Official Packer Fan Tours Cruise

Itinerary & Destinations

Itinerary Map

Whale

Departing from Seattle, WA on NCL's Pearl Cruise ship, we'll visit Alaska's Inside Passage, Glacier Bay, Juneau, Ketchika, and many more!

Exclusive Events

As in previous years, our exclusive events are for Packer Fan Tours guests & players only!

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7 Day Alaskan Cruise Itinerary

Day Port / Exclusive Packer Cruise ActivityArriveDepart
Sunday Seattle, WA
4:00 pm
Monday Inside Passage  
Tuesday Juneau 2:00 am 10:00 pm
Wednesday Skagway 7:00 am 8:15 pm
Thursday Glacier Bay
Friday Ketchikan 6:00 am 1:30 pm
Saturday Victoria 6:00 am 11:59 pm
Sunday Seattle, WA 8:00 am  
Check out a description of each of the ports by clicking on them.
Itinerary, ports, and sequence of events subject to change. A valid passport is required.


Juneau

Inside Passage

Located right along the coast of British Columbia, the Inside Passage is the longest sheltered inland waterway in the world. It features virtually everything you came to Alaska hoping to see including rainforests, glaciers, fjords and white-capped peaks. All of this creates a setting that is perfect for viewing orcas, humpback whales and sea lions as you cruise to the historic Alaskan ports of Juneau, Skagway and Ketchikan.

Juneau

Skagway

Skagway is filled with history of the Gold Rush Days and served as a trading post in the 1890s. The eye-catching façade of the Arctic Brotherhood Hall was built in 1899 by gold miners who paid their dues in nuggets and is decorated with over 20,000 pieces of driftwood. It houses the Trail of 98 Museum, displaying antiques from the Gold Rush. A block away, the Days of 98 Show is an entertaining historical musical about Soapy Smith.
If you feel like hiking, the Skagway Trail leads you to the 300 feet high Reid Falls, Dewey Lakes system, which pass pretty subalpine lakes and tumbling waterfalls. For the more adventurous you can scramble uphill to Denver Glacier.

Juneau

Juneau

Juneau has a reputation as one of the most scenically beautiful cities in the U.S. Overhead are the snowcapped peaks of Mt. Juneau and Mr. Roberts, while the Gastineau Channel provides a bustling waterfront for the city. In the city-center is a fine historical district with many buildings including bars, gift shops and restaurants, some dating back to the early 1900s. Juneau’s many museums and mines in and around the city are worth the discovery. Known as the “Gateway to the Glaciers”, Juneau has several glaciers in the area including the Mendenhall Glacier which Alaska’s famous drive-in glacier.

Glacier Bay

Glacier Bay

Home to the world-renowned icy wilderness…Glacier Bay National Park has 16 tidewater glaciers spilling out of the mountains and filling the sea with icebergs of all shapes, sizes and shades of blue. It is an area of green forests, steep fjords and icebergs. An added attraction is the variety of marine life including humpback whales, harbor seals, porpoises, and sea otters, while other wildlife includes brown and black bears, wolves, moose, mountain goats and over 200 species of birds.

Glacier Bay

Ketchikan

Ketchikan likes to be known as Alaska’s “first city”. Its historic downtown becomes saturated in summer with tourists. However, beyond the souvenir shopping it can be a delight; the city is built into steep hills, and partly propped on wooden pilings, with boardwalks, wooden staircases, and totem poles dotted throughout. Mosst of Ketchikan’s historic buildings lie on Creek Street, a rickety-looking boardwalk along Ketchikan Creek. This was a red-light district until 1954; now all the former houses of ill repute are given over to gift shops and artsy cafes. Dolly’s House, home and workplace of Dolly Arthur, is the town’s most famous madam stuffed with saucy memorabilia.

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