2018 CCL Fun Ashore Alaska

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FUN ASHORE 2018 ALASK A SAILING SEASON

FUN ASHORE GETTING THERE WITH CARNIVAL CRUISE LINE

2 018 AL ASK A SAILING SE ASON

LL COOL J Living the Legacy

BEHIND THE CURTAIN

BRINGING THE BIG SHOWS TO LIFE

CARNIVAL HORIZON

UNITED WE SAIL

THE FUN SHOPS NEW WAYS TO ROCK YOUR STYLE

GUIDE TO THE GREAT LAND

HISTORY, NATURE AND LOCAL TREASURE Starting on page

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PLEASE READ, ENJOY AND LEAVE IN STATEROOM AT CRUISE’S END

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© KABANA. All designs protected by copyright laws. All rights reserved. Reproduction/Duplication prohibited.

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CONTENTS

2018 Alaska Sailing Season

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WELCOME ABOARD! A message from Christine Duffy, president of Carnival Cruise Line.

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FUN TAKES Keeping Up with Carnival Cruise Line Big things on the horizon (Carnival Horizon), menus get a makeover and more news from around the fleet.

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He’s risen from upstart rapper to acclaimed artist, and LL Cool J is still blazing new trails. By Elizabeth Fernandez

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CARNIVAL ADVENTURES

BY CREATISTA / SHUTTERSTOCK.COM

COVER FEATURE Celebrity Profile: LL Cool J

It’s fun out there! And thanks to a comprehensive approach to shore excursions and other cruise experiences, the fun begins even before you board.

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BEHIND THE CURTAIN With a state-of-the-art rehearsal studio and some of the world’s most talented casts and crews, showtime at sea is more exciting than ever. By Sharon Geltner

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THE FUN SHOPS What’s happening at The Fun Shops? Plenty! Exciting new looks in the stores, the famous brands you’ve always wanted to try, events that make shopping completely unforgettable — all at amazing tax and duty free savings.

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Fun Ashore Carnival Cruise Line

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CONTENTS

2018 Alaska Sailing Season

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STYLE FOR ALL Discover watches and jewelry to keep you on time and on trend. Then get ready to rock the shops in port with our Brand Finder.

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A FUN DAY IN PORT What to see, where to go, how to save — it’s all at your fingertips with the Fun Finds Shopping Map.

Symbols of Alaska to take home and treasure.

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WHERE THE WILD THINGS ROAM The dream of observing wildlife in its natural habitat lures many visitors to Alaska. Here’s an introduction. By Lauramay LaChance

BY CHASE DEKKER / SHUTTERSTOCK.COM

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LOCAL SPOTLIGHT

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ALASKA PORTS OF CALL History, culture and attractions in the places you’ll visit, including the top shore excursions. MAP OF ALASKA JUNEAU Glaciers, whales and other natural wonders. KETCHIKAN Exploring Native culture and soaring across lush forests. SKAGWAY A railway built of gold in a frontier built of dreams. REGIONAL HIGHLIGHTS A glimpse of other ports to visit on a cruise to Alaska. 12

Fun Ashore Carnival Cruise Line

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GOLD QUARTZ & NUGGET COLLECTIONS

Quality, Value & Selection made in the USA since 1965! ANCHORAGE The Alaskan Mint 5th Ave Jewelers SITKA Goldsmith Galleries

KETCHIKAN Julie’s Fine Jewelry Julie’s Dock St. Gallery Julie’s at the Promenade

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8400 NW 36th Street, Suite 520, Miami, FL 33166 Tel: (305) 673.0400, Fax: (786) 558.1063 www.onboardmedia.com

Robin Rosenboum-Andras Senior Vice President, Marketing Carrie Julier Senior Vice President, General Manager Jennifer Zawadzki Director of Operations

Editorial & Design

Virginia C. Valls Kate McClare Ryan Slattery Iliana Soto Beth Wood Carlos Suarez-Murias James Perdomo Gail Abrams Violeta Manco-Rojas

Publishing Director Editor Managing Editor Associate Editor Senior Art Director Associate Art Director Production Coordinator Ad Services Director Ad Services Manager

Contributing Writers John Anderson, Richard Carroll, Julie Ceritelli, Ginger Dingus, Elizabeth Fernandez, Janet Groene, Lauramay LaChance, Kelly Liszt, Stanton H. Patty, Lynn Seldon.

Advertising Sales Rudi Riekstins Director of Sales and Cruise Revenue Anna Riekstins Director of International Sales & Brand Marketing Rod Musum Executive Director of Sales Elyce Kolder Brands Marketing & Promotions Coordinator

Video/Film Production Todd Hedge Director/Executive Producer Juan Carlos Peña Director of Photography Kevin Maschke Post-Production Supervisor Caroline Keith Producer Darien F. Rodriguez Editor Iris Cegarra Editor Daniel Kaplan Videographer/Editor

Port Shopping Revenue Vince Mikulus Regional Marketing Manager Will Oldham Regional Marketing Manager Andrew Vrzal Regional Marketing Manager Jimmy Marks Retail Program Manager

Port Shopping

Rina Alvarado Operations Coordinator Candice Ewing Operations Coordinator Nadine Winter Customer Relations Manager

Ships’ registry: BAHAMAS, MALTA, PANAMA All rights reserved. The entire contents of this publication are protected by copyright. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior permission of the copyright owner. Printed in Canada. All articles, descriptions and suggestions concerning activities, tourist attractions and other vacation opportunities described in this publication are merely expressions of opinions by contributing writers, do not constitute the opinions of Onboard Media Inc. or CARNIVAL CRUISE LINE, and under no circumstances constitute assurances or guarantees concerning the quality or safety of any such attraction or activity. Onboard Media Inc. and CARNIVAL CRUISE LINE specifically disclaim any liability for damages incurred due to the attendance or participation by readers of this publication in any such activity or attraction, and the attendance or participation in any such activity or attraction shall be made solely at the reader’s own risk. We and our content providers (“we”) have tried to make the information in this publication as accurate as possible, but it is provided“as is” and we accept no responsibility for any loss, injury or inconvenience sustained by anyone resulting from this information.

FEATURED BUSINESSES HAVE PAID TO BE INCLUDED IN THIS PUBLICATION THE 60-DAY GUARANTEE ASSURES BUYERS THAT THE STORES LISTED IN THIS PUBLICATION STAND BEHIND THE QUALITY OF THEIR MERCHANDISE. BUYER’S REMORSE, BUYER’S NEGLIGENCE AND LOST OR STOLEN MERCHANDISE ARE EXCLUDED FROM THIS GUARANTEE. MANY STORES IN PORT, INCLUDING STORES THAT DO NOT PARTICIPATE IN THE PROGRAM, MAY OFFER THEIR OWN GUARANTEES, BUT ARE NOT INCLUDED IN THE GUARANTEE STATED ON THE MAP.

SARAH JACKSON/SHUTTERSTOCK.COM

©2018 Onboard Media. No claim to original works of CARNIVAL CRUISE LINE or advertisers.

*THE FULL BUYER’S GUARANTEE IS LISTED ON YOUR SHOPPING MAP.

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Fun Ashore Carnival Cruise Line

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Because your vacation won’t last forever, but your memories can...

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T

EN

F

RO

E

A

MESSAG

MT ID S E HE PR

Dear Valued Guest, On behalf of all of us at Carnival Cruise Line, I’d like to personally welcome you aboard and say thank you for allowing us the privilege of creating fun, unforgettable vacation experiences with you! We’re always looking for fresh new ways to enhance what we offer our guests. Our team takes great pride in continuously bringing new innovations and features to life on board each of the ships in our fleet. And we are proud to showcase some of these exciting new experiences in this edition of Fun Ashore. As you can see from our cover photo, rap legend LL Cool J has made a special appearance in this issue in recognition of our Lip Sync Battle Carnival program. We invite you to channel your inner pop star at sea during this authentic re-creation of the immensely popular show, produced in collaboration with Spike TV and part of the diverse entertainment lineup aboard Carnival Cruise Line. World-class entertainment is one of the things Carnival does best, with offerings such as the Carnival LIVE concert series, bringing new, exciting talent to the lineup every year. Carnival also hosts a record 25,000 shows a year at our Punchliner Comedy Clubs. Many of our exciting new entertainment choices are tuned to perfection at our own state-of-the-art land-based rehearsal venue, Carnival Studios. Be sure to check out the Fun Times each day and listen for announcements from your cruise director so you can experience everything we have to offer! We’re committed to enhancing every aspect of your experience — which includes, of course, onboard shopping.

As part of an ongoing effort to provide our guests with the widest variety of choices at sea, we have recently transformed the shipboard shopping experience across many of our ships with renovated spaces and popular items from some of the world’s best-known retailers, including Victoria’s Secret, Swarovski, Pandora, TAG Heuer and others. Through these enhancements, our guests can enjoy some “retail therapy” and take home a unique and memorable keepsake from your Carnival vacation. Carnival continues to make investments in other areas as well. We’ve upgraded dining options on many ships, including the addition of popular favorites Guy’s Burger Joint and BlueIguana Cantina, as well as new pop-up sushi venues on several ships and the New England-inspired Seafood Shack on many others. We’ve also enhanced the outdoor fun on several of our ships with splashy new WaterWorks aqua parks. We think you’ll love them. Meanwhile, we can’t wait for you to experience our newest ship, Carnival Horizon, which just debuted in spring 2018. Of course, we know that some of the best vacation memories are also made ashore, which is why our Carnival Adventures program takes fun, excitement and convenience to a whole new level, bringing you shore excursions, ground transportation and other services to create a highly memorable concierge-like experience for all of our guests. You can read all about these features and much more on the following pages. Once again, thank you for choosing Carnival, America’s Cruise Line, for your vacation! Have a great time and Bon voyage!

Christine Duffy President Carnival Cruise Line 20

Fun Ashore Carnival Cruise Line

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FUN TAKES

Keeping Up With Carnival Cruise Line

UNITED WE SAIL

FROM LEFT: Carnival Horizon Cloud 9 Spa; Havana Pool.

Carnival Horizon brings together the essential elements of the cruise. Sky, sea and land come together on the horizon, and so too are they united on Carnival Horizon. The new ship in the Vista Class is all about unity. It’s easy to see the harmonious theme coming to life throughout the vessel and its many spectacular features. Bringing the three elements together is a breeze with SportSquare, where guests can hit the sea running, playing or cycling. Here, guests will find some of their favorite (previously landlocked) activities such as outdoor soccer, volleyball, ping-pong, mini bowling and more. Those seeking to reach new heights can get swept off their feet with SkyRide, an exhilarating two-lane bike course suspended 150 feet in the air, and SkyCourse, an insanely fun and challenging rope course high above the deck. It’s a truly elevated experience at sea. One of the most exciting pairings in this unifying ship, however, has to be the merging of two of Carnival’s greats: Seuss at Sea and WaterWorks. Splash into big fun with the first-ever Dr. Seuss WaterWorks, only aboard 24

Carnival Horizon. All your favorite Dr. Seuss characters are here, as well as two can’t-miss centerpieces: The Cat’s Hat and Fun Things, dual slides that take you through the wacky world of red and blue with side-by-side racing action. There are lots of other exciting ways the new ship is raising the bar set by her older sister, Carnival Vista. For starters: Carnival's first teppanyaki restaurant at sea; Guy's Pig & Anchor Bar-B-Que Smokehouse | Brewhouse, the latest hot dining spot from Guy Fieri; a whole new stateroom category (an aft view with extended balcony in Family Harbor); and exciting new brands in The Fun Shops. Meanwhile, continents come together with Carnival Horizon’s unique list of itineraries and destinations. From Europe and Bermuda to the Caribbean and transatlantic voyages, guests can choose from an expansive list of exotic tours to experience aboard this remarkable new ship — which means that wherever you’re headed, you’ll find your destination on the horizon. — Iliana Soto

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Fun Ashore Carnival Cruise Line

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GREAT MEMENTOS OF THE GREAT LAND

Take-home treasures crafted in jade and glacier pearl, Alaska's unique stones.

Welcome to Alaska! Between whale spotting, selfie-taking and layering up (seriously, layers are key) you’ll find yourself wanting to bring home the magic of The Great Land. Luckily, you’ll find the best souvenirs and mementos to do just that right here on board. At The Fun Shops, you'll discover jewelry and collectibles commemorating the native flora and fauna carved from glacier pearl, hematite and, of course, jade, Alaska's official gemstone. When you purchase these pieces, you'll not only bring home the memories, but you’ll also leave a lasting impression as a portion of the proceeds will benefit the Polar Bear Fund. That’s what we call “feel-good shopping.” Uploaded all your photos to Instagram already? Happens to the best of us. You can still take loved ones on a photographic excursion with maps, photography books, calendars and more from some of the people who know the land best. And while you can’t exactly cuddle a baby bear, high-fin a whale or tame a majestic eagle, you can feel the warmth and welcome of Alaska with plush animals representing the local wildlife, warm outerwear and accessories, and luxurious lotions and toiletries, because let's face it, there is a bit of a chill in the air. Be sure to explore all that this wildlife haven has to offer on land, then bring home the memories with exclusive memorabilia from The Fun Shops.— Iliana Soto

FAMILY FUN The only question is, where to begin? Now that you’re all here, it’s time to create great family stories Carnivalstyle. Families really dig Carnival (it’s the No. 1 cruise line for families) and for good reason. With dedicated spaces for each member of the gang, everyone gets busy exploring. Features vary by ship, but you’re bound to find something for everyone in the clan.

SERENITY. When mom and dad need a vacation from the vacation, the Serenity spa is the place to disconnect and recharge their batteries. While the kids and the cruise fun will still be close by, parents will be spending time in another world. Hammocks for two, an exclusive bar and the salty ocean breeze will surely help mom and dad unwind.

OUTDOOR ADVENTURE. Soaking fun and aerial thrills await with WaterWorks, where families cool off and splash together for hours. SportSquare gets you in the game with soccer, volleyball and basketball, while indoor warriors can get game with pool, foosball and ping-pong.

SEUSS AT SEA. The playfully quaint world of Dr. Seuss goes aquatic with Seuss at Sea, where the kiddos and their families enjoy whimsical parades, enchanting story times, and green eggs galore. This is fun for kids of all ages, including those who are kids at heart.

YOUTH PROGRAMS. Kids get creative with talent shows, finger-painting and dancing at hula parties thanks to Camp Carnival, while teens enjoy playing video games, singing karaoke songs and even going on exciting shore excursions through the Circle “C” and Club O2 programs. No matter the age, there’s always something exciting for kids happening onboard.

SHORE EXCURSIONS. Carnival knows how to have fun both on board and ashore. By hand-selecting the best local tour providers and taking care of all the details, the Carnival Adventures crew makes sure families and other groups have extraordinary excursions in every port. Tours abound and include exploring ancient cities, interacting with gentle sea animals, zip-lining through tropical jungles and so much more. (For more, see “Carnival Adventures” in this issue.)

IMAX. Offered on select ships, the IMAX theater experience brings families together to enjoy a great movie (from Hollywood blockbusters to award-winning documentaries) on a truly huge screen, with stunning visuals and powerful sound to match.

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Dr. Seuss Properties TM & © 2018 Dr. Seuss Enterprises, L.P. All Rights Reserved.

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Fun Takes | Keeping Up With Carnival Cruise Line

MENU MAKEOVER From Baked Alaska to Italian classics, dining on board just got even more delicious. As Carnival sails into fresh and exciting new dining options, you’ll find hot new dishes to tempt even the pickiest palate. Case in point, the Baked Alaska. After a hiatus, this superstar treat is returning to the entire Carnival fleet, with uniformed waiters performing the time-honored tradition of parading the popular confection throughout the dining room prior to service. But don't skip straight to dessert just yet. Carnival's culinary revamp extends to several of its specialty and main dining venues too. Tasty Times Ahead Start your day on a light note with fresh options like avocado toast, a wholesome breakfast bowl and a fresh-baked broccoli and cheddar frittata. For port days, a satisfying new "breakfast express" option gets you in and out with a complete breakfast in just 25 minutes. Sea days are also covered, with the Carnival Deli sporting both a new design and menu makeover which includes seven tasty new sandwiches and wraps. Craving seafood at sea? You’re in luck! The Seafood Shack, which debuted on Carnival Vista offering lobster rolls, fried clams, chowder and other New England-inspired fare, has also been expanded to additional ships. And for dinner, the line’s classic American steakhouses have added mouth-watering options like Iced and Smoked Fresh Oysters and Pan-Seared Dover Sole to an already tantalizing selection of USDA prime steaks and other gourmet fare. Meanwhile, new offerings for Cucina del Capitano reflect the diversity of Italy’s culinary regions with dishes like Branzino al Forno in Crosta Dorata and Risotto Milanese joining classic Italian favorites aboard Carnival Breeze, Carnival Magic, Carnival Sunshine and Carnival Vista. Hungry yet? Be sure to check out all of your culinary options during this trip. Bon appétit! — Iliana Soto 26

For port days, a satisfying new "breakfast express" option gets you in and out with a complete breakfast in just 25 minutes.

TOP: Baked Alaska. ABOVE: Breakfast choices.

Fun Ashore Carnival Cruise Line

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Fun Takes | Keeping Up With Carnival Cruise Line

FUN AT YOUR

FINGERTIPS

PHOTO BY: MICHAELJUNG/SHUTTERSTOCK.COM.

Carnival HUB app is the ultimate cruise companion. Carnival’s smartphone app just keeps getting better and better, with a growing list of can’t-cruise-without-it features: • Booking tool for purchasing shore excursions. • On select ships, view your photos on the app and order digital or print copies. • Chat feature (for a low activation fee). • Day-by-day schedule of onboard activities. • A “favorites” feature that shows you see which events your friends plan to attend. • Search tool to locate family and friends on board. • Dining menus from onboard restaurants. • Itinerary details. • Searchable deck plans, with key areas highlighted. • Daily weather reports.

Download

your free Carnival HUB at the Apple or Google Play app store.

• Countdown clock that keeps track of the time until your cruise departs. The Carnival HUB app is free to download from Google Play and iTunes. You can access it through your ship’s free WiFi and, except for the chat feature, it’s free to use on board. To avoid roaming charges from your cell provider, use it on airplane mode.

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Fun Ashore Carnival Cruise Line

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Fun Takes | Keeping Up With Carnival Cruise Line

SMOOTH SAILING When the U.S. Coast Guard called upon a Carnival ship to divert from its course in order to help a nearby vessel in trouble, the Carnival captain complied without hesitation. But aid was rendered with no disruption or delay of passengers’ vacations, for Carnival’s Fleet Operations Center was able to offer a faster course for reaching the distressed ship. The quietly successful maneuver was one of numerous victories made possible by Carnival Corporation’s three Fleet Operations centers (FOCs) — in Hamburg, Germany; Seattle, Washington; and Miami, Florida, which opened in late 2017. They’re the most technologically advanced in the commercial maritime industry. The FOCs provide state-of-theart tracking and data analysis for Carnival Corporation’s entire fleet, enabling real-time information sharing between ships and onshore support teams. The centers use Neptune, a cloud-based technology from Microsoft, to capture thousands of data points and provide real-time analytics for 28 distinct parameters of navigational safety. Not only do they enable immediate response to existing conditions, but they can also perform predictive analysis to further improve safety and operational performance. "Our teams have done a remarkable job in developing the most sophisticated and capable system in the cruise and commercial maritime industry for taking safety management to a completely new level,” says Vice Admiral Bill Burke (ret.), chief maritime officer for Carnival Corporation. And if the teams and their systems work properly, you’ll never know it, says Richard Miller, vice president of Nautical & Safety Operations. “If your cruise goes off without a hitch, the Fleet Operations Center is doing its job,” he says.

Industryleading Fleet Operations Centers bring safety and performance to new levels.

FROM TOP: Carnival Corporation's newest Fleet Operations Center enables real-time voyage monitoring, for maximum safety and efficiency.

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Fun Ashore Carnival Cruise Line

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Cover Story | LL COOL J

g n i v i L e h t cy

He’s risen from upstart rapper to acclaimed artist, and LL Cool J keeps blazing new trails.

a g Le

By Elizabeth Fernandez

Described in the Washington Post as “rap’s first true superstar,” LL Cool J has had a trailblazing career. Since first making a name for himself in the 1980s in New York City’s young hip hop scene, he has become a multi-platinum Grammy Awardwinning recording artist as well as an actor, author and entrepreneur. He’s a living legend, an innovator whose impact reaches far beyond the rap world — all the way to the prestigious Kennedy Center Honors, which made him its first solo rap honoree in 2017. “I never could have predicted that I’d still be out here rocking it more than two decades after my debut,” LL said recently, wearing one of his trademark grins. “But here I am.”

On the Rise Raised by his grandparents in Queens, New York, James Todd Smith — the future LL Cool J — started rapping when he was 9, inspired by rap pioneers Treacherous Three and influenced by rock and roll legend Fats Domino. As early as 13, he was already in demand. Jay Philpot, better known as DJ Cut Creator, recognized his raw talent and wanted to work with him. “But I told him, yo, you’ve got to ask my grandmother,” LL reminisced in a recent episode of Oprah’s Master Class. After young James’ grandmother made Philpot promise to keep him out of trouble, they began making music together. Under his new stage name, an abbreviation for “Ladies Love Cool James,” LL honed his skills, making demo tapes with equipment he’d received from his supportive

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grandfather, a musician himself. Before long, he attracted the attention of famed producer and Def Jam co-founder Rick Rubin. By 1984, he was considered Def Jam’s flagship artist. His platinum debut album Radio was one of the earliest commercially successful hip hop albums. After that came a string of hit records, including the triple platinum Bigger and Deffer, his biggest of all time, featuring “I Need Love,” the first-ever successful rap ballad. This was quickly followed by Walking with a Panther in 1989 and the doubleplatinum Mama Said Knock You Out a year later. It was a smash success and the title track won LL his first Grammy. With his music career soaring, in 1992, LL landed his first major acting role in Toys, sharing the screen with the legendary Robin Williams. He gained success as quickly as he had in the music world, and by 1995 had landed his own sitcom, In the House. He released even more groundbreaking albums, including the double-platinum Mr. Smith, packed with well-received songs like “Doin’ It” and “Hey Lover,” which won him yet another Grammy. On his next album, 1997’s platinum-selling Phenomenon, LL collaborated with fellow iconic rappers like Method Man, Redman and DMX.

Beyond the Music Since 2000, LL has released six more albums, including No. 1 debuting platinum G.O.A.T. and 10, featuring tracks produced by Pharrell Williams. His Authentic, released in 2013, included a broad range of collaborators who have admired and been

Fun Ashore Carnival Cruise Line

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I never could have predicted that I’d still be out here rocking it more than two decades after my debut, but here I am. — LL Cool J

PETER YANG

Vitatem ipicatu stibus eatqui occus cum harum elesto tem iunt que solo quo et earcid et doluptam nonserat. Axima nusciistem es

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PETER YANG

Cover Story | LL COOL J

To be able to come from the corner of Farmers Boulevard in Queens, banging on a garbage can, all the way to the Kennedy Center Honors, that’s a long journey. — LL Cool J influenced by LL through the years, such as Snoop Dogg, Fitz and the Tantrums, Eddie Van Halen and Seal, as well as famed R&B super group Earth, Wind & Fire. In 2012, the two-time Grammy winner hosted the Grammy Awards, a gig that would last for a record five years. He’s continued acting, appearing in more than 30 movies opposite such stars as Queen Latifah (The Last Holiday); Al Pacino, Jamie Foxx and Cameron Diaz (Any Given Sunday); and Robert De Niro (Grudge Match). He received a Blockbuster Award for his comedic performance in Deep Blue Sea. He stars in the long-running primetime drama NCIS: Los Angeles, winning four NAACP Image Awards in a row for his role as Special Agent Sam Hanna. He has also expressed himself in books, from his 1997 autobiography I Make My Own Rules to his 2002 children’s book, And the Winner Is. He’s having a blast serving as both host and producer of Lip Sync Battle, Spike TV’s most-watched original program ever and a two-time Emmy nominee. Celebrities such as Dwayne Johnson and Anne Hathaway have flocked to the show, but two guests have eluded him. “I want to see Obama versus Michelle — that would be amazing,” he told BUILD Series. “Can you imagine Obama doing Busta Rhymes?” He still finds time for music, touring in 2017 to play music festivals like Jazz in the Gardens in Miami. “It’s my first love, going out and playing live music,” he told Billboard. He’s been giving back to the people of his hometown since 2004, with Jump & Ball, a free and fun-filled camp every Saturday and Sunday during the month of August for hundreds of kids from Southeast Queens. The program was developed as an opportunity for the kids in the community to not only learn the game of basketball but also to learn team building and leadership skills critical to life off the court.

“A Long Journey”

The last two years have been filled with awards and accolades: He received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in January 2016 and the W.E.B. Du Bois Medal — Harvard’s highest honor in the field of African and African-American Studies — in October 2017. That very same week, he got his fourth nomination for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Finally, in December 2017, he received the Kennedy Center award — one of his most meaningful awards in a career full of them. As he told The New York Times, “To be able to come from the corner of Farmers Boulevard in Queens, banging on a garbage can, all the way to the Kennedy Center Honors, that’s a long journey.”

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Cruise Guests Star in

Lip Sync Battle Carnival Do you have what it takes to be a star, just by belting out a tune without actually singing a note? Here’s your chance to find out: by competing on Carnival’s own version of the hit TV show Lip Sync Battle, offered through an exclusive partnership w it h Spi ke T V (wh ich b e ca me Pa ra mou nt Ne t w ork i n January 2018). Performed live on select Carnival ships, Lip Sync Battle Carnival is an authentic re-creation of the popular show hosted by LL Cool J. While the rap legend isn’t part of the shipboard production, the show is otherwise quite true to the original. Contestants perform at the beginning of their cruise. Two finalists are selected, and work with Carnival’s onboard entertainment experts to perfect their performance. Then, it’s showtime! The second round is a full-scale production — costumes, sets and lighting — and the finalists interpret their chosen song by re-creating a scene from a well-known music video. The winner is selected by an audience vote and receives a special prize unique to the reality show. Lip Sync Battle Carnival further expands on the already wide range of entertainment options on board, which includes Carnival Live, Playlist Productions, The Punchliner Comedy Club and Hasbro, The Game Show. “We’re delighted to offer this exciting new entertainment activity to our guests,” says Carnival President Christine Duffy. “Lip Sync Battle Carnival takes the brand’s participatory fun to the next level, providing our guests with a chance to showcase their talents and demonstrate their creativity with their fellow guests cheering them on.”

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Cover Story | LL COOL J

CAR EER

highlights STUDIO ALBUMS

1985 Radio 1987 Bigger and Deffer 1989 Walking with a Panther 1990 Mama Said Knock You Out 1993 14 Shots to the Dome 1995 Mr. Smith 1997 Phenomenon I think when you move past your fear and you go after your dreams wholeheartedly, you become free. Know what I’m saying? Move past the fear.

2000 G.O.A.T. (Greatest Of All Time) 2002 10 2004 The DEFinition 2006 Todd Smith 2008 Exit 13 2013 Authentic TOP TV AND MOVIE ROLES

1992 Toys

— LL Cool J

1999 Any Given Sunday 1999 Deep Blue Sea 1999 In Too Deep 2000 Charlie’s Angels 2001 Kingdom Come 2002 Rollerball 2003 Deliver Us from Eva 2003 S.W.A.T. 2005 Slow Burn Since 2009

KATHY HUTCHINS/SHUTTERSTOCK.COM

2006 Last Holiday NCIS: Los Angeles

2013 Grudge Match Since

2015 Lip Sync Battle

(producer and host) Fun Ashore Carnival Cruise Line

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Exclusively sold at Diamonds International & Tanzanite International SafiKilima.com juneau ketchikan skagway

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The Angelika Ring

The Infinity Ring

Commemorate your cruise with our signature TrueBlueÂŽ, Vivid Brown & Vogue Black diamond collections, renowned for using only the most sought-after colored diamonds.

TrueLove Diamonds An Exclusive Boutique

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Fun Ashore | Carnival Adventures

CARNIVAL

ADVENTURES It’s fun out there! And thanks to a comprehensive approach to shore excursions and other cruise experiences, the fun begins even before you board.

When you get home from this cruise, chances are you won’t be thinking of it as a series of disconnected pieces but as one continuous experience, all the pieces aligned into one unforgettable Carnival vacation. That’s the idea behind Carnival Adventures. It’s a comprehensive approach to the cruise vacation, taking several once-separate elements and aligning them into one seamless experience. It begins even before you arrive on board — taking you from the airport to your ship, from your ship to your shore excursions and finally to the moment you realize you want to do it all again.

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The Adventure Begins It seems mundane, but the airport pickup and transfer process could be the most important part of your cruise. It can set the tone for the whole vacation, so Carnival Adventures’ transfer specialists work hard to make sure it starts right. The experience begins with a friendly greeter to direct arriving guests to their comfortable motor coach. The welcoming treatment continues right up to your arrival in port, as you embark the ship. “We’re always looking for ways to enhance the experience,” says Alberto Chocron, director of commercial strategy and business for Carnival Adventures. “We put the fun in Carnival Adventures from the beginning — from the moment you get to the airport to the moment of your return.” Excursions that Excel If you didn’t sign up for shore excursions when you booked your cruise, there’s still time — and it’s easier than ever. You can visit the onboard excursion desk or simply book through the Carnival HUB app, which is

ABOVE: The private beach house of La Casa en La Playa, a special excursion in Cozumel. OPPOSITE: Crossing Mendenhall Glacier.

free to download to your smartphone and free to use through the ship’s complimentary WiFi. See the ports section of this book for the top shore excursions in Juneau, Ketchikan, Skagway and other ports. You’ll find an ever-changing selection of tours, which are regularly tweaked and upgraded to be more in line with your interests. “There’s always something new. We’re always refreshing things,” says Erika Tache, Carnival’s director of product development, tour operations. She leads Team Orange, the onboard excursions staff. They’re easy to spot: Just look for the bright orange polo shirts and the big, friendly smiles. Team Orange is something like a concierge service for shore excursions, helping both individual and group cruisers get the most out of their visits. “They’re the first ones on the ship before the cruise starts and the last to come back from a tour,” says Tache. They’re dedicated to personal service on and off the ship. Carnival doesn’t make its groups wait for their tour guides on the pier. “We meet guests in a lounge on the ship and lead them directly to their tour bus or car,” she says. “On family tours we give assistance to families, like carrying their strollers for them.” Tache and her team are continually developing tours tailored for today’s traveler, offering experiences that are more authentic, more relevant, less “been there done that.” Guests can visit local communities to get a truer sense of the people and their culture. There’s also a growing list of exclusive tours for guests who prefer to be in smaller groups where they can enjoy personalized experiences. In Freepor t, the Bahamas, for instance, guests can try My Bahamian House, a delightful day on a private beach with a personal chef, an in-house bartender and recreation such as kayaking and snorkeling. Want to reserve a different private beach or arrange a special tour themed just for your group? How about a supervised outing just for the kids, with a seat where you can relax and watch the fun in true comfort? See Team Orange. Carnival Adventures also has a generous assortment of tours offering unique and even profound experiences. Social impact tours enable guests to give back to the communities that offer such unforgettable vacation memories to visitors from around the world. Tache is proud of the tours that work with an orphanage in Cozumel and a school in Montego Bay, among other projects. Not only do these projects help the communities, but they also offer a glimpse at the islands’ everyday reality. “People go to the ports for many reasons,” says Tache, “but they never really see the place. Now you do have the opportunity to do it all.” Guests on select Caribbean sailings can choose Cozumel Plus tours that offer extended stays in the Mexican port. With more time in port, you can explore and enjoy so much more: Get a closer look at the famed archaeological site Chichén Itzá or try the thrills of swimming with whale sharks.

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Fun Ashore | Carnival Adventures

All tours are offered only after thorough research, to keep the long-standing promise of offering the best tours at the best price and with absolute peace of mind (your ship will never leave without you if your tour is delayed returning to port). “We always research the tours a lot,” Tache says. Five researchers are assigned to the ports to make sure Carnival’s high standards are upheld and look for details to recommend the best tours. They know the can’t-miss experiences each port is known for, so you’re always on the right tour in the right port at the right time. To encourage quality, Carnival recognizes its top tour operators with awards based on guest feedback. The first top award, 2016 Tour Operator of the Year, went to Experiencias Xcaret (Naturama Tours & Adventures), whose tours include the adventure parks Xenses, Xcaret, Xel-Ha and Xplor in Playa del Carmen near Cozumel. Carnival also is proud of the guest feedback it receives about staff. “It’s amazing the number of comments that have the name

Need to Know More? Shore Excursions: Carnival.com/shore-excursions Airport Transfers: Carnival.com/cruise-transfers Carnival MasterCard: Visit Carnival.com and click the Carnival MasterCard link.

El Castillo, the famed pyramid at Chichén Itzá. The ancient Mayan site is part of the Cozumel Plus program, in which guests can spend more time exploring destinations.

of a Carnival Adventures team member,” says Renata Ribeiro, Carnival’s senior vice president, guest commerce. The Rewards of Cruising With so much expert knowledge of local ports, the Carnival Adventures staff is the perfect choice to manage the Future Cruise and FunPoints loyalty programs. They do so much more than take your cruise reservation. “They’ll book your whole cruise,” Ribeiro says. “They’ll help you plan your whole vacation.” Planning to visit the Caribbean? Carnival Adventures will tell you the best times to go and help you choose the perfect shore excursions to get in everything you want to see and do. They can also help you get the most of your membership in FunPoints, the loyalty program offered in partnership with MasterCard. The program gives you reward points whenever you use the Carnival MasterCard for purchases from Carnival or anywhere else that accepts MasterCard. Points are generous: 20,000 just for joining, and twice the points for anything you purchase within Carnival. Then use your FunPoints toward the purchase of future cruises or onboard products and services.

Use the Carnival MasterCard and earn reward points faster than ever.

All About the Guest It’s all about creating the best possible experience for the guest. From the moment you decide to book a cruise to the moment you realize you’re having so much fun you have to do it again, Carnival Adventures takes care of the details so you can focus on the fun. “We always try to put ourselves in the mind of the guests,” Ribeiro says. “They’re on vacation — they shouldn’t have to think too much.” Team Orange is always ready with information, service and smiles.

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If it can survive being ejected from a plane, it can survive near enough anything. Should you treat your Bremont MB watch with respect? Not really. We don’t. We freeze it, we bake it, and we shake it. For hours on end. Then we shoot it out of a plane. Just to make sure it’s as tough as we claim it is. What’s more, it has been assembled and tested at our headquarters in Henley-on-Thames. So don’t worry about looking after a Bremont MB. It can look after itself.

MBII

British Engineering. Tested Beyond Endurance. DIAMONDS INTERNATIONAL JUNEAU | KETCHIKAN | SKAGWAY

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The Crown Regal Collection

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That’s Beautiful

Exclusively at

Alaska • Car ibbean • Mexico

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Carnival Studios | Behind the Curtain

BEHIND CURTAIN THE

With a state-of-the-art rehearsal studio and some of the world’s most talented casts and crews, showtime at sea is more exciting than ever. By Sharon Geltner

Scene from Flick, a Carnival show from Playlist Productions.

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America Rocks, from Playlist Productions.

Outside a rehearsal room at Carnival Studios, the sign reads, “Studio 2.” But it sounds more like Studio 54, with the cast belting out Chic’s 1978 disco hit “Le Freak” (“Ah, freak out!”). Down the hall, in a larger studio, two dozen dancers get a signal from their choreographer and suddenly spring into the air like wild animals. Around the corner, in a band room, musicians are working on a jazz tune. All the action takes place at Carnival Cruise Line’s high-tech rehearsal space, a $5 million complex that holds six large performance studios and eight band rehearsal rooms and offers state-of-the-art audio, Bluetooth and LED equipment. The giant entertainment space covers 44,500 square feet under 35-foot ceilings, with empty space reserved to develop future productions for mega-class ships. It opened in May 2017, west of Fort Lauderdale, Florida. This means Carnival guests get to enjoy the gold standard of onboard entertainment, with an even larger selection of entertainment on board, says Chris Nelson, Carnival’s senior director of entertainment. “We’ve raised the bar high,” he says. “Cruise ship entertainment has evolved and this is a new ilk of performances. The choreography is very technical and the vocals are complex. We have partnered with Broadway, Las Vegas and London’s West End designers and choreographers. Our music program has expanded and engages the emotional center of our guests.” The Best for the Best To bring the shows to life, Carnival hires the top talent from 20 cities around the world. More than 3,000 people audition each year; an additional 2,400 apply online. The cruise line hires just 10 percent of the applicants, the high-quality “triple threats” who can sing, dance and act.

Technicians come from all over the world, and Carnival’s versatile musicians often play in several different styles, from jazz to country. “We don’t just hire a band,” Nelson says. “We hire each musician, teach them material and form a band. This creates cohesion and bonding. Our unique approach is a game changer for our guests.” Perhaps they’re lured by the quality of the equipment they get to work with. “Carnival is the only cruise line to equip every studio with a complete sound system that mirrors the ship and technical operator for rehearsals,” Nelson says. The land-based Carnival Studios has also freed up space on the ships that once had to be used for rehearsals. That has reduced congestion on board and creates more room for programming and guest staterooms. There are 20 to 120 performers and entertainment technicians in Carnival Studios at one time. More than 1,000 performers and technicians come through annually. They rehearse four to six weeks, twice a year. Rehearse, Rehearse, Rehearse Some More Carnival has prioritized treating its casts well, fostering a happy, energetic vibe that is reflected on stage. The cruise line houses the cast and musicians across the street from the studios, not only for convenience and comfort but also to help build camaraderie. Even local performers move into the apartments, in the name of teamwork, cooperation, collaboration and friendship. There is a Carnival staffer on site full time, to introduce new performers and help them learn their way around. “We have supervised, safe, clean living conditions for the performers. All of this contributes to the environment,” Nelson says. Fun Ashore Carnival Cruise Line

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Carnival Studios | Behind the Curtain

Scene from Amor Cubano, Playlist Productions.

The methods to encourage friendship and bonding are certainly working. The cast was delighted during one rehearsal when an actor got down on one knee and proposed to his shocked and thrilled cast mate. Another couple, a dancer and a music supervisor, are getting married. Earlier, a baby girl was born to a couple who met on board. “We also throw team holiday parties,” Nelson says. The cast celebrates in its own sunny and spacious “green room.” Part of the fun is rehearsing in the high-tech surroundings. The floors are made of a sprung wood, which has “give” and is topped with springy rubber. These materials absorb shock and protect the dancers’ shins and feet as they practice eight to 10 hours a day. The cast is increasingly incorporating video with the music, so a performer can dance with her own shadow or in front of scenery which matches her lyrics. She can wave her hand to the right, and words and other graphics instantly appear on the right side of the screen. Each studio meticulously duplicates the same size and shape stage on board, so the cast will be familiar with the dimensions when performing at sea. Numbers and guidelines are painted on the floor so the cast always hit their marks. Once they move on board the ship, the performers get their sea legs in about a week. The Chic rehearsal in Studio 2 is for Studio VIP, one of Carnival’s shows in Playlist Productions. Playlist is a series of 14 shows, each representing a different musical era, presented to be as fun and personalized as the playlists on guests’ smartphones. Studio VIP combines the funky flair and fashion of Soul Train with New York City nightlife in the 1970s. Studio 3 is the biggest studio of all, where all five types of Carnival stages fit in one gargantuan cavern, nicknamed the Development Studio.

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This is where the cast experiments with new concepts for shipboard shows, such as Lip Sync Battle Carnival and the children’s puppet show Towel Animal Theater. Studio 3 is also where plans were hatched for entertainment on Carnival Horizon, the second of the Vista Class ships. Curtain Up

Lip Sync Battle Carnival is a live version of the hit TV show hosted and produced by rapper LL Cool J. In the onboard show, Carnival guests compete for the most impressive lip-sync performance, with back-up from the professional cast and voting by fellow guests. (For more on the show, see our profile of LL Cool J in this issue.) Towel Animal Theater was inspired by the clever towel animals you find on your stateroom bed each evening. It was scripted by none other than the writers of the Tony Award-winning Broadway hit, Avenue Q — which could explain why audiences include many adults along with the kids. Seuss at Sea is also very popular with younger guests, who get to eat green eggs and ham for breakfast on plates decorated with Seuss characters and served by waiters dressed as the Cat in the Hat, Horton, the Lorax and other beloved Seuss characters. It’s an exciting place for a performer to be, and there’s no shortage of talented people who want to experience it. “Many aspiring performers audition five to six times before they make it aboard Carnival,” Nelson says. “They keep coming back and when they make it, they realize all those auditions were a big part of their professional development and growth. It means a lot to them that they are talented enough to perform on board.” He smiles. “We are confident that we hire the best people out there.”

Fun Ashore Carnival Cruise Line

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H E A R T S O N F I R E S T O R E S , A U T H O R I Z E D R E TA I L E R S , H E A R T S O N F I R E . C O M

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THE FUN SHOPS: MORE FUN THAN EVER Fun Ashore | The Fun Shops

What’s new at The Fun Shops? Plenty! Already as much fun as the rest of the cruise, the onboard shopping destination offers enhanced spaces and a bigger selection of top brands throughout the fleet, on established ships and the newest to sail. The shipboard retail experience has also been enhanced with fun activities, special promotions and giveaways, in-store parties and more. “Carnival is committed to enhancing every aspect of our operations,” says William Butler, vice president of retail services. “That includes onboard shopping, of course. Our expanded and enhanced retail offerings provide guests with an opportunity to enjoy some ‘retail therapy’ and take home a unique and memorable keepsake from their Carnival vacation.”

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Effy Fine Jewelry’s updated boutique is one of many enhancements to The Fun Shops on several ships in the Carnival fleet.

Retail Rejuvenation The shopping makeovers are one facet of an overall enhancement across much of the fleet, which have added thrilling new entertainment and recreation features. Carnival Elation, for instance, returned to sea in October 2017 with popular venues such as Guy’s Burger Joint, RedFrog Rum Bar, BlueIguana Cantina and BlueIguana Tequila Bar, as well as an all-new décor in its shops: enticing new colors, flooring and product displays. Carnival Conquest underwent similar upgrades. The shops on Carnival Sensation a nd Carnival Valor have been completely overhauled, including fully branded spaces for fine watches and improvements in the shops’ design and layout.

All About Those Brands The most exciting news may be the shops’ brand assortment. The Fun Shops offer in-demand labels to please the most trend-conscious shoppers — those you’ve dreamed of possessing and new ones to discover. Whether you’re looking for something cute and chic or elegantly au courant, the brands on board are sure to satisfy. Pandora has brought its customizable jewelry to Carnival Elation, Carnival Breeze and Carnival Glory, where you’ll also find the alluring scents of Victoria’s Secret and a stunning new façade for the Effy Fine Jewelry boutique. The brilliant designs of Swarovski are on board select ships, along with style stars like Alex and Ani, Lovita and Salt Life.

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Fun Ashore | The Fun Shops

Anne Klein and TAG Heuer are among the popular watch brands available in The Fun Shops.

Some of the most desirable timepieces are offered at The Fun Shops

Shop Talk Here are some of the new offerings at The Fun Shops, on select ships across the fleet: Effy Fine Jewelry: Known for unique design and meticulous craftsmanship, with tax and duty free savings and a lifetime guarantee. Invicta: High-end retailer offers a full line of fashion watches, with hundreds of different styles to choose from. Los Cinco Soles: Mexican-themed retailer offers sterling silver jewelry, souvenirs, T-shirts and authentic arts and crafts created by local artisans. Pandora: Top fashion jeweler presents a selection of custom bracelets, rings, necklaces and charms. Swarovski: One of the world’s leading retailers of fashion jewelry; renowned for stunning designs using hand-cut crystals. TAG Heuer: A leading manufacturer of high-end luxury timepieces worn by celebrities and sports stars the world over. Victoria’s Secret: Purveyor of top beauty products, including mists, lotions and perfumes.

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Watches have always been one of Carnival’s most popular gift selections, and there are more choices than ever in the expanded and enhanced timepieces boutique. Lending dazzle to the displays are the latest, greatest and sexiest new designs by longtime favorite brands including Citizen, Fossil, Invicta, Movado and TAG Heuer, plus exciting innovators like Daniel Wellington, Nixon and TechnoMarine. Select ships also feature stand-alone kiosks with “wearable tech” accessories that include the latest fitness trackers, pedometers and heart rate monitors by Fossil and other brands. New Ship, New Shops Carnival Horizon is making some of the biggest news. The ship launched in spring 2018 with a number of firsts for Carnival: the cruise line’s first stand-alone Victoria’s Secret shop; the first leather goods on board from Kate Spade, Michael Kors and Rebecca Minkoff; the first watches from premier timepiece brands Breitling and Hublot. Also sailing are the on-trend jewelry designs of Alex and Ani, BB Becker, Lulu DK and other top names. An Eventful Shopping Experience What truly sets The Fun Shops apart are interactive events that take shopping beyond mere transactions. Guests don’t just shop for handcrafted jewelry from Los Cinco Soles, for instance — they’re transported to the Mexican Fiesta marketplace. Personal beauty consultations, exclusive previews of new jewelry collections, interactive watch seminars and other experiences turn shopping into an event. “Retail on cruise ships is meant to be fun and engaging,” Butler says. “We do everything possible to present a positive experience for the guest. We create a whole variety of events so guests have a reason to come back each and every day.” It’s what The Fun Shops are all about: an engaging, entertaining experience to help you relive your cruise again and again.

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VIVIDLY BRILLIANT Blue Sapphire, Fancy Yellow & Colourless Diamonds

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RARE/re r/: Adjective: not common, very unusual; Marked by unusual quality, merit or appeal.

Take a look at the brightest blue glaciers and you will begin to know the color of Paraiba Tourmaline, except Paraiba is this color made doubly intense. Described by experts as “neon” or “electric”, the blue of Paraiba Tourmaline is unlike anything you’ve probably seen before. Is there any point in trying to show a gemstone so unbelievably blue that a camera can’t capture its intensity and a printing press can’t recreate its depth? A stone so remarkably blue that it can’t be shown on paper? Well then, it looks like you’ll have to come and see these amazing gemstones in person.

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Style For All

FASHIONABLY

CONSCIOUS Jewelry brands that make sustainable luxury a lasting trend. By Iliana Soto

ALEX AND ANI Between countless hours in the office, keeping up with ever-changing trends and all the unexpected happenings that we call life, finding a way to support your values and stand up for the causes that truly matter hasn’t always been an obtainable endeavor. Luckily, with the rising tide of progressive businesses and organizations, it’s easier than ever to back up the causes that truly matter to you. And with brands like these creating high-quality, stylish and guilt-free goods, you’ll find that your accessories now speak to more than just your phenomenal fashion sense.

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Unabashedly You

A great accessory seamlessly completes your look, adding flair and personalization in just the right quantity. An even greater accessory does so while giving back to the causes that you feel passionate about. Enter Alex and Ani. Their signature Expandable Wire Charm Bangles expand to fit virtually any wrist size and any cause, incorporating powerful symbolism and personal meaning, which allows you to represent the details that are uniquely and authentically you while supporting a humanitarian company that is passionate about the well-being of our planet, our communities and our individual paths. So whether you simply want to support a fantastic fashion sense, eco-consciousness, humanitarianism or self-empowerment, you’ll find the perfect piece that speaks to you.

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KORITE

Positively Lovely

Korite ammolite is revered by feng shui masters as the most influential stone of the millennium, with many believing the stone absorbs positive cosmic energy from the earth and universe. Thanks to Korite’s award-winning reclamation efforts, there’s even more goodness for this ethically-mined stone to absorb. The company’s dedication to preserving the landscape and restoring the excavation area to its natural state has set new environmental standards in the ammolite mining and reclamation process. Korite works closely with environmental officials to ensure that the land is not just restored to its natural state, but also improved, carefully layering the soil and native grasses in the order in which they were removed. Whether it’s the universe’s cosmic energy or Korite’s environmental efforts, this is one stone that’s full of positive vibes.

JOHN HARDY

Across the Board

When it comes to ethical and responsible practices, John Hardy takes on a multifaceted approach. As part of their commitment to sustainability, John Hardy uses 100 percent reclaimed gold, silver and ethically sourced gemstones in their Bali-inspired designs. Additionally, for each purchase from their Bamboo Collection, a select number of bamboo seedlings are planted, resulting in over one million planted seedlings to date. Supporting the local community and artisans is another cause that’s near and dear to John Hardy, this is evident through their “Jobs for Life” program, which ensures the unique jewelry-making tradition is passed on through the generations, while staying true to the authentic techniques of the Balinese royal courts. But John Hardy doesn’t just hold themselves up to these high standards, they also require that all their business partners follow suit.

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Style For All

Tanzanite earrings.

All featured pieces by Safi Kilima Tanzanite. Large pear-shaped tanzanite and diamond pendant.

Oval Infinity tanzanite bolo bracelet.

THE YEAR OF

TANZANITE A Coveted Gem Comes Into Its Own. By Julie Ceritelli

Look through the latest fashion magazines and you will find that tanzanite’s rich blue hues are making quite a statement on the fashion runways and the red carpet. First discovered in 1967, tanzanite is said to be rarer than diamonds because it is mined in only one place on earth: beneath the foothills of Mt. Kilimanjaro in East Africa. So, that is exactly where Diamonds International went to source these rare gems for its exclusive Safi Kilima Tanzanite collections.

Marquis-shaped tanzanite and diamond ring.

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In the 50 years since then, designers at Safi Kilima Tanzanite have created innovative pieces that continue to set the standard in the jewelry industry. Safi Kilima Tanzanite declared 2017 #TheYearofSafi in honor of the 50th anniversary of the gemstone tanzanite and introduced several new pieces to help commemorate the occasion. They include the “Forget Me Not” collection featuring Alaska’s official state flower,a unique memento of a visit to the 49th state. Morris Gad, CEO of Diamonds International, will be featured in an upcoming episode of Modern Living with Kathy Ireland®. The Safi Kilima Tanzanite collection was the focus of conversation whereby Gad, world-renowned business mogul, and Ireland, model of a superbrand, enthusiastically expressed how captivating these rare stones are. “The color is stunning, it’s so rich,” said Ireland. To make these rare gems more accessible, Diamonds International has expanded the Safi Kilima Tanzanite collection to include an assortment of budget-friendly designs. The Safi Kilima Tanzanite bolo bracelet — with its easy to use adjustable closure — has quickly found a following and become a best seller. Stay on top of the trend by including magnificent tanzanite jewelry that will add a pop of color and a subtle elegance to your overall look. All you need is a bit of tanzanite to be fashion-runway ready, no matter where you’re going.

Fun Ashore Carnival Cruise Line

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The Crown Unity ® Collection Together, Forever.

That’s Beautiful

Exclusively at

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Style For All

Danyal Paraiba Paraiba tourmaline and diamond ring in 18-karat white gold.

Gone are the days when the traditional ring finger was the only place you’d find a lone sparkler. Nowadays it’s the more, the merrier. Hands complete with stacked midi rings, cuffs and chains are all the rage — and all fingers are fair game! Just check out your favorite fashion magazine and celebrity pics and you’ll find that everyone is enjoying this fun and stylish trend that combines two or more rings together on a single finger and on multiple fingers.

Hearts on Fire Bezel regal triple ring.

Messika Glam’Azone chain-linked diamond ring in 1 8-karat white gold.

Lulu Frost CODE number rings in 14-karat gold.

hand CANDY One ring to rule them all? Nope. The more, the merrier. By Julie Ceritelli

UNOde50 Anubis ring.

PHOTOS COURTESY OF BRANDS.

Swarovski Hilly rings.

By combining pieces in various ways, you can play up your mood or perfectly finish off an ensemble. Try mixing it up with colors and textures. Think thin bands in multiple finishes for a subtle but impactful stacked piece. Monica Vinader Signature wide ring.

UNOde50 Swagy ring.

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Consider mixing a thicker cuff ring with smaller bands to bring new dimension to your style. Sprinkle in a few diamonds and gemstones to accentuate the personality of each combination. But use all your fingers to pull off the look. Pinkies, pointers and thumbs are all prime placements — even midi rings that sit above the lower knuckle. It’s a whole new game for hand candy; time to dig in and enjoy!

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That’s Beautiful

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Hearts On Fire Optima Station Necklace Understated while still eye-catching with subtle diamonds spaced throughout the chain, this necklace can be worn alone or layered with other styles. A true classic.

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BREMONT Women’s SOLO Watch in Red Inspired by the classic pilot watches from the 1940s, the Solo collection was designed for beauty and legibility. It’s an obvious choice for anyone interested in the allure of mechanical watches.

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WOLF Watch Winders Choose a luxury watch winder that complements your style as it preserves your timepiece. These handmade winders work with all automatic watches, vintage or new, with patented technology for the perfect wind. 70

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HUBLOT One Click Italia Independent Sparkling diamonds accentuate a luxe velvet face and matching wristband for a purely indulgent look, available in deep blue, blue and purple. 72

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FUN DAY IN PORT

Bring your Fun Finds Map into port. Tuck it into your purse or pocket and put the port at your fingertips.

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LOCAL SPOTLIGHT

Symbols of Alaska to take home and treasure.

Gold jewelry.

Claim your own piece of Alaska with a souvenir version of the state’s emblems. Look for a list of local retailers in the Juneau, Ketchikan and Skagway port of call sections.

Gold The buzz started sometime after the U.S. purchase of Alaska in 1867. All-out gold fever finally struck in the 1880s. The precious metal was found in Juneau, on the Klondike River and on the beaches of Nome. Prospectors rushed to Alaska to find their own fortunes. Knives Hunters and other outdoor ent hu sia s t s r ely on t hei r k n ives ’ sharpness, but beauty also counts for at least one: the ulu (OO-loo) knife. It has been used for thousands of years, serving as a multipurpose blade used for everything from skinning animals to trimming blocks of ice to build igloos. The original ulu had a bone, ivory or wood handle, often embellished with distinctive marks carved by the knife’s creator. Masks Inuit masks are ranked among the finest tribal art in the world, traditionally worn by dancers in religious ceremonies

honoring the spirits of birds or animals that are hunted or need to be appeased. The Tlingit and other coastal tribes produce transformation masks with several faces concealed within a single face, while the Aleuts create bone masks worn at burials that are broken and thrown away after completion of the funeral rites.

Ulu knives.

Sa lmon Ma ny of A la sk a’s Nat ive communities rely on salmon as a food and an economic source, and the rest of the world has caught up to them. Salmon is an excellent source of omega-3 oils, the “good” fats. Alaska salmon is sold fresh as whole fish, steaks and fillets, as well as preserved in cans.

Reindeer fur.

Totem Poles A traditional art form among Natives of Southeast Alaska, totem poles reflect ancestral pride by depicting the lives and history of the people who create them. They are carved out of huge cedar trees and often display carvings of animals found in the region, such as eagles, ravens, frogs, bears, wolves and whales. After they are erected, totem poles stand as long as nature permits, typically 50 or 60 years. When the pole eventually falls to the ground, it is left to decay or is used for firewood.

PHOTOS BY: ONSUDA/SHUTTERSTOCK.COM; BMJ/SHUTTERSTOCK.COM; SETHISLAV/SHUTTERSTOCK.COM; GEORGE BURBA/SHUTTERSTOCK.COM; ANDREA IZZOTTI/SHUTTERSTOCK.COM; JOSHUA RESNICK/SHUTTERSTOCK.COM

Fur Most people think of the Gold Rush when they think of Alaska, but the region’s first hot commodity was fur. Russian traders and Native hunters had their most profitable relationship in the early to mid-1800s.

Mouthwatering salmon.

See our guide to the distinctive creations that make Alaska so exceptional. Detail of a totem pole.

Inuit mask. Fun Ashore Carnival Cruise Line

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WHERE THE WILD THINGS

RIGHT: A grizzly bear in a snowy meadow. OPPOSITE, FROM TOP: A bald eagle catching a fish; a young moose grazing on grass.

Roam By Lauramay LaChance

Soaring Through the Sky Bald eagles, the national bird of the United States, are far more abundant in Alaska than anywhere else in the country. It’s nearly impossible to cruise to Alaska and not see one of these fierce birds of prey, with its distinctive white head and gigantic wingspan of up to 7 feet. Watch for the white “snowball” of the eagle’s head in the tops of the trees. Once you learn to spot them, you tend to recognize them everywhere. “During the peak of salmon spawning season, bald eagles feed in droves of sometimes 50 or more out over the inlets,” says Michele Morris, an onboard naturalist. Bear Spotting Bears, both brown and black, are typically solitary animals. Grizzly bears, the mainland subspecies of brown bears, are much larger than their black bear cousins, weighing between 500 and 900 pounds and having a more prominent hump on their shoulders. Black bears, despite their name, can range in color from a sandy blond to an almost bluish shade of gray and weigh between 200 – 500 pounds. Black bears tend to live in dense forests, and there are about 100,000 black bears throughout the state. Grizzly bears typically live along Alaska’s southern coast, where they primarily feed on salmon. According to the Alaska Department of Fish and Game, there can be one grizzly bear per square mile in portions of southern Alaska, especially in areas with plentiful food sources. Spotting bears is easier than you think. When you’re out on the ocean, look along the shoreline for shiny black rocks that stand out against the typical dull black rocks. Once you spot one, watch for any signs of movement. Typical boulders will appear dull, but a bear’s fur looks particularly oily, and that distinct sheen will stand out against the landscape. Once the salmon begin to swarm the rivers in late July through early September, many bears will move to the streams to feed. Just keep in mind that bears are best when seen from a distance. If you are hiking in bear territory, especially along a river teeming with salmon, make your presence known. “If you do come across a bear, stand your ground, wave your arms in the air 78

DID YOU KNOW?

Grizzly bears have a better sense of smell than hound dogs and can detect food from miles away.

PHOTOS BY: (BEAR) DAWN WILSON PHOTO/SHUTTERSTOCK.COM; (EAGLE) FLORIDASTOCK/SHUTTERSTOCK.COM; (MOOSE) KRZYSZTOF WIKTOR/SHUTTERSTOCK.COM

Alaska’s wildlife is unpredictable, captivating and raw, encompassing hundreds of species, ranging from determined salmon swimming up the rivers to spawn to the magnificent grizzlies roaming the untamed terrain in search of their next meal. The dream of observing wildlife in its natural habitat is what lures many visitors to Alaska, a state bigger than Texas, California and Montana combined. Every moment is an opportunity to see rare animals in their natural environment. Training your eyes to properly spot wildlife means knowing not just where to look, but how to tell the difference between the wild landscape and the wild animals.

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DID YOU KNOW?

PHOTOS BY: (BEAR) DAWN WILSON PHOTO/SHUTTERSTOCK.COM; (EAGLE) FLORIDASTOCK/SHUTTERSTOCK.COM; (MOOSE) KRZYSZTOF WIKTOR/SHUTTERSTOCK.COM

Bald eagles in Alaska have been documented living as long as 32 years.

and speak loudly,” says Dan Irelan, a park ranger for Denali National Park & Preserve. “I had a bear approach me as I was walking along a river. I stood my ground and eventually the big momma bear and her curious cubs turned around, leaving me with a racing heart and a good story to tell.” Moose It’s a deer. It’s a horse. No, it’s a giant moose! Unlike many of Alaska’s wildlife, these iconic creatures don’t stick to the wilderness. Moose seem to appear when you least expect them, whether prancing through the parking lot as you’re hopping on a tour bus or simply standing in a small pond by the side of the road, sipping the cool water as cars pass by. Alaska has anywhere from 175,000 to 200,000 of these long-legged mammals. They’re frequently seen in areas that have been recently affected by forest fires and along the major rivers of Southcentral and Interior Alaska. Their sheer size is hard to appreciate from a distance. A bull (male) moose stands 7 feet tall at the shoulder and can weigh up to 1,600 pounds. If that’s not massive enough, the bulls can also grow an 80-pound antler rack in a single summer. That’s about 1 pound of bone growth a day. It’s quite impressive to see how gracefully they move throughout the forest, despite all that additional weight.

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Mountain Goats and Dall Sheep Agility and strength are a necessity for these all-white mountaineering ungulates (hooved animals) as they spend most of their time clambering through steep and rocky terrains. Dall sheep and mountain goats look similar, but one look at their horns and you’ll know which is which: Dall sheep have ram-shaped horns that curve on the side of their head, while mountain goats flaunt pointed horns. Though they have comparable body shapes, Dall sheep can weigh up to 300 pounds. Mountain goats weigh up to 380 pounds and often seem much bigger due to their long fur and fluffy beards.

Dall sheep climbing high in Denali National Park.

DID YOU KNOW?

Caribou and reindeer are the same species, but reindeer are usually privately owned and have some genetic differences.

PHOTOS BY: (SHEEP) CHRISTOPHER BOSWELL/SHUTTERSTOCK.COM; (CARIBOU) NANCYS/SHUTTERSTOCK.COM

A caribou bull in Denali National Park; in the background is Denali, the high mountain.

Caribou Caribou are one of the most recognized symbols of the great wild north. Much smaller than moose, caribou weigh between 175 and 400 pounds. They have the distinction of being the only member of the deer family whose males and females both grow antlers. They spend most of their time in the open country and have adapted to the cold, wind and snow of even the harshest Alaskan winters. Caribou are difficult to spot even for wildlife peeping pros, but it’s possible with a keen eye and a little patience. In the summer, caribou spend most of their time in the remaining snow patches high on the mountains. Keep your binoculars handy while scanning the spines of the mountains. Allow your eyes to adjust and look for out-of-place silhouettes. You just might get a peek of the elusive caribou.

Peeping either of these two bovids will require a lot of neck bending, because these rugged climbers are high country dwellers. Dall sheep roam throughout every mountain range in Alaska. They tend to huddle in dry habitats in open alpine ridges, meadows and steep slopes. Mountain goats, on the other hand, are most frequently found in the southeast, where they feed low in the early summer and move higher as the snow melts. If Juneau is one of your ports of call, you’re in luck. Mountain goats were actually reintroduced to Mount Juneau in 1989 and have become a common sight since the early 2000s. From afar, both mountain goats and Dall sheep look like small mounds of snow on the mountain, and you can easily miss them with the naked eye. Use binoculars to scan the cliffs, and you’ll realize that, yes, that mound of snow is in fact three Dall sheep resting, or a scruffy mountain goat browsing for food. If they seem to be moving swiftly up the mountain, pay careful attention as it might mean one of their predators, such as a wolf or coyote, is nearby. Like No Place Else The rugged wilderness may seem daunting, but the creatures that have adapted to thrive under its extreme conditions are one of the many reasons Alaska has enthralled visitors for generations. As longtime ranger Irelan puts it, “The amazing and unusual aspects of the far north — the midnight sun, vast spaces and incredible mountain surroundings, winters of darkness and solitude, northern lights — each continue to inspire me. Even the feel of the forest and the air itself is almost indescribable.”

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PHOTOS BY: RUTH PETERKIN/SHUTTERSTOCK.COM

JUNEAU

A whale breaches the ocean’s surface off Juneau.

Besides being the state capital, Juneau is also the cultural and outdoor adventure hub of Alaska’s panhandle — the wild and watery stretch of islands, glaciers and rainforests along the southeast coast. Accessible only by sea or air (there are no roads to the mainland), the city is set along the beautiful Gastineau Channel at the foot of the towering Boundary Range mountains, their peaks protruding above massive ice fields. The breathtaking scenery includes plenty of wildlife. Breaching humpback whales that feast on herring and

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krill can be seen in Juneau’s bays. Bald eagles, great blue herons and ravens soar through the skies. And trails that fan out from the Mendenhall Glacier visitor center offer glimpses of black bear, beavers and mountain goats. The city itself beckons visitors to stroll its compact downtown, with shops and attractions that offer insights into Juneau’s unique history and culture that date back to the rugged gold mining era of the late 1800s. — John Anderson

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FUNTREKS

TOP SHORE EXCURSIONS Choose your adventure in Juneau! Here are the top tours of the many you can experience with Carnival Adventures, all led by local providers who’ve been hand-selected to give you an unmatched experience. Book through your onboard shore-excursion specialist or on the Carnival HUB app, available for free download to your smartphone. Please ask about age requirements, physical considerations, proper dress and other details.

Mendenhall Glacier & Wildlife Quest

Experience Alaska’s Mendenhall Glacier and its abundant wildlife in this exhilarating tour. Begin with a stroll on a glacier-view path, followed by a scenic drive through Mendenhall Glacier. Then, board a jet-powered catamaran for a ride through Stephens Passage, where you can spot humpback whales, porpoises, bald eagles and more.

Taku Lodge Feast & 5-Glacier Seaplane Discovery

Get a breathtaking view of 5 of Juneau Icefield’s glaciers aboard a classic De Havilland seaplane before landing at the historic Taku Lodge, located across from Juneau’s largest glacier, the 5-mile-wide Taku Glacier. Then, enjoy a feast with fresh wild Alaska king salmon.

Dog Sledding on Mendenhall Glacier via Helicopter

Combine the exhilaration of a glacier helicopter flight with the thrill of dog sledding for the true Alaskan adventure. Experience a spectacular flightseeing tour over the lush Alaskan rainforest and glacier-carved peaks en route to the dog sled camp on the Mendenhall Glacier.

Best of Juneau

QuickGuide Famed for: Whale-watching excursions into Stephens Passage and Lynn Canal, where humpbacks feed throughout the summer. It’s a Fact: At 2,701 square miles, Juneau is the second-largest city by area in the U.S.; it’s larger than Delaware and Rhode Island. Signature Souvenirs: Native ulu knife; glacier silt soap; walrus and mammoth ivory jewelry.

Experience three of Alaska’s top attractions: First, embark on a wildlife cruise aboard a deluxe catamaran to explore Stephens Passage, where whales are often so close you can hear them breathe! Then, enjoy a feast at the exclusive Orca Point Lodge on Colt Island. Finally, you’ll return to Auke Bay and take a scenic bus ride to the mighty Mendenhall Glacier.

VIP Alaska’s Whales & Glacier Rainforest Trails

Journey on a personalized small-group tour to Tongass National Forest, where you’ll hike along a wooded path once covered by the massive Mendenhall Glacier as you track its recession over the past 100 years. Then, board a covered exploration vessel where you can spot humpback whales, orcas, sea lions and more.

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DARRYL BROOKS/SHUTTERSTOCK.COM

PORT VIEW

Juneau as seen from the Gastineau Channel.

No roads lead to Juneau. Since it’s surrounded by extremely rugged terrain, the only way to get to this gorgeous state capital is by air or sea. What’s so special about this remote urban center amid the wilderness? Plenty. Way before Europeans claimed the area for their own, indigenous tribes had been inhabiting the area for millennia, favoring its great fishing. Even today, the Tlingit people, descendants of the original tribes with a rich artistic heritage, hold celebrations during spawning season. Then came gold. Modern-day Juneau was founded in 1880, when prospectors Joe Juneau and Richard Harris found nuggets as large as “peas and beans.” Thus began a gold rush lasting decades.

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Beyond this precious metal, the city is the launching point to unsurpassed hiking along the Mendenhall Glacier, a staggering leftover of the last Ice Age. Head to the Visitor Center for fantastic views, or get a bird’s-eye look at the region on an exhilarating helicopter ride up to hike this massive hunk of ice. Or stay grounded at Glacier Gardens, a rainforest paradise showcasing the region’s amazing flora and fauna, including its famous flower towers and the occasional bald eagle. Crave some action? Try zip lining from treetop to treetop through the rainforest. Or head further out into the wilderness at Tongass National Forest to spot brown and black bears, humpback whales, more bald eagles, black-tailed deer and so much more. — Kelly Liszt

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400 Mission Street Ketchikan, AK, 99901 907.225.1880

495 South Franklin Street Juneau, AK, 99901 907.523.5683

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MENDENHALL

GLACIER

Breathtaking scenery and amazing wildlife activity make a visit to this vast ice field unforgettable. By Richard Carroll

An intrepid wind gusts across a timeless and icy landscape, releasing a flurry of intensely blue icebergs that carve off the facade of the mighty Mendenhall Glacier and splash into Mendenhall Lake, while misty veils of drifting clouds cast shadows across some of Alaska’s most captivating scenery. Tucked within the nearly 17-million-acre Tongass National Forest, the largest in the United States, the glacier stretches some 13 miles in length from the Juneau ice field. It offers visitors a surprising choice of activities and a photographic challenge to capture the surging power of the glacier as it erupts from the landscape with a brilliant gleam. The historic U.S. Forest Service Mendenhall Glacier Visitor Center was the first of its kind in the United States when it was built in 1962. Subsequent parks have emulated its architectural concept, floor-to-ceiling windows, expansive outdoor viewing areas and changing exhibits. It has outdoor viewing platforms overlooking Steep Creek and affording panoramic views of the glacier’s ever-changing 1.5-mile face. Here, one might see a meandering black bear below or a bald eagle drifting in the sky above. Interpretive programs and ranger talks, wide-ranging exhibits, an observatory with telescopes and a 15-minute film, Magnificent Mendenhall, offer an essential overview of the glacier, an awe-inspiring wonder of the natural world. The rangers explain that Mendenhall is one of 38 major glaciers that extend from the 1,500-square-mile Juneau icefield. The rapidly retreating glacier has uncovered vegetation thousands of years old, while the effects of the glacier’s movement can be seen in the radically changing landscape, which is remarkably similar to the deep U-shaped valleys of Yosemite and California’s towering Sierra Nevada mountains. Mendenhall was originally named Auk Glacier by naturalist John Muir. In 1891 it was renamed in honor of Thomas Corwin Mendenhall, a famed scientist, inventor, physicist and meterologist who led a survey that determined the border between Alaska and Canada. Steps from the Visitor Center there is easy access to a selection of six trails for up-close glacier experiences.

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RUTH PETERKIN/SHUTTERSTOCK.COM

CLOCKWISE FROM LEFT: A helicopter lands on mighty Mendenhall; a waterfall cascades through an ice cave inside the glacier; trekkers make their way across.

Exploring the Glacier The 1.5-mile Moraine Ecology Trail leads into a mossy forest where visitors have watched a frustrated bear trying to hook a spawning sockeye salmon from an icy stream. The popular three-mile-long Nugget Creek Trail wanders to a tumbling 377-foot waterfall past patches of wildflowers searching for a gleam of sun and a landscape that has been ice-free for only 50 years or less. For those in excellent shape with a strong sense of adventure, a trek on the glacier begins at the West Glacier Trailhead. Guests are outfitted with a backpack, glacier and rain gear, clampons, food and water and are led on a 2.75hour trek through a temperate rainforest and up a strenuous, unmaintained switchback trail to the ice, where the jagged mountain ridges appear close enough to touch. Retaining enough energy for the downward trek is essential, but there’s time to explore deep textured crevices, meltwater streams and possibly an ice cave. The fickle weather patterns add another dramatic dimension to a glacier trek. On a cloudcovered rainy day, the weather seems to close around the glacier in a timeless manifestation of frosty splendor. When time is of the essence, an alternative Mendenhall adventure begins with a 30-minute helicopter flight soaring to 7,000 feet before landing on the ice. Dress warmly and bring binoculars and camera, with a zoom lens if possible. The 5,815acre Mendenhall Recreation Area and the massive Tongass National Forest are arranged like a mammoth crossword puzzle, the glacier appearing like a large white blanket spread on the landscape to enhance the setting and set off the shimmering lake. Lake Mendenhall, created some 80 years ago when the glacier meltwater filled a severely eroded valley to over 200 feet deep, is ideal for family oriented river rafting tours. Guided trips take rafters over Class II and III whitewater rapids onto a lake sprinkled with icebergs and provide widely varying views of the glacier. As the rangers in the Visitor Center say, any view of the glacier creates a long-lasting memory. Although Mendenhall is positioned just 12 miles from Juneau, a city that is only accessible via boat or aircraft, a trip here feels like an exotic adventure to the far reaches of the American continent.

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DIGIDREAMGRAFIX/SHUTTERSTOCK.COM

Sawyer Glacier at Tracy Arm Fjord.

WHEN IT COMES TO GLACIERS, THERE’S EVEN MORE THAN MENDENHALL The Mendenhall may be the most famous, but it’s one of many major glaciers that flow from the Juneau ice field. Here are two others to put on your must-do list: Taku Glacier Non-Native settlers first called it Schultze (in 1883) and then Foster (in 1890), but it eventually reverted to the Tlingit word for “glacier”: taku. It’s the largest glacier in the Juneau ice field, a mighty marvel measuring 4,845 feet deep and 36 miles long; the Taku is believed to be the deepest and thickest alpine temperate glacier in the world. It’s also the only Juneau glacier to be advancing rather than losing mass and retreating. Carnival guests can visit Taku as part of a thrilling flightseeing tour and feast at ruistic Taku Lodge. Sawyer Glacier This is actually a set of twin glaciers, North Sawyer and South Sawyer, at the end of the deep, narrow waterway, Tracy Arm Fjord. Abundant wildlife can be seen here, from black and brown bears to deer, wolves and mountain goats. A deluxe catamaran takes Carnival guests on an awe-inspiring trip to the Sawyer glaciers, which rise an astounding 4,000 feet above sea level.

Carnival offers many opportunities to explore Alaska’s glaciers with expert local guides. See your onboard excursion desk, visit the Carnival HUB app or go online to carnival.com/shore-excursions.

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5 Fantastic facts about glaciers 1. Alaska is believed to have more than 100,000 glaciers. 2. Glaciers cover about 10 percent of Earth’s land mass, and store about 75 percent of the world’s freshwater. 3. Ice crystals from glaciers can grow to be as large as baseballs. 4. Alaska is home to the largest glacier in North America, the Bering Glacier. The largest in the world is the LambertFisher Glacier in Antarctica. 5. They can be found on every continent but Australia.

Fun Ashore Carnival Cruise Line

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369 S.FRANKLIN STREET, JUNEAU, AK 99801

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A floatplane is a must for glacier travel.

FEAST AND FLOATPLANE

For a fresh taste of Alaska, there’s only one way to go. By Ginger Dingus

Nothing says “Alaska” like freshly caught wild salmon. And one of the more intriguing places to sample the locally caught fish grilled on the outdoor barbeque is Taku Glacier Lodge. Hungry lodge visitors are in for another treat. Reaching this remote dining site involves an iconic Last Frontier must-do: riding in a floatplane over spectacular glaciers and snow-capped peaks. During cruise season, floatplanes depart daily (weather permitting) from downtown Juneau piers. Once your plane lifts off the waters of the Gastineau Channel, be sure to check out the view of your cruise ship docked below. Within minutes, you’re flying 1,000 to 2,000 feet above the massive Juneau Icefield, observing multiple glaciers, including Taku Glacier, the area’s largest at roughly 35 miles long. Floatplanes coast to a landing across from Taku Glacier, where you step into Taku Lodge, a log structure built as a fishing camp in 1923, to feast on a buffet of alderwoodgrilled salmon, baked beans, coleslaw, herb biscuits, ginger cookies and more. The drinks are chilled with glacier ice, but if you prefer a bit of heat, cozy up to a crackling fire in the stone fireplace decorated with a moose head and old fishing gear. After savoring your meal, there’s time to watch the floatplanes arrive and depart, or to take a guided nature walk through the adjacent woodlands. If you’re lucky, you may spot a black bear or two. Less adventurous visitors can stop by the gift shop where four large bears of the stuffed toy kind regularly lounge around a table pretending to play cards. To book a trip to Taku Lodge, see your onboard excursions specialist.

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210 Admiral Way Juneau, Alaska 99801 Next to the world famous Red Dog Saloon. 907.796.3877 6201.indd 1

Introducing an exclusive collection of masterfully crafted garments and accessories made of 100% luxurious Alpaca fiber. SHOP ONLINE AT WWW.ALPACAINTERNATIONAL.NET

2/21/18 1:22 PM


ALYSTA/SHUTTERSTOCK.COM

SPEC I A L A DV E RT ISI NG F E AT U R E

JUNEAU FROM UP ABOVE Goldbelt Mount Roberts Tramway

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Ride Southeast Alaska’s only aerial tramway! At 1,800 feet above sea level, the Goldbelt Mount Roberts Tramway treats you to Juneau’s stunning panorama. From the Chilkat Range to Stephens Passage, the expansive views are a photographer’s dream. The short ride to 1,800 feet above sea level is a breathtaking way to see the Capital City, waterfront and surrounding mountains. When you arrive at the Mountain House, enjoy dining with a view at the Timberline Bar & Grill, serving local seafood and a variety of dishes. Try our signature Crab Nachos, with locally brewed Alaskan Brewing beer. “Shop at the Top” in Raven Eagle Gifts & Gallery, where you’ll find something for everyone on your list. Raven Eagle features gifts, souvenirs, clothing and original, Alaska Native made art. Then, visit the Chilkat Theatre for our award-winning film on Tlingit history and culture, Seeing Daylight. Outside the Mountain House, meet the Juneau Raptor Center’s education eagle and have a personal experience with one of America’s great birds. The Nature Center’s knowledgeable staff can provide information about the trails, wildlife and environment. Interactive displays entertain and educate all ages. On Mount Roberts, you can hike well-maintained rainforest and sub-alpine trails. Culturally modified trees are carved with traditional, historic images. Watch for songbirds, deer and marmots from the observation platforms. The interpretive signage and audio tour provides a wealth of information about the natural environment. Indoors or out, there is something for all ages, interests, and abilities atop Mount Roberts! The ADA accessible Goldbelt Mount Roberts Tramway runs every five minutes and tickets are good all day. Come and go at your leisure. See your Shore Excursion Desk for tickets!

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®

CONTACT YOUR SHORE EXCURSION TEAM TO BOOK 6251.indd 1

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SPOTLIGHT

JUNEAU

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ALASKA FISH & CHIPS CO. ...at the flight deck Watch float planes take off from and land at this indoor/outdoor seafood bar serving a variety of fresh Alaska seafood. The specialty is Halibut & Chips, but you’ll also find fish tacos, reindeer sausage corndogs, salads and regional craft beer.

HANGAR ON THE WHARF PUB & GRILL Juneau’s favorite waterfront restaurant with the largest menu and best view in town. Featuring the finest Alaska seafood: king crab, halibut, salmon and chowder. Plus 125+ beers to go with salads, burgers, steaks and more!

PIER 49 SEAFOOD + BAR Pier 49 is Juneau’s newest waterfront restaurant! Join us for great eats, a full bar and a beer garden atmosphere. We serve a variety of Alaska seafood, burgers, brats and daily specials. Look for the huge outdoor deck along the seawalk.

TWISTED FISH COMPANY ALASKAN GRILL For the best in fresh Alaska seafood, look for the Twisted Fish near the Mt. Roberts Tram, offering incredible menu options, surf and turf, a vast wine selection, craft cocktails and casual waterfront dining.

Historic Merchants Wharf 2 Marine Way, Ste 124 (907) 723-2586 alaskafishandchips.com

Historic Merchants Wharf 2 Marine Way, Ste 106 (907)586-5018 hangaronthewharf.com

406 S Franklin Street www.pier49alaska.com

550 S Franklin Street (907) 463-5033 twistedfishcompany.com

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Juneau, Alaska

REPRESENTING OVER 60 ALASKAN ARTISTS

ALASKAN MADE • ALASKAN MADE

ALASKAN ARTISTS • ALASKAN OWNED D IR TH

ST

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FIND US IN THE GOLDEN YELLOW BUILDING

T TS N O FR Y RR FE

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ST

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D AR W SE

IN A M

E AT E ST FICING F O ILD U B

BUS stop

ST

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D REOG D MARINE WAY

harf the w

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ATM ST

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marine park

TRAM

387 S. franklin st. located in the golden yellow building

cariboucrossings.com

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SPOTLIGHT

JUNEAU Changing Tides

fabrics

needleART

gifts

JUNEAU ALASKA

ALASKA JUNEAU MINING COMPANY Visit one of Juneau’s largest and most unique gift stores. We offer a huge selection of apparel, gifts and souvenirs with prices to fit any budget. Be sure to take a photo of the pod of orca whales suspended above the store. Pictured: UNOde50 Fresh bracelet from the Ice Collection. Exclusively sold at Alaska Juneau Mining Co. & Juneau Trading Co. 425 S Franklin Street (907) 463-5595

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ALASKA KNIFEWORKS

ALASKA SHIRT COMPANY

Locally owned and operated for 18 years. EASY USPS Flat Rate shipping anywhere in the USA. This is not just another souvenir store; we have custom Alaska antler handle knives, hunting knives, pocket knives and top quality ulus. Don’t be fooled by the souvenirs, get the real thing at Alaska Knifeworks! Please come visit our expert staff inside Merchants Wharf on the downtown Port of Juneau waterfront.

Why did the tourist cross the road? To get to Alaska Shirt Company, of course! No joke – we provide the best t-shirt and souvenir savings, styles and selection – all wrapped up in fun! (And seriously, we’re located right across the road from the Juneau Tram and Cruise Terminals.)

Inside Merchants Wharf 2 Marine Way Ste. 119 www.alaskaknifeworks.com

489 S Franklin Street (907) 586-9510 www.Shirtco.com

CHANGING TIDES FABRIC, QUILTING AND YARN GIFT SHOP A year-round local NeedleART shop located in the heart of historic downtown Juneau. Known for their great selection of Alaska fabrics, batiks, wool and yarn hand-dyed in Alaska. Barbara Lavallee’s quilt patterns, cross-stitch and fabric panels are designed in their Juneau studio. Also featuring kits and exclusive “Juneau” fabric, designed by Alaskan artist Jon Van Zyle. 175 S Franklin Street Ste. 203 (907) 523-6084 changingtidesak@gmail.com

Fun Ashore Carnival Cruise Line

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• Juneau, Alaska •

CONNECT WITH ALASKA’S RUSSIAN HISTORY!

LOCALLY OWNED FOR OVER 35 YEARS! 3 89 S. FR A NKL I N ST. J U NE AU LOCAT E D I N THE GO LD E N Y E L L OW BU I L D I NG NE A R T H E T R A M 6122.indd 1

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SPOTLIGHT

JUNEAU

JUNEAU TRADING COMPANY Located directly on Juneau’s new sea walk. Come enjoy a free cup of coffee while you shop. We promise to have everything on your list all under one roof, even buy a tour from the tour center. Pictured: UNOde50 Fresh bracelet from the Ice Collection. Exclusively sold at Alaska Juneau Mining Co & Juneau Trading Co. 720 S Franklin Street 907-463- 4480

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MERCHANTS WHARF SALMON SHOPPE Wild Alaska smoked salmon from the boat to your table! Locally owned and operated. All shelf-stable and fully-approved for travel with EASY USPS shipping to the USA! Check out our large selection of Alaska wild game sausages. Salmon themed Ray Troll clothing, salmon ornaments and much more. Where Salmon is the star of the show! Inside Merchants Wharf 2 Mariner Way Ste. 114 www.salmonshoppe.com

TROVE Discover Juneau’s hidden gem ... Trove! Specializing in distinct and diverse items selected to enhance your modern lifestyle. Our exclusive collection of home decor, clothing and jewelry is both functional and fanciful – truly delightful! Treat someone you love – or yourself – to a treasure from Trove. 497 S Franklin Street (907) 586-9530 www.shoptrove.com

Fun Ashore Carnival Cruise Line

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BROWSING THROUGH HISTORY

South Franklin Street offers treasures to take home and nuggets of Juneau’s fascinating history. By John Anderson shops. Or mosey past swinging doors and along sawdust floors at the historic Red Dog Saloon, where you can belly up to the bar under wagon wheel chandeliers and gawk at bear pelts, Wyatt Earp’s pistol and other curios adorning the walls. Of course, a trip to South Franklin Street wouldn’t be complete without shopping at its many stores that feature an array of made-in-Alaska items. Stock up on the region’s most famous food – smoked salmon – caught and processed locally. With a host of gold and silver mines in the state, jewelry is another popular item sold in shops along the street, including silver bracelets with totemic designs carved by artisans from local Native tribes. Totem poles and Native art can also be found on South Franklin, as well as soap made with glacial silt from nearby glaciers. And beer lovers can take home a taste of Alaska with ales and ambers brewed with local alder-smoked malts and Sitka spruce tips.

PHOTOS BY: SARAH CANNARD

As one of Juneau’s “can’t miss” attractions, South Franklin Street provides a well-preserved view into the past with some of the city’s oldest and most architecturally noteworthy buildings. The main thoroughfare of shops, cafés and saloons is also easy to find, running along the lively waterfront where incoming ships dock and into the historic downtown district. Navigating South Franklin Street is a lesson in Juneau’s colorful history, found in the stories of the quaint buildings that date to the early 1900s and the city’s heyday as a mining hub. Visitors can learn about this history by joining walking tours from Juneau-Douglas City Museum or Adventure Flow, complete with guide and audio, offering stories about the old buildings and the city’s early personalities. Included is the Alaskan Hotel from 1913, featuring a beautifully preserved barroom from the period, as well as the Alaska Steam Laundry Building from 1901 which now houses a café and

South Franklin Street, Juneau. Fun Ashore Carnival Cruise Line

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SLAM: JUNEAU’S NEW WONDER Uncover Alaska’s colorful heritage at this expansive history museum. By Ginger Dingus If you’re hoping to discover Alaska’s Russian heritage, mining history, Native culture and wildlife all in one place, think SLAM — the Andrew P. Kashevaroff State Library, Archives and Museum, or SLAM for short. Juneau residents simply call it the Alaska State Museum. Juneau’s $139-million museum opened in 2016. The modern, 118,000-square-foot building occupies the site of the previous (1967) Alaska State Museum, torn down in 2014 to make way for the expanded SLAM. The Whittier Street location is an easy walk from cruise ship docks. Entering the museum’s atrium lobby, visitors are greeted

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with the sight of a regal eagle and its chick (both real, but mounted) perched atop a massive nest made of twigs. For a close-up look, climb the stairs to the second-floor balcony, also the best spot for an eagle’s-eye view of the wall-to-wall map of Alaska stretching across the floor below. SLAM’s permanent displays represent Alaska’s 126 years under the Russian flag through religious icons, tools, weapons and documents. Of note is a rare bronze double-headed eagle medallion presented by Alexander Baranov, chief manager for the Russian American (fur trading) Company, as a peace offering to an Alaska Native leader at Sitka in the early 1800s. Items from the American period (1867 to today) showcase exploration, transportation and commerce. Exhibits include ship artifacts, gold rush memorabilia, whaling gear and aviation history. Dozens of elaborate ceremonial headdresses and masks in the shape of birds, bears and whales highlight the galleries devoted to Alaska Native history. Displays of Alaska Native watercraft demonstrate how skin-covered kayaks and umiaqs are made and used. The extensive basket collection contains 5,000-year-old remnants of the oldest basketry found on the north Pacific coast. Also featured are sculpture and painting by Alaskan artists, and natural history displays of local minerals, fossils, seashells and animals.

PHOTOS BY: LARA SWIMMER

LEFT: Visitors take in the museum’s many historical artifacts telling Alaska’s story. RIGHT: Bristol Bay double-ender, a vessel used for salmon fishing.

Fun Ashore Carnival Cruise Line

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S ebody L es Me

T-Shirt

Everyone’s favorite Alaskan souvenir in adult and kids sizes.

We hope you’re having a wonderful time in our favorite place in the world...Alaska! When you come to Juneau or Skagway, we know your time is limited...but you’ve still got people back home to shop for. Where to go? The Alaska Shirt Company really is the answer. We’ve been helping people find the perfect gifts and souvenirs since 1995, and our selection is EPIC! Let our staff of enthusiastic locals help you find the perfect souvenir of this amazing place!

Juneau • Skagway

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RUTH PETERKIN/SHUTTERSTOCK.COM

KETCHIKAN

As the southernmost port in the state, Ketchikan has long been the first Alaska stop for ships and ferries coming from the south. Set along the Tongass Narrows on the shores of mountainous Revillagigedo Island, much of the city seems on first approach to be floating on water, with several large marinas and numerous buildings sitting on piers and pilings. Even a stroll down several of the town’s colorful streets takes you on a boardwalk over flowing Ketchikan Creek.

Water is a natural feature in the “Rain Capital of Alaska.” Just to the east is the spectacular Misty Fjords National Monument, with deep channels that meander between steep, green-clad mountain cliffs. Dramatic waterfalls, glassy lakes and snow-capped peaks shrouded in foggy mist, along with regular wildlife sightings, are part of the enchanted scenery in the park. It’s one reason the native Tlingit people have proudly called the area home for millennia. — John Anderson

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FUNTREKS

TOP SHORE EXCURSIONS Choose your adventure in Ketchikan! Here are the top tours of the many you can experience with Carnival Adventures, all led by local providers who’ve been hand-selected to give you an unmatched experience. Book through your onboard shore-excursion specialist or on the Carnival HUB app, available for free download to your smartphone. Please ask about age requirements, physical considerations, proper dress and other details.

Magnificent Misty Fjords Flightseeing

Fly high above the 2.3-million-acre Misty Fjords National Monument, viewing areas accessible only by boat or plane. Take in sights like the 1,000-foot waterfall at Big Goat Lake and spot Alaskan wildlife including bears, Sitka deer, wolves, bald eagles and more before landing on a pristine alpine lake or remote bay.

Misty Fjords & Wilderness Explorer

Explore Misty Fjords aboard one of Alaska’s fastest sightseeing jet-powered catamarans. You’ll sail through the Behm Canal, where you can take in the sights including an active bald eagle’s nest, a Tlingit pictograph, ice-carved Rudyerd Bay and New Eddystone Rock, an immense volcanic spire.

RUTH PETERKIN/SHUTTERSTOCK.COM

Adventure Kart Expedition

A floatplane takes off at Misty Fjords National Monument.

QuickGuide Famed for: Totem poles painstakingly carved by local artists, an important symbol of the native Tlingit tribe. It’s a Fact: : Rainfall averages 153 inches per year, though it’s just over 7 inches per month during the “dry” summer season. Signature Souvenirs: Native art; locally smoked salmon; wild huckleberry honey or jam.

Take in the history and culture of Ketchikan as you ride a motor coach to the rainforest wilderness for the off-road adventure of a lifetime! After gearing up, your caravan will set out on an exciting guided trek through the remote backcountry toward unparalleled views of the Tongass National Forest, Behm Canal and Alaska’s Inside Passage.

Bering Sea Crab Fisherman’s Tour

Hop aboard Aleutian Ballad, the vessel from the second season of the hit reality TV show Deadliest Catch, and sail through the Inside Passage to witness the amazing life of commercial fishermen. The heated lower deck or open-air top deck let you take in the local wildlife and stunning scenery in comfort, while the skilled crew displays the catch of the day in an on-deck aquarium.

Canopy Adventure & Wildlife Expedition

Glide through the Tongass National Forest canopy on this zip lining eco-adventure. You might even spot local wildlife from tree platforms, nature trails and boardwalks. Pus, you’ll discover a hidden waterfall, cross 3 aerial bridges — all offering breathtaking views of the forest below — and receive a medal upon completion.

Fun Ashore Carnival Cruise Line

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Ports of call | Ketchikan

ALITA BOBROV/SHUTTERSTOCK.COM

PORT VIEW

Ketchikan, known as the “First City,” is the initial port reached by marine ferries and cruise ships traveling from the south. And what an introduction to the area. Lush and dewy from daily — perhaps hourly — rain, the town sparkles when the sun shows its face. Here’s where visitors’ visions and daydreams of Alaska come to life. It’s a place where bald eagles dive for dinner in the Tongass Narrows. Where killer whales frequent. Where the backdrop of one’s day is lush rainforest, waterfalls and towering fjords. And where ancient totem poles hold the secrets of the region. Walk along picturesque Creek Street, a boardwalk lined with boutiques and teeming with salmon in the waters just below.

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Once part of the Ketchikan’s red-light district, Creek Street was known as the only place where the “fishermen and fish went upstream to spawn.” Venture 10 miles north to Totem Bight State Historical Park, a former Native campground set in the rainforest. The park is a collection of these colorful, intricate cedar monuments found in abandoned villages as well as a replica of a chieftain’s house. Those wanting to get the adrenaline pumping should head to Bear Creek for incredible zip lining. Whoosh across thousands of feet of cable from platform to platform, taking in panoramic views of the lush forest, a stunning waterfall, the nearby ocean and incredible mountain vistas. — Kelly Liszt

Fun Ashore Carnival Cruise Line

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495 South Franklin Street, Juneau, AK | 907-523-5683 400 Mission Street, Ketchikan, AK | 907-225-1880 www.bluediamondgems.com

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Ports of call | Ketchikan

Creek Street’s present is a lot tamer than its past.

WALK ON WATER It’s pretty as a picture now, but Creek Street has a notorious past. By Janet Groene Bright colors and a cornucopia of chic eateries and boutiques now greet visitors to Creek Street, built on pilings over Ketchikan Creek. but history tattles a more tawdry story of its colorful past. Here, against the dramatic backdrop of Deer Mountain, once stood dance halls, saloons and bordellos. Meandering uphill behind the buildings is the Married Man’s Trail. Today it’s a rugged hike for adventure tourists. During the infamous Prohibition years, it was an escape route for desperate husbands on the run from angry wives who’d caught them sampling the pleasures of Creek Street. The twin sins of boozing and wenching were a major industry in the mining and salmon fishing boomtown of Ketchikan in the roaring 20’s. Prohibition stopped up the beer taps and banished spirits to hidden cupboards. Prostitution was legal

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in Alaska but subject to government regulations. Boarding houses with more than two “female boarders” were considered to be brothels, so women who set up housekeeping, so to speak, on Creek Street worked only by ones and twos. One of the most successful sole proprietors was Dolly Arthur (1888-1975), born in Idaho as Thelma Dolly Copeland. Her bawdy house opened in 1919, with rates of $3 for “going upstream to spawn” or 50 cents for a shot of watered whiskey. Today a must-see museum, her home is much as she left it when she died in 1975. Relics of the home’s roistering past include Dolly’s shower curtain, decorated with a floral wreath fashioned out of French silk condoms. Always colorful but now law abiding, today’s Creek Street is G-rated.

Fun Ashore Carnival Cruise Line

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54A FRONT STREET, KETCHIKAN, AK 99901

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Ports of call | Ketchikan

SPEC I A L A DV E RT ISI NG F E AT U R E

ALASKA’S LOGGING HISTORY LIVES ON Sit back and enjoy a thrilling display of agility, energy and power as some of the world’s best athletes compete for the title “Bull of the Woods.”

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It all started in the early 1900s, as rugged lumberjacks toiled each day in one of Alaska’s most grueling environments, harvesting timber for our growing nation. Echoing from remote logging camps, up and down the coast, you could hear the clamor of the axe, the racket of the cross-cut saw and the frequent calls of “TIMBER!” Eventually, these hardy loggers began gathering once each summer in Ketchikan to go head to head against their rival camps. Showdowns included chopping, sawing, log rolling, axe throwing and so much more. Today this legend lives on at The Great Alaskan Lumberjack Show where our lumberjacks are still battling it out for bragging rights. Rated one of the top five tours in Alaska, this action-packed Alaska experience provides 60 minutes of thrilling competition fun for all ages! Located just one block from the cruise ship docks in the heart of Ketchikan! This show is a must see, rain or shine! Our grandstands are covered, heated and handicapped accessible! Don’t miss out on the AXE-tion! For the rowdiest good time in all of Alaska visit your Shore Excursions desk!

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CONTACT YOUR SHORE EXCURSION TEAM TO BOOK 6253.indd 1

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Ports of call | Ketchikan

FEATURED ADVENTURE Port: Ketchikan, AK Duration: 3 Hours Activity Level: Moderate Minimum Age: 2 Years

Exclusive Flightseeing & Crab Feed Experience two of Alaska’s must-do activities: a flight on a De Havilland Beaver floatplane and a meal of succulent Alaskan Dungeness crab! You’ll take off from downtown Ketchikan and enjoy 20 minutes of spectacular scenery before landing at George Inlet Lodge. While visiting this remote, yet elegant, stop, you’ll snack on smoked salmon and sip white wine or Alaskan Amber beer as you learn about the colorful lodge and its epic transport across 90 miles of ocean to its current location. You’ll also enjoy a feast of fresh romaine salad, steamed baby red potatoes and Dungeness crab — with a second helping of crab if you wish. Last, but certainly not least, you’ll indulge in rich, smooth cheesecake smothered in Alaskan blueberries. A quick visit to the lodge’s gift shop before you depart is another must. Your return journey is a narrated coach ride along the coastline back to downtown Ketchikan, passing totem poles, a fish hatchery and the Coast Guard station along the way. Note: This excursion may operate in reverse. Only small camera bags and purses are permitted on the aircraft. Flight time is approximately 20 minutes. Infants up to 23 months may sit on a parent’s lap. Children 2 and older must have their own seat and full-price ticket.

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Ride in style to your feast!

For tickets to the Exclusive Flightseeing & Crab Feed tour, see your onboard shore excursion specialist or book on the Carnival HUB app, available for free download to your smartphone.

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38 Front Street, Ketchikan AK 99901 | 907-247-2383

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Ports of call | Ketchikan

INTO THE WOODS The Tongass National Forest, encompassing more than 16 million acres, is the largest national forest in the United States and an integral part of Ketchikan’s economy and lifestyle. Most people are surprised to learn that the Tongass is a rainforest, albeit a temperate one; there is no defined rainy season and rain may fall here every day. On the first floor of Ketchikan’s Federal Building, the U.S. Forest Service Interpretive Center runs an excellent program about this natural wonder.

An aerial view of the Tongass.

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PHOTOS BY: (RAIN FOREST) LEE PRINCE/SHUTTERSTOCK.COM; (AERIAL VIEW) LEE PRINCE/SHUTTERSTOCK.COM; (BEARS) NANCYS/SHUTTERSTOCK.COM.

The Tongass is a temperate rainforest.

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FOPE.COM

38 Front Street, Ketchikan, AK 99901 | 907-247-2383

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Ports of call | Ketchikan

Brown bears fishing off Admiralty Island, Tongass National Forest. The island is home to an estimated 1,500 brown bears — more than in all the Lower 48 states combined.

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Ports of call | Ketchikan

FEATURED ADVENTURE Port: Ketchikan, AK Duration: 3.5 Hours Activity Level: Difficult No Minimum Age

Canopy Adventure & Wildlife Expedition It’s the ultimate nature experience! Imagine the thrill of gliding through the top of a rich rainforest canopy, along a series of cables suspended between tall trees in the Tongass National Forest. That doesn’t begin to do this trip justice — to truly understand it, you have to try it. This eco-adventure sends you flying along seven zip lines and takes you across three aerial bridges, with a rappelling element as well. You’re fitted with safety equipment and given an orientation on the basics of zip lining. Then you start your adventure from 135 feet above the forest floor, traversing lines 175 feet to the pulsepounding, 850-foot “Ben’s Revenge.” Treetop platforms and three hanging sky bridges offer breathtaking views of the forest. Wildlife sightings are frequent, especially of wild black bears. After completing the zip-line course, you will be able to choose your adventure to return to ground level. Beginners can choose a simple descent, while the more adventurous trekker can choose a faster way down. Upon completing this adventure, you’ll receive a medal in recognition of your achievement. If time permits, you can round out your adventure with a tour of the historic Fleenor Sawmill, a Ketchikan landmark. Other opportunities may include observing a master Native totem carver at work before exploring a “garden” of totem poles; and visiting the Alaska Raptor Center’s Ketchikan exhibit to see their amazing birds of prey up close. Complimentary snacks and beverages are provided before you return to your ship.

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Soaring above the trees.

For tickets to Canopy Adventure & Wildlife Expedition, see your onboard shore excursion specialist or book on the Carnival HUB app, available for free download to your smartphone.

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“Jewelry that expresses the woman you are, without saying a word.”

38 Front Street, Ketchikan, AK 99901 | 907-247-2383 6132.indd 1

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Ports of call | Ketchikan

SPOTLIGHT

KETCHIKAN ARCTIC SPIRIT GALLERY Specializing in Northwest Coast and Alaskan Native art, Arctic Spirit Gallery is locally owned and operated. Featuring baleen baskets and basketry, walrus ivory carvings, whalebone fossil carvings, totem poles, Bentwood boxes, wood masks, Haida argillite carvings and a vast collection of Native art from Barrow to Southeast Alaska. Located under the Welcome Arch.

SCANLON ART GALLERY Featuring Alaskan art by Alaskan artists, including prints, originals, handcrafted jewelry, gold nugget jewelry mined and made in Alaska, glass, soapstone, bronze, antlers, gifts and much more. Locally owned and operated since 1972. Located under the Welcome Arch.

318 Mission Street (907) 228-2277 arcticspiritgallery.com

318 Mission Street (907) 247-4730 scanlongallery.com

GET WILD! Fresh & smoked premium salmon fillets

WILD-CAUGHT SALMON

SHIPPED FROM ALASKA’S SALMON CAPITAL TO YOUR DOOR

Family- operated for thirty years salmonetc.com  322 Mission Street 120

 800-354-7256

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Shop Local. Shop Alaskan Owned & Operated

In the beginning, the earth was created, including the raw ingredients for these beautiful creations from Orocal. Gold formed as veins inside quartz deposits within the earth. Erosion then broke the gold out to become individual nuggets. Today, when gold is found still embedded in quartz, they are kept as one and placed in dazzling settings by the craftspeople of Orocal.

Gold nuggets and gold in quartz. Created to be beautiful from the best of the earth.

You have the opportunity this week to own this rare treasure. Julie’s in Ketchikan has the world’s largest selection of this incredible work of Nature.

326 Dock Street

120 Front Street

55 Schoenbar Court

www.juliesalaska.com 800.982.0554 Stay connected and like us on Facebook

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Ports of call | Ketchikan

SALMON CAPITAL of the World By Janet Groene In Ketchikan, salmon is more than just a traditional food. It’s an iconic animal with a deep spiritual meaning for Native cultures. This legendary fish has played an essential role in sustaining local communities. Whether it’s attending a salmon bake, going on a fishing excursion or buying a piece of Native art depicting the legendary salmon of Haida and Tlingit folklore, a visit to Alaska isn’t complete without connecting with salmon in one way or another. The fish is one of the figures that are prominently depicted on totem poles in Ketchikan, home of the world’s largest collection of standing totems. Its presence on the poles, which also portray ravens, eagles, frogs and other creatures, indicates its importance to local communities. The connection between Ketchikan and salmon is more than just spiritual. For generations, Ketchikan was a summer fishing camp for Tlingit tribes. The area’s fame as a fishing site grew, and in 1883, settlers from Oregon built a salmon cannery. Mining, timber and tourism have also played a part in building the community (which was incorporated in 1900), but it’s salmon that continues to feed Ketchikan’s stomach, as well as its soul.

SPEC I A L A DV E RT ISI NG F E AT U R E

NUGGETS:

The Next Big Thing Over the past 120 years, an immeasurable amount of gold has been mined in Alaska; however, very few gold nuggets weighing over 30 ounces have ever been found. One now belongs to David Conner. In the fall of 2012, Conner, owner of Orocal Natural Gold Co., received a call from an Anchorage area number. He was offered an opportunity that, in over 45 years of doing business in Alaska, he had never seen. The caller was selling a 30-ounce Alaskan gold nugget from his family estate that had been found years earlier. After careful consideration, Conner agreed to the sale. “You see, finding a nugget weighing over 1 ounce is considered rarer than a 5-carat diamond, so can you only imagine how rare a 30-ounce nugget is?” According to Conner, most gold pieces found are between one and two millimeters. Nuggets of this size can be bought at any of the Orocal Natural Gold Co. authorized dealers in Ketchikan and throughout Alaska. They can then be cut by skilled craftspeople into a beautiful piece of jewelry or as keepsakes to remember your trip to the Last Frontier. Conner is not sure if he’ll be selling “The Big One” anytime soon, but he hopes to put it on display at one of his authorized dealers to allow visitors a chance to see and even hold it. To learn more, visit www.orocal.com.

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Pre-Historic WoollyMammoth Jewelry 10,000 to 100,000 Years old

A fino Diamond Past,Present,Future Collection

Alaskan Native HandiCraft Carvings

Orca Multi-Color Diamond Collection

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STEVE ESTVANIK/SHUTTERSTOCK.COM

SKAGWAY

Located at the northernmost point of the Inside Passage, the small town of Skagway has played a big part in Alaska’s colorful history. Soon after homesteaders William Moore and his son Ben founded the tiny outpost in the late 1800s, Skagway became a major embarkation point for a flood of prospectors on their way to the Yukon during the Klondike gold rush. The town boomed to as many as 10,000 residents in 1898, as businesses flourished helping outfit the tens of thousands of stampeders on their way to the gold fields.

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Skagway today pays homage to this famous era. The Moore Homestead, now managed by the National Park Service, looks much as it did in 1887. The Mascot Saloon Museum offers a glimpse of the town’s rough-and-tumble past, when up to 100 saloons were open for business. And the Arctic Brotherhood Hall has been restored to its 1899 glory with some 9,000 pieces of decorative driftwood covering every inch of its façade. — John Anderson

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Mushing across snowy terrain, a popular pursuit in Skagway.

FUNTREKS

TOP SHORE EXCURSIONS

STEVE ESTVANIK/SHUTTERSTOCK.COM

Choose your adventure in Skagway! Here are the top tours of the many you can experience with Carnival Adventures, all led by local providers who’ve been hand-selected to give you an unmatched experience. Book through your onboard shore-excursion specialist or on the Carnival HUB app, available for free download to your smartphone. Please ask about age requirements, physical considerations, proper dress and other details.

Dogsledding & Helicopter Glacier Flightseeing

Guests fly by helicopter over Taiya Inlet as the pilot narrates the history of Skagway and the Gold Rush of 1898. They land at a dog camp and get to drive a team of friendly Alaskan huskies over the ice-covered glacier, or they can choose to simply sit back in the sled and take in the sights.

Takshanuk Mountain Trail by 4x4

This tour begins with a scenic cruise to Haines aboard a high-speed catamaran. At the Takshanuk trailhead, participants get an orientation in operating four-wheel-drive vehicles before setting off to explore the trail. On the way down, they stop at an exclusive mountaintop lodge to enjoy a warm fire, stunning views and a gourmet lunch before returning to Skagway.

Ultimate Yukon & White Pass Railroad Adventure

Hop on a motor coach and set off along the Klondike Highway, climbing to the top of the White Pass to Canada’s Yukon Territory. Then, you’ll stop at the Trading Post to visit the wildlife museum, interact with sled dogs and enjoy a fabulous barbecue lunch, before reboarding for a scenic ride back to Skagway.

Grizzly Falls Ziplining Expedition

QuickGuide Famed for: The White Pass & Yukon rail line, first opened in 1900 to carry miners and freight to and from the Yukon; it now operates as a heritage railway. It’s a Fact: Skagway served as part of the setting for Jack London’s book The Call of the Wild. Signature Souvenirs: White Pass & Yukon railroad memorabilia; hand-blown glass art from Jewell Gardens; barware from local saloons.and mammoth ivory jewelry.

Fast, fun and exhilarating, this adventure is sure to excite nature lovers and thrill seekers alike! Get a running start on solid ground and take flight into the treetops of the Alaskan rainforest.

Best of Skagway — Rail Summit, Trail Camp & Salmon Bake

Aboard an antique parlor car, guests travel the White Pass & Yukon Route Railway to Fraser, British Columbia, where they switch to a deluxe motor coach and ride on to the Liarsville Gold Rush Trail Camp. Guests enjoy a dramatized portrayal of Soapy Smith, the “uncrowned king of Skagway.” Following lunch, the saucy ladies of the Red Onion Saloon welcome guests back to 1898.

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Ports of call | Skagway

PORT VIEW

The Railroad Building offers glimpses of Skagway's rugged history.

Wanting to trace the trails of the Klondike Gold Rush? You’ve come to the right place. Skagway is gateway to the days of frenzied prospecting — also known as the Last Grand Adventure — amid a stunning, yet harsh, terrain. Downtown itself looks locked in time, resembling a movie set with its false-front buildings. Downtown Skagway is also within Klondike Gold Rush National Park, a place with many opportunities to explore. Hike the Chilkoot Trail to the peaceful Yukon River. Try panning for gold, weighing your findings at the Assayer’s Office. Or step aboard a vintage railcar for an unforgettable ride over the White Pass Trail, up to the Yukon’s White Pass summit, more than 3,000 feet above sea level. The railroad

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is an incredible feat of engineering, carved from the region’s most rugged terrain more than a century ago. Look out for peculiarly named Bridal Veil Falls, Inspiration Point and Dead Horse Gulch. Also explore Dyea Townsite, a ghost town at the foot of the Chilkoot Trail that was at one time Skagway’s rival city. Once the White Pass & Yukon Route was completed in 1900, the town seemed to vanish. Crumbling ruins remain amid gorgeous scenery, and the overlook affords splendid views of Skagway. Make your visit to the area complete with a visit to a musher dog kennel. Meet a musher and learn about how they train these amazing canines. Watch the dogs in action, pet them and, if you’re lucky, you may get to hold a musher puppy. — Kelly Liszt

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FEATURED ADVENTURE Port: Skagway, AK Duration: 6.5 Hours Activity Level: Easy No Minimum Age

Best of Skagway: Rail Summit, Trail Camp & Salmon Bake

The saucy ladies and rascally gents of Liarsville welcome you to the wild life of Alaska!

For tickets to the Best of Skagway, see your onboard shore excursion specialist or book on the Carnival HUB app, available for free download to your smartphone.

Embrace the true spirit of 1898 and sign on for the experience of a lifetime. First, you'll ascend into the beautiful mountains on the White Pass and Yukon Route railroad, enjoying the incredible scenery from an antique parlor car. After arriving in Fraser, British Columbia, you'll embark on a deluxe motor coach with your guide pointing out the famous sites along the way. At the foot of the pass is Liarsville Gold Rush Trail Camp and Salmon Bake, where a cast of sourdoughs and dance hall girls will entertain you! You'll be set free in the Liarsville gold fields before enjoying a lunch of freshly grilled Alaskan salmon, salad, coleslaw, baked beans, chicken, corn bread, beverages, and blueberry pie. Finally, your excursion concludes at the world-famous Red Onion Saloon's celebrated brothel museum. Here, the Red Onion madams will serve your choice of Alaskan Amber beer, red or white wine or non-alcoholic punch. Then they'll take you up the "Stairway to Heaven" to the prestigious upstairs brothel. You will be entertained with incredible tales of the girls who used to "work" in these historic rooms. Note: This tour may run in reverse. A passport is required for all guests.

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Ports of call | Skagway

A Railway

BUILT OF GOLD More than a century ago, a railroad was born of a gold rush. Gold was discovered in the Yukon Territory in 1896. From 1897 to 1898, the stampeders arrived in Alaska en masse on their way to the Yukon.

Gold brought with it commerce and permanence; the settlers needed a way in and a way out. The line, the White Pass & Yukon Route (WP&YR), was completed in two years, two months and two days. Now the White Pass & Yukon Route’s narrow-gauge railroad, headquartered in Skagway, is one of Alaska’s top visitor attractions. From May to September 2015, it carried more than 400,000 passengers. Before departing on their ride into history, they can see the story of the WP&YR depicted in a handpainted mural that wraps around all four walls of the depot waiting room. It’s a colorful story indeed. “This Country Needs This Railroad” Gold was discovered in the Klondike country of the Canadian Yukon, almost 500 miles north of Skagway, near the end of the 19th century. The whispered word “Gold!” became a shout heard around the world, and soon the stampede was on. Thousands of hopeful miners poured through Skagway on their way to the gold fields around the Klondike’s nascent boomtown, Dawson City. There were two perilous gold trails from the Skagway area. One was the avalanche-prone Chilkoot Trail. The other was known as the White Pass Trail. Both ended at Lake Bennett, British Columbia, where the gold-fevered prospectors built crude boats and rafts to float down the Yukon River to Dawson City.

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Halfway around the world, British financiers in London were looking for ways to cash in on the Klondike madness. They reasoned there must be a better way to get prospectors over the mountains — and harvest a share of the miners’ gold. Sir Thomas Tancrede, an English aristocrat, was dispatched to Skagway in 1898 to explore the feasibility of building a railroad into the Yukon. Tancrede had a look around and decided that the mountain barriers were too high, the grades too steep. He was just about to file a negative report when Michael J. Heney, a Canadian railroad contractor, hiked into Skagway after scouting the mountain passes around Lake Bennett. Tancrede and his companions invited Heney to join them for a drink at Skagway’s St. James Hotel. The men talked far into the night. Heney affirmed that a railroad could be built through White Pass. “This country needs this railroad — and I would like to be the man to do it,” he told Tancrede. “Give me enough dynamite and snoose [snuff], and I’ll build a road to hell!” Heney was hired, and construction began on May 28, 1898. But even as the first ribbons of steel pointed toward White Pass, trouble was brewing back in Skagway. Wicked Ways At the time, Skagway was a rowdy town ruled by an outlaw gang. A visiting Canadian Mountie called it “little better than a hell on earth.” Robberies and murders were common

LEE PRINCE/SHUTTERSTOCK.COM

By Stanton H. Patty

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Today's passengers get a comfortable ride through aweinspiring views. At right, a tougher trip for builders.

LEE PRINCE/SHUTTERSTOCK.COM

occurrences. Honky-tonk pianos accompanied the crack of gunshots and cries for help. Jefferson Randolph “Soapy” Smith, a sometimes charming, always dangerous con man, reigned over both Skagway and the gold trails. Local merchants decided that Soapy Smith and his gaggle of gangsters had to go. The showdown came on July 8, 1898. Vigilantes gathered on the Skagway waterfront. Smith, hearing about the meeting, downed a glass of whiskey, then, rifle in hand, marched down the street to confront his foes. Frank H. Reid, the town surveyor, blocked his way. There was a brief scuffle. Smith shot Reid in the groin; Reid fired his revolver at almost the same instant, putting a bullet through the scoundrel’s heart. Smith died on the scene. Reid, mortally wounded, expired shortly thereafter. Building a Railroad Thirteen days later, the White Pass & Yukon Route dispatched its first train on a 4-mile excursion for Skagway dignitaries. Two and a half miles out of town, the tracks meandered by the fresh graves of Soapy Smith and Frank Reid. Heney’s men continued toiling toward the White Pass summit. They hacked and blasted through the mountains with picks, shovels and black powder, sometimes dangling on ropes hundreds of feet above thundering rapids. They swatted swarms of mosquitoes in summer and endured

winter temperatures plunging to 60 degrees below zero. The tracks reached the 2,865-foot-high White Pass summit in February 1899. And on July 29, construction crews coming from Skagway and Whitehorse met at Carcross, where a “golden spike” was driven into the ground to mark the line’s completion. Chugging Along Nowadays visitors are immersed in history as they ride the WP&YR train along the old rail trail over White Pass. While passing the Gold Rush Cemetery, passengers see a tall granite shaft over Reid’s resting place, inscribed: “He gave his life for the honor of Skagway.” Smith’s grave is just outside the cemetery boundary. The good people of Skagway were not about to plant his remains in hallowed ground, Skagway tour guides tell visitors. Just beyond the cemetery, the tracks rise quickly from sea level into the snowcapped peaks and blue-white glaciers of the St. Elias Mountains. The train weaves, climbs and grinds toward the crest of White Pass, looping across cliffhanging cuts with dizzying views of misty waterfalls and traversing granite paths where the boot prints of Klondike stampeders can still be seen. The stampede to the Klondike was a frenzy that burned out in little more than two years. But the White Pass & Yukon Route, a nugget from that epic Gold Rush, chugs along as one of the last remaining narrow-gauge railroads in North America.

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Ports of call | Skagway

THE SCENIC RAILWAY OF THE WORLD!

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Built in 1898 to open the Klondike region of Yukon Territory to gold seekers, the White Pass & Yukon Route Railway (WP&YR) — originally stretching from Skagway, Alaska, to Whitehorse, Yukon Territory — was completed in 1900, just before the end of the Klondike Gold Rush. It took the labor of 35,000 men, using only black blasting powder and crude tools to battle the elements and treacherous landscapes, to hew out the original 110-mile narrow-gauge line. The railway hauled freight and passengers for over 80 years, and was also an early pioneer of intermodal freight containerization. It closed down in 1982 after a dramatic fall in world ore prices. But WP&YR persevered and reopened its doors just six years later as “The Scenic Railway of the World,” providing rail excursions to visitors from all over. In 1994, WP&YR was named an International Historic Civil Engineering Landmark, joining the likes of the Statue of Liberty and the Panama Canal with this prestigious honor. Today, guests experience the breathtaking panorama of mountains, glaciers, trestles and tunnels from the comfort of vintage rail cars. Hear a fully narrated tour of the White Pass & Yukon Route featuring tales of villainous gunslingers, good-time girls and would-be gold seekers struggling towards the Yukon, and see with your own eyes the untouched, pristine beauty of the Pacific Coast mountain ranges. Trips depart from Skagway, with many of the rail and motor coach combination trips featuring connections in both Fraser, British Columbia, and Carcross, Yukon Territory. Excursions are available between early May and late September each year and are geared around the schedules of all major cruise lines. The White Pass & Yukon Route is Alaska’s most popular shore excursion and a favorite on many Alaska/Yukon travelers’ must-see lists.

PICTURES BI: FRANK CORTESE/SHUTTERSTOCK.COM; WHITE PASS & YUKON ROUTE ARCHIVES. OPPOSITE PAGE: (SIGN) JIRI VONDROUS/SHUTTERSTOCK.COM.

SPEC I A L A DV E RT ISI NG F E AT U R E

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SK A AG LA W SK A A Y,

THE SCENIC RAILWAY OF THE WORLD

Built in 1898 during the Klondike Gold Rush, this narrow gauge railroad is an International Historic Civil Engineering Landmark. Experience the breathtaking panorama of mountains, glaciers, gorges, waterfalls, tunnels, trestles and historic sites from the comfort of vintage parlor cars.

CONTACT YOUR SHORE EXCURSION TEAM TO BOOK

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Ports of call | Skagway

FEATURED ADVENTURE Port: Skagway, AK Duration: 3 Hours Activity Level: Easy Minimum Age: 7 Years

Golden Glassblowing Experience This unique hands-on "hot shop" adventure is truly a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to create your own glass art on the Last Frontier. You'll escape to the tranquility of beautiful Jewell Gardens for a very personal and fun-filled glassblowing workshop. You'll keep the glass you make, and after it cools we'll even take care of the shipping (to anywhere in the world!). Upon arrival at Jewell Gardens, you'll receive a private orientation of this spectacular Northern Show Garden and the Hot Shop, where you will learn the ancient art of working with molten glass to create your ultimate Alaska memento: an ornament for hanging in a window or on your Christmas tree, or perhaps as a float in your garden pond. You are the designer. Before blowing your piece, you'll choose your color combinations and whether you want to incorporate 24k gold for spectacular effect. Afterward, enjoy a delicious tea service or light lunch (depending on the time of day) prepared by Jewell Gardens' resident chef. Note: Minimum age for this tour is 5 years, and each tour is limited to 10 guests.

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TOP: Jewell Gardens, host of the glassblowing workshop. ABOVE: A piece being shaped in the hot shop.

For tickets to the Glassblowing Experience, see your onboard shore excursion specialist or visit the Carnival HUB app, avaiable for free download to your smartphone.

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FEATURED ADVENTURE Port: Skagway, AK Duration: 6.5 Hours Activity Level: Easy No Minimum Age

Takshanuk Mountain Trail by 4x4

Crossing a rugged bridge on the trail.

For tickets to the Takshanuk Mountan Trail tour, see your onboard shore excursion specialist or visit the Carnival HUB app, available for free download to your smartphone.

Take the wheel of a Kawasaki Mule and get ready for a real Alaskan wilderness adventure on the Takshanuk Mountain Trail! Your journey begins with a scenic cruise down North America's longest fjord, aboard a high-speed catamaran to Haines. Your guide will take you to the trailhead, where you will be shown how to operate your automatic, 4-wheel-drive Mule, best described as a heavyduty golf cart. Besides the adventure, this tour allows semi-ambulatory guests and families with children to experience the breathtaking views. Beautiful waterfalls and crystal-clear creeks are just part of the natural scenery you'll drive through on your way to the panoramic views from subalpine meadows which lie at 1,500-foot elevation. On the way down, stop at a mountaintop lodge to enjoy a warm fire, stunning views and a gourmet lunch before descending the trail for the fast ferry cruise back to Skagway. Note: Guests wishing to drive the Mule must be 21 or older with a valid driver's license. Tour duration includes transfer via fast ferry from Skagway to Haines, 40 minutes each way.

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Ports of call | Skagway

FEATURED ADVENTURE Port: Skagway, AK Duration: 1.5 Hours Activity Level: Easy No Minimum Age

Skagway Street Car City Tour Experience Skagway with Alaska’s original city historical tour for an informative, fun-filled 90 minutes to all points of interest! Skagway character Martin Itjen came North looking for Klondike gold in 1898, and became the town’s most celebrated storyteller. He gave Alaska’s first motorized sightseeing tour on his “Skagway Street Car” for U.S. President Warren G. Harding in 1923, and delighted visitors for decades. Today, Itjen’s tour lives on in Skagway. Aboard your yellow 1927 sightseeing bus, your costumed conductor passes on a century of history, behind-the-scenes tales and stories of life in small town Alaska, just like Itjen did himself. You'll explore the waterfront and National Park Historic District, enjoy the panoramic views from the Scenic Overlook and visit the Gold Rush Cemetery as you learn the history of this gold rush town and the pioneer families who built it. You will motor through the residential neighborhoods of Skagway, famous for its flower gardens, and past the early childhood home of Alaska’s most famous resident, former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin. A stop is made in town for those who want to get off to shop or explore before the tour continues back to the ship. There is truly nothing in the world like Skagway. Don’t miss seeing all points of interest aboard the Skagway Street Car!

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The tour brings Skagway's fascinating history to life.

For tickets to the Skagway Street Car City Tour, see your onboard shore excursion specialist or book on the Carnival HUB app, available for free download to your smartphone.

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SPOTLIGHT

SKAGWAY ALASKA SHIRT COMPANY All aboard for amazing savings, styles and selection at Alaska Shirt Company! Stop in and load up from our 9,000 square feet of fun, fashionable and frugal souvenirs, including the "Somebody Loves Me" t-shirt (shown), available in kids and adult sizes. It’s worth it to cross the tracks - located near the Train Depot at 1st and Broadway.

SKAGWAY BREWING COMPANY Drink up a bit of history with us. Established in 1897 to hydrate the thirsty prospectors of the Klondike Gold Rush, Skagway Brewing Company continues to create handcrafted ales and delicious pub fare, including local salmon and halibut fish & chips for today’s local and traveling crowds. Check out our souvenir beer gear! Located on 7th Avenue & Broadway.

131 Broadway (907) 586-9510 shirtco.com

(907) 783-brew (2739) skagwaybrewing.com

425 Broadway • Skagway Celebrate Christmas Alaska Style! Santas Ornaments Nativities Dolls 907-983-2006 www.alaskachristmasstore.com

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Ports of call | Skagway

Dyea was a gateway to the Chilkoot Trail.

GOLD RUSH GHOST TOWN A prosperous settlement in boom times, Dyea now offers the natural riches of the Klondike. By John Anderson

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There was gold in the hills, rich veins of the prized ore discovered in 1896 in the Yukon Territory of northwest Canada. The Klondike gold rush sent an army of prospectors flooding through Southeast Alaska, creating the boom town of Dyea (pronounced: dye-ee). Located on the shores of the Taiya River, it was the ideal port and embarkation point for gold miners on their way up the Chilkoot Trail, one of two paths used to reach the Canadian interior. Dyea’s name is derived from a Native word that means “to pack,” and prior to the gold rush the locale was used as a staging area for trading excursions between the coast and interior. The Chilkoot Trail runs due north from Dyea, up and over the Chilkoot Pass. It was the main route used by the Chilkat Tlingit tribe to reach and trade with Russian, American and Hudson’s Bay Company fur trading outposts in the mid 1800s. After word of the Klondike gold strike got out, thousands of stampeders flocked to and through Dyea on their way to the gold fields. As winter arrived, many were forced to wait out the harsh weather, which ended up creating a five-by-eight-block town almost overnight to cater to the needs of the fortune seekers. At its peak, 1897-1898, Dyea boasted some 150 businesses. Bankers, freight companies, photographers, real estate agents, doctors, two hospitals, three undertakers, two newspapers, two breweries, a dentist, and more were established in the town during that time. Just as suddenly as it began, the town began to fade. Its fortunes were tied to the prospectors, and the gold rush was all but over by 1899. By 1903 fewer than six people remained in Dyea. Dyea is now part of Klondike Gold Rush National Historic Park. Rangers lead visitors past remnants of the once booming town; a weathered building façade, pilings from a former wharf. Groups can wander past Slide Cemetery where most of the grave stones list the same date of death: April 3, 1898, the date of the Palm Sunday Avalanche that killed more than 70 on the Chilkoot Trail. More pleasant are Dyea’s views of Southeast Alaska’s stunning nature, from fields of wildflowers to brown bear fishing for salmon in the Taiya Inlet.

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TELLING TALES Skagway’s wild beauty inspired characters both real and imagined.

PHOTOS BY: JEWELL GARDENS

PHOTOS BY: (AUTHORS) WIKIPEDIA.ORG; LIBRARY OF CONGRESS; WIKIPEDIA.ORG; WIKIPEDIA.ORG; BERTON HOUSE WRITERS; (CABIN) WIKIPEDIA.ORG

By Richard Carroll

Robert Service, also known as the Bard of the Yukon, perhaps captures Skagway best in his poem, “The Trail of NinetyEight,” which recalls the days when he “joined the weltering mass/Clamoring over their outfits, waiting to climb the Pass.” But Jack London is the town’s best-seller. “The dogs dashed up on the street, adding to the gayety of Skaguay,” he wrote (with the spelling of the time) in The Call of the Wild. It was easy to have fun in Skagway. Naturalist John Muir said the town resembled a “nest of ants,” because it was the end of civilization: Beyond lay nothing but that calling wild. Still, Alaska’s wild spirit made even the great gunslinger Wyatt Earp nervous, according to his bride, Josephine Sarah Marcus Earp, who wrote I Married Wyatt Earp. The book also mentions one of Earp’s pallbearers, Wilson Mizner, a member of Skagway’s infamous Soapy Smith gang. Soapy ’s crew conned nearly every miner who passed through and inspired endless myths. They developed such notoriety that they earned a cameo in one of Disney’s Uncle Scrooge comics and a major role in James Michener’s Alaska, a novel that seems to be half the size of the state itself. The Gold Rush has passed, the streets are tamed, but Skagway is still proud of when it was, as Pierre Berton recounts in Klondike, “outrageously lawless.” Because that makes for great stories — stories they’re still telling in the town’s streets and beyond. FROM TOP: Jack London; Josephine Sarah Marcus Earp; Pierre Berton; Robert Service’s cabin in Dawson City, 1958; James Michener.

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Regional HIGHLIGHTS

PHOTOS BY: F11PHOTO/SHUTTERSTOCK.COM; ROMAN KHOMLYAK/SHUTTERSTOCK.COM

Ports of call | Regional Highlights

ABOVE: The downtown Seattle skyline, with Mount Rainier in the background. RIGHT: Pier 66, the city’s waterfront amusement center.

SEATTLE Founded in 1851, Seattle has always lured those with a pioneer spirit. And it’s still attracting adventurous souls. The Emerald City celebrates its past at Pioneer Square, a National Historic District, as well as at Chinatown-International District, where Seattle’s Asian-American heritage is showcased at restaurants, shops and historical exhibits.

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Outdoor enthusiasts enjoy the scenic Cascade and Olympia mountain ranges out-side the city; experienced climbers make their way here to scale Mount Rainier. And the arts are fully represented at numerous museums and cultural venues. They include the Seattle Center, on the original grounds of the 1962 World’s Fair. Here you will find Seattle’s most famous landmark, the Space Needle, which offers a 360-degree view from a 520-foothigh observation deck.

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Choose your adventure in Seattle! Here are the top tours of the many you can experience with Carnival Adventures, all led by local providers who’ve been hand-selected to give you an unmatched experience. Book through your onboard shoreexcursion specialist or at the Carnival HUB app, available for free download to your smartphone. Please ask about age requirements, physical considerations, proper dress and other details.

Seattle Essentials w/Airport Transfer

Visit two of the Emerald City’s most famous attractions, the Space Needle and Pike Place Market. Begin with a drive through Seattle’s birthplace, historic Pioneer Square, and continue to the International District, where aromas from local restaurants fill the air. Pass by the Downtown Shopping District and arrive at the Space Needle, the symbol of the 1962 World’s Fair. You’ll soar 520 feet for an amazing 360 bird’s eye view of the city, Puget Sound, Mount Rainier and the Cascade Mountains. Re-board your motor coach for a quick jaunt to the Pike Place Market, the West Coast’s oldest and largest open air Farmer’s Market. Here, you’ll have a little over an hour to explore the wares of hundreds of local farmers and artisans.

Grand City Tour w/ Airport Transfer

Past and present collide in Seattle, and here’s your chance to see it all, from the modern Fifth Avenue to historic Pioneer Square and the International District. Your first stop will be the Space Needle, where you’ll rise to the Observation Deck for a bird’s eye view of “The City of Flowers.” Then it’s off to Pike Place Market, the oldest open-air Farmer’s Market on the West Coast. Here, you’ll have time to explore the multitude of culinary offerings and the wares of local artisans and vendors. Next, you’ll stroll through the oldest and most colorful neighborhoods in Seattle, before stopping at the Ballard Locks and its Botanical Garden. Finally, you’ll tour through the downtown core of Seattle, learning the roots of this modern and eclectic society.

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Ports of call | Regional Highlights

LEFT: The Sunken Garden at Butchart Gardens, Victoria. BOTTOM LEFT: British Columbia’s Parliament building in Victoria, with tulips blooming in the foreground.

Choose your adventure in Victoria! Here are the top tours of the many you can experience with Carnival Adventures, all led by local providers who’ve been hand-selected to give you an unmatched experience. Book through your onboard shoreexcursion specialist or at the Carnival HUB app, available for free download to your smartphone. Please ask about age requirements, physical considerations, proper dress and other details.

Historic Downtown & Butchart Gardens

This excursion shows why Victoria is known as Canada’s “City of Gardens.” Participants take a self-guided tour, using multi-language maps, of famed Butchart Gardens. More than a century ago, the Butchart family transformed an old rock quarry into one of the world’s top floral gardens. The downtown portion includes the Inner Harbour, with its majestic Parliament buildings and the ivy-covered Empress Hotel.

Twilight Highlights & Craigdarroch Castle

Built between 1887 and 1890, Craigdarroch Castle is a National Historic Site on a hill overlooking the city. After touring the Victorian home, guests are taken on a drive through Victoria. Landmarks include Chinatown’s Gate of Harmonious Interest, Canada’s narrowest street, the Inner Harbour, Parliament buildings and the Empress Hotel.

Victoria by Double Decker

VICTORIA The influence of Victoria’s English founders remains strong in this pretty city of well-tended gardens and charming homes. During the Gold Rush days of the mid-1800s, it was home to thousands of hopeful prospectors. Today, it showcases its nautical past at the Maritime Museum of British Columbia. The heart of the city curves around the quaint stonewalled Inner Harbour, around which are such attractions as the Undersea Gardens, the Royal London Wax Museum and the staid, block-long Empress Hotel.

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Victoria’s old-world charm comes alive on this tour. Participants board a double-decker bus and enjoy a scenic marine drive past beautiful bays and coves, neighborhoods, parks and lookouts. After the drive, guests have time to explore the town.

Victoria by Horse-Drawn Trolley

Guests may feel they’ve gone back in time on this narrated journey along the waterfront. A powerful team of purebred horses — usually Percherons, Belgians or Clydesdales — leads the trolley along historic James Bay, one of Victoria’s original neighborhoods, and through Beacon Hill Park, the city’s natural heart. The park’s 154 acres of carefully preserved trees, gardens and ponds provide a peaceful haven amid the busy town.

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SPOTLIGHTS

1150 Douglas St. TheBayCentre.ca

The Bay Centre is a "must-shop" in Downtown Victoria's iconic Government Street, located in the heart of the shopping district and just steps away from the downtown cruise ship shuttle stop. While you are here, pick up our "10 Ways to Experience The Bay Centre Like a Local" guide which includes complimentary experiences from select retailers.

Explore a large variety of souvenirs to bring home, from T-shirts and shot glasses to maple syrup and candies, plus a large selection of memorable "Made in Canada" gifts. The Beaver Gift Shop accepts U.S. currency and gives U.S. currency change for your convenience.

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