A bush plane flies over a glacier deep in Wrangell–St. Elias
A bush plane flies over a glacier deep in Wrangell–St. Elias (Mint Images/Aurora)

Alaska Is Essentially One Big Park—And It’s Our Very Best

Here are a few of our favorite things about all it has to offer

A bush plane flies over a glacier in Wrangell-St Elias National Park.
Chris Cohen

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The 49th state has 54 million acres of national parklands, thanks in large part to the Carter administration. But so much green goodness can be overwhelming, so we enlisted the help of John Baston, a guide with Mountain Travel Sobek who has led trips in all eight of Alaska’s national parks. He agreed to a round of rapid-fire word association to pin down what’s great about each one.

National Parks Centennial

See the complete list of 100 reasons to love the parks (and a few things we’d improve)

Kobuk Valley: Sand dunes
Gates of the Arctic: Backpacking
Glacier Bay: Kayaking
​Kenai Fjords: Gulf of Alaska
Lake Clark: Giant lakes
Wrangell–St. Elias: Enormous
Denali: Highest mountain
​Katmai: Bears

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