Homer, USA, 2024-May-13 — /Travel PR News/ — Bear Viewing in Alaska is one of the most known bear watch tour operators in Alaska offering a wide range of bear viewing tours for hassle-free bear watching in Alaska. There are many reasons for you to visit Alaska for bear watching and one of them is to enjoy watching gigantic brown bears in Alaska from close and distant.
Bear Viewing in Alaska offers multiple full-day and half-day bear watch tours on foot, boat, and float planes. These tours are accompanied by professional guides that will help you in directing these visits and take you to places where you can easily see bears.
The Alaska is warmly referred to as the Last Outskirts, and its wild, unblemished scenes make the ideal normal living space for the vast majority of bear species, including dark and brown colored bears, and polar bears, and that’s only the tip of the iceberg!
Since there are endless spots to watch bears and experience natural life in Alaska, Bear Viewing in Alaska brings you some phenomenal areas to get your camera and catch the excellence of Alaska and its great natural life.
Bear Viewing in Alaska offers a bear shore journey or you’re venturing out tours for excellent bear viewing in Alaska. They have the very best places to experience and view bears from a protected distance here in one of the most mind-blowing bear seeing destinations in the planet.
Lake Clark National Park Bear Watching Tour – This tour offers an extraordinary bear-watching experience in Lake Clark which is a hotspot for excellent bear-watching in Alaska. On this tour, you can easily spot brown colored bears that accumulate in enormous gatherings to gobble up salmon and other fish as they run.
Chinitna Bay Bear Tours – Situated at the Cook Inlet and south of Lake Clark National Park is Chintana Bay. This place is also known for beautiful bear watching. Guests can see upwards of 20 seaside brown colored bears on the double at this bear-seeing area.
Experience: Captain Mel Erickson has been guiding in Alaska for 33 years, Extensive knowledge of navigating Cook Inlet.
Why depart from Anchor Point instead of Homer for your Bear Watching trip to Chintna Bay in Lake Clark National Park? Travel distance is only 38 miles and 1 hour 15 minutes by boat from Anchor Point, Homer is 62 miles each way, saving you 48 miles and over 2 hours of travel time round trip.
Professionally guided bear viewing tours: Bear Viewing in Alaska offers professionally guided bear viewing tours every day and has been for 8 years now, we know when, where, & how to find the bears. We have not seen at least 1-2 bears in all our trips, most days we see 10-25 bears.
For more information visit https://bearviewinginalaska.com/
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