AGENT Destination – Alaska

Alaska

With thousands of miles of scenic coastlines, wildlife, mountains, arctic tundra and glaciers it’s no wonder that over one million cruisers a year visit Alaska. Whales, eagles, bears, moose and seals can be seen from the deck of your ship. Called the last great frontier, you’ll find 17 of North Americas 20 tallest mountains and more than 100,000 glaciers here. Don’t forget to bring binoculars, warm outerwear or rain gear to best enjoy the views of glaciers, marine life, birds, and breathtaking scenery.

Inside Passage

Cruises through the Inside Passage usually depart from Seattle or Vancouver. The scenic trip takes passengers by snow-capped mountains and fjords through the calm blue-green waters between the Pacific Coast islands. The main ports of call are Juneau, Skagway, Sitka and Ketchikan, but some ships stop in spots like Icy Strait, Haines, Wrangell or Petersburg.

Outside Passage

The Gulf itinerary takes you between Seattle/Vancouver and Seward/Whittier, the gateway ports for Anchorage. You’ll visit Itineraries many of the same stops that a round-trip Inside Passage cruise does, plus extras such as Valdez, Hubbard Glacier and College Fjord. This is the perfect trip to take, if you want to add a land tour on to your cruise. Since these cruises disembark from either Seward or Whittier, moving on to a land tour is very simple. Most land tours last 4-7 days. This is a great way to experience Alaska’s mountains, animals, vast tundra, and a chance learn more about the culture.

Small Ship Adventure cruises

For those looking to get closer to nature and explore the many small inlets and shallow waters where bigger ships can’t go, this type of cruise is for you. You’ll find rafts and kayaks that can be launched from the back of the ship. These cruises offer hiking experiences and visits to ports off the beaten path. Each port of call offers a unique perspective and experience.

Ketchikan, Alaska

Ketchikan is between the base of Deer Mountain and the Tongas Narrows. Creek Street is the main attraction there. Filled with charming Victorian buildings and quaint shops the town is built on pilings over the water.

The town has a colorful past as the home of miners, loggers and fishermen. What was once the city’s red- light district during the mining years, is now lined with stores and restaurants. Look down as you walk through the streets built on stilts, you’ll see canoes, kayaks and leaping salmon in the waters below. Ketchikan is the salmon capital of the world and the gateway port for scenic tours of the Tongass National Forest and Misty Fjords, as well as fishing trips. While there you can also visit the Totem Heritage Center and see the world’s largest selection of totem poles!

It’s one of the rainiest cities in the United States, raining 230 days a year.

Juneau, Alaska

Juneau is Alaska’s capital. Located between Mt. Juneau and Gastineau Channel, its’ the only state capital accessible by only water or air. While there you can kayak, canoe or hike close to the Mendenhall Glacier. At the cruise terminal you can take the Mount Roberts Tramway 1,800 feet up for gorgeous views and hiking trails. Travel back to an earlier time and enjoy some honky-tonk music and great food at the Red Dog Saloon.

While there visit the Alaska State Museum and learn more about gold mining and the local wildlife, take a river raft excursion on the Mendenhall River or visit a salmon hatchery.

Skagway, Alaska

Founded as a gold rush town in 1897, Skagway was the entry point for hundreds of fortune hunters on their way to the Klondike in search of gold. Many of original buildings, board sidewalks and pebbled streets remain from that time.

Take a train ride along the narrow-gauge White Pass & Yukon Railroad for spectacular views. You’ll be following the tracks that the gold seekers took by foot over the pass to the Canadian border. Take a gold rush history tour at the Klondike History Gold Rush National Park Trail of ‘98 Museum has artifacts, photos and records of the colorful history of this town. When your done, take a break for a brew at the Red Onion Saloon.

Sitka, Alaska

Located on the outer coast of Baranof Islands, Sitka’s first inhabitants were the Klinkut Indians. In 1799, Russian fur traders traveled here to make it their home. The town is also where Russia handed Alaska over to US in 1867 – $.02/acre. Today, Sitka is a unique cultural melting pot for the Klinkut Indians and Russian populations.

Explore Sitka National Park and see the many native totems. While there you can take the Mt Roberts Tram up 1800 feet to the Nature Center. Another highlight is the Alaska Raptor Center, a not-for-profit facility dedicated to healing injured birds of prey, primarily American eagles.

Tracy Arm

Tracy Arm Fjord is 27 miles long with cliffs that rise more than 3,000 feet on either side of the narrow passage and waterfalls that cascade down the steep rock walls. Named after Civil War general Benjamin Franklin Tracy, this narrow fjord is located approximately 45 miles southeast of Juneau.

You’ll find some of Alaska’s largest glaciers, including the twin Sawyer glaciers, which often drop enormous chunks of ice into the waters below. While there you may see icebergs floating on the water. Located within the Tongass National Forest, Tracy Arm Fjord is teaming with wildlife such as black and brown bears, deer, wolves, harbor seals, mountain goats and a variety of seabirds.

Glacier Bay

Glacier Bay is a destination millions of years in the making. There are 16 glaciers – that’s more than anyplace else in the world! One of them is 265 feet high and 2 miles wide. In order to take in the spectacular views, your cruise ship will stop at several glaciers so guests can take in the amazing colors of these majestic and massive natural phenomenon. On most cruises, Naturalists come aboard the ship to narrate as you pass by the glaciers.

Anchorage

Anchorage is Alaska’s largest city, spanning 1,955 square miles, from the Alaska Native village of Eklutna all the way to Portage Glacier. Anchorage features dozens of parks and 122 miles of paved bike paths. A metropolitan city within the wilderness there are many fine restaurants and entertainment venues within miles of spectacular vantage points. Don’t miss the city zoo where you’ll find every animal and bird native to Alaska.

Denali National Park

Denali is six million acres of pristine preserve and amazing scenery. There are 35 species of animals and 135 species of birds in this self-contained wildlife domain. The park is also home to Mount McKinley, North America’s tallest peak at 20,310 feet high.

Congress created the park in 1917; at the time, the purpose was to protect Dall sheep from overhunting. The park’s size and purpose grew over time. With terrain of tundra, spruce forest and glaciers, the park is home to wildlife including grizzly bears, wolves, moose, caribou and Dall sheep. Popular activities in summer include biking, backpacking, hiking and mountaineering.

Fairbanks

Fairbanks is the northern most city in the United States. Located at 64 degrees north latitude, it’s the perfect place to witness the aurora borealis, the midnight sun and sunsets and sunrises that last forever. Tour a local museum, choosing from Fairbanks Community Museum, Pioneer Air Museum, Fountainhead Antique Auto Museum, or Tanana Valley Railroad Museum. Or go at your own pace with a selfguided gold rush walking tour. You can even take an old fashion paddle boat tour along the rivers that surround the town.

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Take action now to prepare for your upcoming Walt Disney World® vacation! Link your reservation and tickets to stay informed about important next steps and key planning dates, including important Know Before You Go resources.
Follow these simple steps to get started:

Register or Sign In to Start Your DisneyExperience.com

This will take you to the My Disney Experience website. Sign in using your Disney Account or create one. Then, create your Family and Friends list for your travel party. You'll need this to assign Tickets to them and to make Theme Park reservations.

Link your reservation

Once you're signed in to My Disney Experience, enter your Resort Confirmation number provided by your Travel Professional.

Please note: You'll need to verify the names of everyone on this reservation. If you need to make any modifications, we recommend you contact your Travel Professional before you link your reservation.

Link your Walt Disney World Ticket or Pass

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Please note: If you have a room and ticket package for a select Walt Disney World Resort hotel, your tickets will be included when you link your Disney Resort reservation and you can skip Step 3.

Make your Theme Park Reservation in the Disney Park Pass System

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Review and Confirm Your Plans

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Boardwalk Travel agents should always offer travel insurance to each client. It will protect their travel and limit the risk of losing a customer because they were never offered a travel protection plan. Let the client be the one to reject, but every agent should offer it to every client.

7 Reasons to Buy Travel Insurance

Travel insurance isn’t just for expensive vacations. Travel insurance isn’t just for trips overseas. And travel insurance isn’t just for long journeys.

It’s essential to buy travel insurance for every trip, because you never know what might happen when you’re far from home! Every year, 55 million Americans purchase Allianz Travel Insurance to protect them against the most common travel mishaps.

Not sure if you need to insure your trip? Here are the top seven reasons to buy travel insurance.

1. Because you don’t want to lose all your money if you have to cancel your trip.

Even the best-planned trips sometimes have to be canceled. But many travel providers—such as tour operators, cruise lines and airlines—offer minimal or no refunds for last-minute cancellations. If this happens, can you afford to lose all the money you’ve spent on your trip?

One of the best reasons to buy travel insurance is having the protection of trip cancellation benefits. These can reimburse you for prepaid, nonrefundable trip costs when you must cancel for a covered reason. When you get your money back, you can book your vacation for another, brighter day.

What if you need to cancel for a reason that’s not covered? If you think that’s a possibility, consider buying the Cancel Anytime upgrade. Available on our most popular plans, OneTrip Prime and OneTrip Premier, Cancel Anytime can reimburse 80% of your lost non-refundable trip costs if you cancel your trip for almost any unforeseeable reason your plan does not already cover. That way, you can travel with confidence.

2. Because accidents can—and do—happen while traveling.

Healthy travelers often think they don’t need emergency medical insurance. The truth is, no one’s immune from illness and injury. We receive thousands of calls each year from American Allianz Travel Insurance customers who are experiencing a medical crisis during their trip, such as trauma, broken bones, heart attacks, and strokes. When you have travel insurance, you can contact 24-hour assistance for help in an emergency. Our team of experts can get you the help you need and may even be able to arrange payment in advance for covered emergency medical care.

3. Because your health insurance probably won’t work overseas.

If you get seriously sick or hurt in another country, don’t expect your health insurance card to help. “Many foreign medical facilities and providers require cash payment up front and do not accept U.S. insurance plans. Medicare does not provide coverage outside of the United States,” the U.S. Department of State warns.1 When you have travel insurance with emergency medical and dental benefits, it can pay for losses due to covered medical and dental emergencies that occur during your trip.

4. Because medical evacuations can be really expensive.

If you get seriously sick or badly hurt while traveling overseas, and you need to be taken via helicopter to the nearest high-quality hospital, the cost can be enormous. In some parts of the world, a medical evacuation can potentially cost six figures—and that doesn’t even include the expense of getting you home again.

Travel insurance with emergency medical transportation benefits can pay for you to be transported to the nearest appropriate facility if you suffer a covered illness or injury during your trip and our medical assistance team determines that the local medical facilities are unable to provide appropriate treatment. It can also pay for specialized transportation to bring you home, once your condition is stable.

5. Because travel delays are inevitable.

Airlines’ on-time stats rise and fall from year to year, but on average, around 18% of domestic flights are delayed.3 That’s not even counting the flights that are canceled! That’s why you need travel insurance with travel delay benefits, which can reimburse you for additional accommodation, meals or travel expenses and lost prepaid expenses due to a covered departure delay. You’ll be much happier if you have insurance that can reimburse you for your airport lunch or unexpected extra night in the hotel.

Here’s some even better news: You can get paid $100 per insured person, per day for a covered travel or baggage delay if you have SmartBenefits® (included with the OneTrip Prime and OneTrip Premier plans). You don’t need to provide any receipts—just proof of the delay!

6. Because a missing bag can ruin your trip.

In a recent survey, more than half of travelers said an airline had lost their luggage in the past. Just 34% of them ever got their missing bags back, and 72% said they’d lost an irreplaceable item.

When your suitcase goes AWOL, travel insurance can save the day. Baggage delay benefits can reimburse you for the reasonable additional purchase of essential items during your trip if your baggage is delayed or misdirected by a common carrier for 24 hours or more. Baggage loss/damage benefits can reimburse you for the actual price, actual cash value, repair or replacement of your lost/damaged items—whichever is less—based on the limits in your insurance policy’s letter of confirmation. Just remember: The best place for truly irreplaceable items is in your carry-on luggage, or at home.

7. Because sometimes, even expert travelers need a little help. 

One of the best reasons to buy travel insurance is the peace of mind you get from knowing help’s just a phone call away. When you face a crisis while traveling—a medical emergency, a lost passport, a stolen wallet, a natural disaster, etc.—you can always contact 24-hour assistance. Our U.S.-based team of travel experts will do everything in their power to take care of you and help make things right.