Orientation
Many visitors never make it beyond the downtown area, the old-fashioned grid of streets at the northwest corner of town where the large hotels and gift shops are located. Street numbers and letters work on a simple pattern and navigation is easy. Beyond downtown, most of Anchorage is oriented to commercial strips, and you'll need a map to find your way. To find anything on smaller streets, pick up a detailed map at the visitor centers, at a grocery store, or on the Internet. Some parts of greater Anchorage are in distinct communities outside the bowl formed by the Chugach Mountains, including Eagle River and Eklutna, within half an hour on the Glenn Highway to the northeast, and Girdwood and Portage, on the Seward Highway, 45 minutes to the south. The suburban Matanuska and Susitna valleys (known as Mat-Su) lie an hour north of the city on the Glenn and Parks highways.
Visitor Information
The Anchorage Convention and Visitor Bureau, 524 W. 4th Ave., Anchorage, AK 99501-2212 (tel. 907/276-4118; fax 907/278-5559; www.anchorage.net), offers information on the city and the entire state at its centers and extensive website (the site even has a feature to allow visitors to ask questions of volunteers by e-mail). The main location is the Log Cabin Visitor Information Center, downtown at 4th Avenue and F Street (tel. 907/274-3531; open daily June-Aug 7:30am-7pm, May and Sept 8am-6pm, Oct-Apr 9am-4pm). If it's crowded, go to the storefront office right behind it. You'll also find visitor information desks at the airport: one in the baggage-claim area in the C concourse and in the international terminal.
The Alaska Public Lands Information Center, located at 605 W. 4th Ave. (across the intersection from the log cabin at 4th and F), Suite 105, Anchorage, AK 99501 (tel. 866/869-6887 or 907/644-3661; www.nps.gov/aplic; open daily 9am-5pm in summer, Mon-Fri 10am-5pm in winter), can help anyone planning to spend time outdoors anywhere in Alaska. Exhibits in the grand room with high ceilings -- the building was a 1930s post office and federal courthouse -- orient visitors to Alaska's geography and outdoor activities and make an excellent starting point for your trip. When you're ready for details, you will find all the land agencies represented by rangers whose advice is based on personal experience. Be sure to pick up the free booklets they distribute on the highways and parks you will be visiting and pick from an excellent selection of trail and field guides at the bookstore. Even if you have no need for information, stop in for free films, presentations, and children's programs. You'll have to pass through a federal security checkpoint at the entrance, but the center is well worth the trouble.
Special Events
The Anchorage Folk Festival (tel. 907/566-2334; www.anchoragefolkfestival.org), the last two weekends of January, imports musicians and shows off local talent in free concerts, workshops, and jam sessions, as well as four guest musician dances that raise money for the festival. They have other events through the year, including an August fiddle camp and a Novemberfest; check the website for times and venues.
The Fur Rendezvous Winter Festival (tel. 907/274-1177; www.furrondy.net), February 22 through March 2, 2007, is a winter celebration of many decades longevity, featuring community events, a parade, fireworks, a carnival, craft fairs, snowshoe softball, dog-sled rides, and other fun. Of late, the festival has suffered shaky finances, so check ahead if you're planning it as part of your trip. The Rondy's traditional centerpiece is the World Champion Sled Dog Race, a 3-day sprint event of about 25 miles per heat. In addition, the last weekend of the festival coincides with the start of the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race (tel. 907/376-5155; www.iditarod.com). The Iditarod, long Alaska's biggest winter event, has recently grown dramatically as a tourist attraction, bringing in a flood of visitors who combine seeing the race with winter sports and festivals in Anchorage and Fairbanks. On the weekend of the start, the streets of Anchorage fill with foreign languages, as European visitors come in disproportionate numbers. The Iditarod begins from Anchorage the first Saturday in March (in 2008, March 2) and then proceeds in trucks to the restart the next day in the Mat-Su Valley for the 1,000-mile run to Nome.
The Native Youth Olympics (tel. 907/793-3267), held by the Cook Inlet Tribal Council in April at the Sullivan Arena (a children's event is in January), is a tough competition in traditional Alaska Native games such as the seal hop (done on the knuckles) and the spectacular high kick, in which young men kick a ball suspended as high as 9 feet off the floor. Admission and parking are free.
The Anchorage Market & Festival is a big street fair and farmer's market held every weekend from mid-May through mid-September at 3rd Avenue and E Street (tel. 907/272-5634; www.anchoragemarkets.com).
The stocked salmon runs in Ship Creek, which runs right through downtown Anchorage, produce one of the town's most popular summer activities. The Slam'n Salm'n Derbies (tel. 907/646-4846; www.shipcreeksalmonderby.com) add the possibility of winning money and prizes for fishing. The derby for kings is in early June and another for silvers is in early August. One-day tickets are $10 and benefit the Downtown Soup Kitchen; they are available at the derby headquarters in the Alaska Railroad plaza near the creek.
The Blues on the Green music festival, the first weekend in June, takes place under the sky in the natural amphitheater at Kincaid Park. It is an all-day, all-evening blues concert. Headliners in the past have included Taj Mahal, Bo Diddley, and Buddy Guy.
The Alaska State Fair (tel. 907/745-4827; www.alaskastatefair.org), which culminates a 12-day run on Labor Day each year, is the biggest event in the area. It takes place in Palmer, 40 miles north of Anchorage on the Glenn Highway. In most ways, it's a typical state fair, with rides, booths, exhibits, contests, fireworks, and live music. Not typical are the vegetables. The good soil and long days in the Matanuska Valley around Palmer boost their growth to massive size, the stuff of childhood nightmares. Cabbages are the size of beanbag chairs. A mere beach-ball-size cabbage would be laughed off the stage. And it's not just the 100-pound cabbages. Imagine a 19-pound carrot, 35-pound broccoli, 43-pound beet, 63-pound celery, or 76-pound rutabaga (all world records from the fair, among others you can check out on the website). The flower gardens are amazing too, although not in the same way. Note that on the weekends the fair ties up traffic between Palmer and Anchorage, so it's wise to go midweek if possible.
The Carrs/Safeway Great Alaska Shootout basketball tournament (tel. 907/786-1250; www.goseawolves.com), hosted by the University of Alaska Anchorage, brings top-ranked college men's and women's teams to the Sullivan Arena over Thanksgiving weekend and the preceding week.
Anchorage Travel Experiences
Popular Anchorage Hotels
- Holiday Inn Express Anchorage
- Homewood Suites Anchorage
- Marriott Anchorage Downtown
- Dimond Center Hotel
- Anchorage Grand Hotel
- Historic Anchorage Hotel
- Hampton Inn Anchorage
- Hotel Captain Cook
- Comfort Inn Ship Creek
- Sheraton Anchorage Hotel
Popular Anchorage Things to Do
- Alaska Native Heritage Center
- Flattop Trail Hike
- Club Millenium
- Darwin's Theory
- Bear Tooth Theater Pub
- Downtown Bicycle Rental
- Anchorage Museum of History & Art
- Z.J. Loussac Library-Main Branch
- Anchorage Fifth Avenue Mall
- Rosenberg Photography Gallery





