Gables Inn.

    reviewed

  3. C

    Gray Line

    Offers a four-hour 'Discover the Gold Tour' that departs at 09:00 and noon, and includes Gold Dredge No 8, the Trans-Alaska Pipeline and lunch.

    reviewed

  4. Chena Dome Trail

    The trail follows the ridge for almost 30 miles in a loop around the Angel Creek drainage area; the first 3 miles to the tree line make an excellent day hike.

    reviewed

  5. El Dorado Gold Mine

    This daily two-hour train tour on a mile-long narrow-gauge track winds through a reconstructed mining camp and culminates with visitors panning gold-laden dirt.

    reviewed

  6. D

    Fairbanks Golf & Country Club

    The venerable Fairbanks Golf & Country Club is a nine-hole course open until 02:00 in June and July. Listed hazards at the courses include moose, marmot and Sandhill crane.

    reviewed

  7. Manley Boat Charters

    Frank Gurtler of Manley Boat Charters can take you to catch salmon, char and grayling, or just show you the sights along the broad Tanana River, just upstream from its confluence with the Yukon.

    reviewed

  8. E

    Fairbanks Historical City Tour

    Departing from River's Edge RV Park & Campground, this four-hour motorcoach tour leaves daily at 08:30 and visits downtown, the Trans-Alaska Pipeline, and the UAF Museum and Botanical Gardens.

    reviewed

  9. Northern Alaska Tour Co

    The Arctic Circle may be an imaginary line, but it's become one of Fairbanks' biggest draws, with small air-charter companies doing booming business flying travelers on sightseeing excursions across it.

    reviewed

  10. Trans Arctic Circle Treks Ltd

    The Arctic Circle may be an imaginary line, but it's become one of Fairbanks' biggest draws, with small air-charter companies doing booming business flying travelers on sightseeing excursions across it.

    reviewed

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  12. Alaska Flying Tours

    The Arctic Circle may be an imaginary line, but it's become one of Fairbanks' biggest draws, with small air-charter companies doing booming business flying travelers on sightseeing excursions across it.

    reviewed

  13. Paddling

    With no whitewater and comparatively few other hazards, the peaceful Chena River offers a variety of day and multiday canoeing possibilities in the area, with access points all along Chena Hot Springs Rd.

    reviewed

  14. F

    Bike & Canoe Hire, Go North Hostel

    Bike & Canoe Hire, Go North Hostel hires mountain bikes for a day, as well as canoes for a day or a week. Go North Hostel can help with trip-planning and will transport you to and from rivers throughout the Interior.

    reviewed

  15. G

    North Star Golf Club

    Fairbanks has a couple of golf courses where you can tee up well past your bedtime. North Star Golf Club is an 18-hole course where visitors can start a round as late as 22:00. The USGA-approved course bills itself as 'America's Northernmost Golf Course.'

    reviewed

  16. Wickersham Dome Trailhead

    At Mile 28 of the Elliott Hwy is the Wickersham Dome Trailhead parking lot and an information box. From here, trails lead to Borealis-Le Fevre's and Lee's cabins. Lee's Cabin is a 7-mile hike in and has a large picture window overlooking the White Mountains and a loft that comfortably sleeps eight.

    reviewed

  17. H

    Bike & Canoe Hire, Alaska Outdoor Rentals & Guides

    Bike & Canoe Hire, Alaska Outdoor Rentals & Guides is centrally located on the river behind Pioneer Park and rents mountain bikes for a day. Alaska Outdoor Rentals & Guides also will set you up with a canoe and pick you up at downstream locations like Pike's Landing or the Pump House Restaurant.

    reviewed

  18. I

    Alaskan Prospectors & Geologists Supply

    If you've been bitten by the gold bug, Fairbanks is an ideal area to try your hand at gold panning. Start at Alaskan Prospectors & Geologists Supply, which sells all the necessary equipment for recreational prospecting. It stocks books, pamphlets and videos to help you strike it rich, and even offers panning instructions.

    reviewed

  19. Pinnell Mountain Trail

    Access points for the Pinnell Mountain Trail are at Mile 85.6 and Mile 107 of the Steese Hwy. The first trailhead is Twelvemile Summit, which offers remarkable alpine views and is often snowy well into June. Even if you have no desire to undertake the three-day trek, the first 2 miles is an easy climb past unusual rock formations.

    reviewed

  20. Birch Creek canoe route

    The Birch Creek canoe route begins at Mile 94 of the Steese Hwy, where a short road leads down to a canoe launch on the creek. The wilderness trip is a 140-mile paddle to the exit point, at Mile 147 of the highway. The overall rating of the river is Class II, but there are some Class III and Class IV parts that require lining your canoe.

    reviewed

  21. J

    Larry's Flying Service

    The Arctic Circle may be an imaginary line, but it's become one of Fairbanks' biggest draws, with small air-charter companies doing booming business flying travelers on sightseeing excursions across it. Larry's Flying Service offers a 1¾-hour air-only tour, or a three-hour trip with an hour-long ground tour of Fort Yukon, just north of the circle.

    reviewed

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  23. Gold Dredge No 8 tours

    Off the old Steese Hwy at Mile 10 Goldstream Rd, this five-deck, 250ft dredge was built in 1928, operated until 1959, and was named a national historic site in 1984. Today perhaps Alaska's most visited dredge, No 8 is still making money. There are on-the-hour one-hour tours from 09:30 to 15:30 daily; for an additional fee you can also indulge in gold panning and the all-you-can-eat Miner's Lunch.

    reviewed

  24. K

    Gold Dredge No 8

    Off the old Steese Hwy at Mile 10 Goldstream Rd, this five-deck, 250ft dredge was built in 1928, operated until 1959, and was named a national historic site in 1984. Today perhaps Alaska's most visited dredge, No 8 is still making money. There are on-the-hour one-hour tours from 09:30 to 15:30 daily; for an additional fee you can also indulge in gold panning and the all-you-can-eat Miner's Lunch.

    reviewed

  25. L

    Bike & Canoe Hire, 7 Bridges Boats & Bikes

    Bike & Canoe Hire, 7 Bridges Boats & Bikes, at the 7 Gables Inn & Suites, rents road bikes and mountain bikes for a day. They also provide canoes and a shuttle service.

    From 7 Bridges Boats & Bikes you can drop a canoe in the Chena River, head downstream and into the quiet Noyes Slough and complete the loop by paddling east back into the river, a 13-mile round-trip journey.

    reviewed

  26. Eagle Summit Trail

    Eagle Summit, 3624ft in elevation, has a parking area for the second trailhead of the Pinnell Mountain Trail. A climb of less than a mile leads to the mountaintop, the highest point along the Steese Hwy and a place where the midnight sun can be observed skimming the horizon around the summer solstice. On a clear day, summiting here can feel like ascending to heaven. The peak is also near a caribou migration route.

    reviewed

  27. Granite Tors Hiking Trail

    The 15-mile Granite Tors Hiking Trail loop provides access into an alpine area with unusual tors: isolated pinnacles of granite rising out of the tundra. The first set is 6 miles from the trailhead but the best group lies 2 miles further along the trail. The entire trail is a five- to eight-hour trek gaining 2700ft in elevation, with a free-use shelter midway. The trailhead is in the Tors Trail State Campground, at Mile 39 of the Chena Hot Springs Rd.

    reviewed