2025 Alaska: Utqiagvik (Barrow) – Top of the World

from $3,550
  • Reviews 0 Reviews
    0/5
  • Vacation Style Holiday Type
    Bird Watching, Wildlife
  • Activity Level Challenging
    5/8
  • Group Size Medium Group
    8
All about the 2025 Alaska: Utqiagvik (Barrow) – Top of the World Tour.

Utqiagvik (formerly Barrow), Alaska, is the northernmost city in the United States and is located over 300 miles (480 kilometers) into the Arctic Circle. Utqiagvik is close to Point Barrow which is the northernmost point of the North American mainland. In the summer months the sun never fully sets, as the area experiences 24-hour daylight, an amazing phenomenon to experience. Several species of waterfowl utilize this high-Arctic habitat for breeding, such as Steller’s, Spectacled, and King Eiders, Long-tailed Duck, Tundra Swan, and numerous shorebirds (waders).

This Alaskan extension can be combined with our main Alaska: Vast Beauty, Nome, Denali, Seward tour, which immediately precedes it and covers many other amazing areas of Alaska.

We will take a maximum of eight participants. On rare occasion we may extend the maximum to ten participants.

Duration: 5 days
Group Size Limit: 4 – 8
Date: 26 – 30 June 2025
Start: Anchorage, AK
End: Anchorage, AK

Price:
US$3550 per person sharing assuming 5 – 8 participants
Single supplement: $740

The tour package inclusions and exclusions at a glance
What is included in this tour?Items that are included in the cost of tour price.
  • Meals
  • Accommodation
  • Transport
  • Guiding fees
  • Native Land Birding Permit
  • Flights Anchorage – Utqiagvik – Anchorage
Whats not included in this tour.Items that are not included in the cost of tour price.
  • Flights to and from Anchorage
  • Personal insurance
  • Alcoholic beverages
  • Laundry service
  • Personal expenses such as gifts
  • Gratuities
  1. Day 1 Anchorage to Adak Island

    You will fly from Anchorage to Adak on Sunday, 12 May 2019. From the Adak Airport we’ll make the short drive to our lodging facilities, comfortable town houses that formerly housed naval officers and their families when the base was active. They are all well equipped, including a washer and dryer. As soon as everyone has moved in, we’ll begin birding. Our first stop is an overlook of Kulik Bay to look for alcids and cormorants. From there, we’ll continue to Clam Lagoon, THE hotspot on Adak. This location has yielded THREE of North America’s few records of Spot-billed Duck. On previous tours we have found Lesser Sand-Plover, Far Eastern Curlew, Smew, Brambling, and other good birds at the lagoon.

    Overnight: Adak Island

  2. Day 2 - 7 Clam Lagoon and Surrounding Areas

    We’ll spend most of our days looking for shorebirds, Asian vagrants, other migrants, and all of the island’s resident species such as Lapland Longspur, Snow Bunting, and Gray-crowned Rosy-Finch. We’ll check Clam Lagoon at least once daily, plus other areas including the Old Loran Station at the north end of the island to look for seabirds that may include Laysan and Black-footed Albatross and Short-tailed Shearwater. This is also a good spot for Orcas. We’ll visit Lake Andrew where we saw Common Greenshank and Eastern Yellow Wagtail on a previous tour, and the town itself where the few ornamental spruce trees are prime habitat for a vagrant songbird, perhaps a Hawfinch. Part of the excitement of birding on Adak Island is that you never know exactly what we may find, or where it may be.

    Overnight: Adak Island

  3. Day 8 Heading Home

    We’ll take one more look at Clam Lagoon and perhaps a few other sites, then return to town to prepare for the return flight to Anchorage, the end of our Adak Adventure! Or, if you are staying for additional time, we’ll do it all over again, looking for new migrants and vagrants every day.

Your Guide: Jacob Roalef

Tours: Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Florida, Maine, Minnesota, Ohio, Texas, Wyoming, Birding Ecotours (Worldwide)

ALASKA - ADAK ISLAND TRIP REPORT - MAY 2012

ADAK ISLAND
20-27 May 2012

Top 10 lists are voted upon by the participants at the completion of each tour.

1 – Ruff – a white male flew into a large wetland at Contractor’s Camp, preened, bathed, and drank for 5 minutes, then flew east and out of sight, never to be seen again.
2 – Hawfinch – this handsome Eurasian finch is slightly smaller than an Evening Grosbeak. A male and a female spent at several days at one of our feeding stations.
3 – Laysan Albatross – distant but good looks at one over the open ocean, north of the old Loran Station.
4 – Ancient Murrelet – this striking alcid was numerous everywhere that we scoped coves and open ocean.
5 – Brambling – a male and female were present for several days on the grassy flats at Clam Lagoon, a somewhat unusual spot for them.
6 – Yellow-billed Loon – we found one from Palisades Overlook, the only individual of the week.
7 – Bar-tailed Godwit – we sometimes found 6-7 in a day, with an occasional individual in high breeding plumage.
8 – Common Snipe – seen and heard well in courtship flight over Contractor’s Camp.
9 – Eurasian Wigeon – as many as three pairs were present at Clam Lagoon for the entire week.
10 – Song Sparrow (maxima) – this local race is impressive by both its size and plumage.

Our favorite mammals were the adult SEA OTTERS carrying their nearly fully-grown young on their chest. We counted a minimum of 24 Sea Otters, mostly in Clam Lagoon.

  1. Will we do any birding the first day?

    YES! – Assuming that everyone’s flight arrives before dark. One of our first targets is only a few minutes from from the airport.

  2. How should I dress for the tour?

    Check the weather for the destination as close to your departure date as possible, and dress accordingly for your comfort level. You can also review our What to Bring page for more information.

  3. Besides clothes, what do I need to bring?

    There are many items the will be useful to you while on a Bird Treks tour. We have put together our list of recommendations on the What to Bring page.

  4. What language are tours conducted in?

    Our tours are all conducted in English, but we do have some experience working with client that don’t speak English well – Some English would be needed for safety reasons. In locations where another language is predominately spoken, a native guide may accompany the tour.

  5. Can you help me book flights?

    Yes, we will always try our best to help with anything at all! We’re here to serve you. However, it is usually easier if you book your flight through your own travel agent as we can’t always get the best deals from your particular country. But we will help whenever needed!

    It is quite possible for you to save money on your airfare by booking it all at one time, home to Adak and back again. In three consecutive years, I flew from Baltimore to Anchorage to Adak and home again, using frequent flyer miles. Each flight cost 25,000 miles and $25 on American Airlines. Also, Alaska Air sometimes has a sale on their tickets to Adak, another way to save money.

  6. Can you book accommodation for us the night before the tour starts or the night the tour ends?

    While Day 1 is usually a travel (arrival) day, and the last day of the tour is usually also a travel day (departure), many people do like to arrive early and/or leave late. We can indeed book extra nights before and after the trip, and we in fact recommend you let us book them, as it avoids confusion and allows us to book the accommodation that is most convenient for the tour.

    NOTE: Most often it is the same hotel or lodge that you use on the first night of the tour, but in some instances, it could be an airport hotel or an accommodation establishment where the guide is staying.

  7. Do you provide trip insurance?

    No, we do not. We find that it is better for trip participants to purchase their own medical, trip cancellation, and baggage insurance through their own insurance provider in the country they reside in. We expect all tour participants to have comprehensive insurance, and we encourage everyone to send us a copy of their insurance documents.

  8. Are meals included?

    For most tours, meals are included in the tour price. This may include a hotel-provided breakfast, or guide-provided box lunches. For dinners, we strive to find interesting and delicious local restaurants – this allows us to give back to the local economy, and find exciting new place to eat.

  9. Does the tour include the flight from Anchorage to Adak Island?

    The tour starts from the Adak Island Airport. You are responsible for your flight from Anchorage to Adak Island.

    It is quite possible for you to save money on your airfare by booking it all at one time, home to Adak and back again. In three consecutive years, I flew from Baltimore to Anchorage to Adak and home again, using frequent flyer miles. Each flight cost 25,000 miles and $25 on American Airlines. Also, Alaska Air sometimes has a sale on their tickets to Adak, another way to save money.