Alaska Guide Services
Alaska is the last great wildnerness. There is no better place to fish and hunt in the United States. The abundance and variety of fish and game makes Alaska the best place for hunters and anglers.
This is the home page for Alaska fishing and hunting information. AlaskaGuideServices.com provides hunters and anglers with information about hunting and fishing in Alaska, from travel and packing tips to fun Alaska facts.
Find the best fishing charters and hunting outfitters in Alaska using our directory. Learn how to select the best Alaska guide services for your specific needs.
Plan your Alaska fishing trip or hunting expedition after reviewing the essential Alaska hunting regulations and fishing regulations pages.
- Salmon fishing
- Halibut fishing
- Alaska bear hunting
- Wolf hunting
- and more.
Don't miss our list of featured Alaska wilderness lodges, which are among some of the best in Alaska. There are many Alaska fishing lodges throughout the coastal regions of Alaska. Fish for trout, salmon, Arctic char, halibut, lingcod, and even catch a few dungeness crab. Hunting guide services in Alaska are numerous and take clients out for moose, bear, deer, Dahl sheep, and other Alaskan game species..
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Plus, we give you information on seasonal and year-round Alaska fishing jobs.
Alaska
Go to Anchorage, and you'll feel like you've truly arrived in Alaska. After all, where else in the U.S. can you find city parks teeming with moose and 105 miles of cross country ski trails? You wander around Anchorage, giddy with the feeling that you made it to the 'final frontier,' that mythic land that most Americans will never see. Ravens hang out on telephone poles downtown; whales breach the waters off-shore. The glistening white shoulders of the Chugach Mountains hug the edges of the suburbs. But then some longtime Alaska resident will let you know that you're not really in Alaska at all. Anchorage, that city of 278,700 (smaller than Newark, New Jersey), is too citified, too tainted by the influence of Seattle, perhaps, or even San Francisco to be considered "Alaska."
Ask a fisherman, and he - or she - will tell you the real Alaska is out on the water, whether that's Bristol Bay or the Bering Sea. In 2006, 20% of all visitors to the state went there to fish.
A hunter will tell you the real Alaska is in the Bush, the great land beyond the cities, far from the highways, both interstate and marine. This is the place that calls to the adventurer, as the call of the wild once inspired Jack London to write:
"Deep in the forest a call was sounding, and as often as he heard this call, mysteriously thrilling and luring, he felt compelled to turn his back upon the fire and the beaten earth around it, and to plunge into the forest, and on and on, he knew not where or why; the call sounding imperiously, deep in the forest." - Jack London, The Call of the Wild.
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