Scenic Transfer • Wildlife Encounters • Bespoke Sightseeing
Your journey to Whittier should feel like part of the adventure—not just a ride. With Epic Alaska Tours, it’s a completely custom, high-touch experience crafted around your interests and schedule.
Travel in a luxury Mercedes Sprinter van with your personal Alaskan guide, offering rich storytelling, local history, and insider insights along the way.
Choose from an array of iconic and hidden-gem locations: • Portage Valley, abundant hanging glaciers • Girdwood, an alpine town with gourmet dining • AWCC- home to rescued bears, bison, & more • North America’s longest highway tunnel in a mountain • Anchorage highlights: Earthquake Park, Lake Hood seaplane base, & downtown • Scenic spots: Beluga Point, eagles, dall sheep, Anchorage cityscape overlook • Local artisan shops
We’ll tailor every detail to your pace and passions. This is your day, your way—crafted with the care and elegance Epic Alaska is known for.
Pickup included
Anchorage was born as a railroad construction camp in 1914 and has since grown into Alaska’s largest city. Downtown is compact, walkable, and full of charm, with historic buildings, vibrant murals, and sweeping views of the Chugach Mountains and Cook Inlet.
Alaska Wildlife Conservation Center is a heartfelt sanctuary dedicated to rescuing, rehabilitating, and providing lifelong care to Alaska’s injured and orphaned wildlife. Visitors have the unique opportunity to get up close with iconic Alaskan animals such as bears, moose, bison, mountain goats, and wolves, all living in large, natural enclosures that mimic their wild habitats. AWCC is a place of education and conservation, where expert staff share stories about each animal’s rescue journey and ongoing efforts to protect Alaska’s fragile ecosystems.
This quiet, forested area marks the site of one of the most devastating natural disasters in U.S. history: the 1964 Good Friday Earthquake. Measuring 9.2 on the Richter scale, it remains the strongest earthquake ever recorded in North America and the second strongest in the world. Here, the earth quite literally gave way. A once-thriving Anchorage neighborhood slid into the Cook Inlet when the ground dropped more than 30 feet in seconds. Today, you can still see the contours of the land where it buckled and shifted—a haunting, beautiful landscape shaped by seismic force. Interpretive signs throughout the park offer insight into what happened, while elevated viewpoints give you sweeping vistas of Cook Inlet, Mount Susitna ("Sleeping Lady"), and on a clear day, even Mount Denali in the distance.
Choose to be picked up from a list of locations
Please arrive at the pick up point 30 minutes before departure time.
Your journey begins with a personalized pickup at the location of your choice.