Alaska Vacation Travel Video Guide



Travel video about destination Alaska. Alaska is a country situated on the edge of the Arctic and dream destination for wildlife and nature lovers who answer to …

43 thoughts on “Alaska Vacation Travel Video Guide

  1. Lee gorsuch says:

    I am American and don’t know what this man is saying sometimes. He gets letters mixed up . R are R and A is A for some reason he gets them
    Mixed up . So I am sitting here
    Trying to figure out what the
    Man is saying. Did he say one
    Town survives on salads & lumber ? I would thing being
    So close to ocean it would be
    Fish – lobster and alike (seafood) . This video is a bit
    Confusing. Maybe next time
    Have American Narrate .

  2. Evelyn Gray says:

    slept like a baby last night…. Waking up every 3 hours crying for food. Hey Do you intend to laugh so very hard ? Then search this on google "makemelaugh8282" or "make me laugh 8282"

  3. zahra vasheghani says:

    Hi i am an iranian iam living in tehran . i am intrested go to alaska for living . i am 49 years old mareed have a girl 12 year . i decides start a beassenes of rug and carpet hand made old from iranian culture .maybe i go to alaska . please show me way and guoid me . haev a nice time and good baye . see you in alaska

  4. 3 Borders says:

    Come to Los Anchorage! Get some meth, steal a car, steal food from the grocery store. Get caught. Start over again that night. Welcome to Mayor Ethan melting pot! It’s such a sweet thing.Maybe get shot, get stabbed. Come get some.

  5. Eric Kamov says:

    A very nice tour of the highlights of The Last Frontier! – Good to see both Ketchikan and Anchorage again after so mant years . . . . . . .

  6. Neil O'Neal says:

    At 00:50 when the voice over says, "Alexander archipelago in the gulf of Alaska", you should show a map, so it makes more sense. Not continue to show scenes of Vancouver. That's laziness, not to make the effort to find a map and insert it appropriately.

  7. Tulsatom Bob says:

    I took this trip, plus Vancouver to Calgary by train and I would highly recommend this trip. I went in the first part of September and ended the trip in mid-October. It was a bit foggy most of the time, but very enjoyable!
    BTW, I bought a nice watch in Skagway, because you can buy jewelry and watches Duty-Free.

  8. Jim Green says:

    EXPOZA, THIS IS THE 3RD. OF YOUR VIDEOS I'VE WATCHED, AND I MUST SAY THAT I NEVER CEASE TO BE AMAZED AT THE WONDERFUL FILMING JOB YOU DO, THEN MANAGE TO SERIOUSLY DAMAGE IT BY YOUR HORRID JOB OF PRONOUNCING THINGS CORRECTLY, AND GETTING FACTS JUST SLIGHTLY WRONG. THE SAD THING IS IT COULD SO EASILY BE AVOIDED BY TAKING A LITTLE TIME TO ASK LOCALS FOR HELP.
    1) Alaska is an American state, not a country. 2) Just for the record, in the USA, the politically correct term for Indian is now Native American, whereas in Canada it's First Nation. 3: Technically speaking, since Yukon, NW, and Nunavut are all territories, British Columbia is the province in the west, not the SW. 4) The first Alaskan town you visited was KETCH-a-can, not KETCH-a-kn. 5) Juneau is pronounced JEW-no, not ZHEW-no. 6) It should be pointed out that just 200 years ago, the glaciers at Glacier Bay were still all the way out at the bay's mouth, as they were 6000 years earlier. 7) The famous Alaskan dogsled race is the eye-DIT-uh-rod (Iditarod), not eye-DEET-uh-rod. 8) The Kenai Peninsula is pronounced KEEN-eye, not KEN-eye. 9) Chugach (Mtns.) is pronounced CHEW-gatch, not CHEW-gack. 10) Anchorage is the largest city, but not the capital; you already correctly identified Juneau as being the capital. 11) The seaplane base in Anchorage is not a river, but Lake Hood, the largest seaplane base in the world. 12) The sea eagle you filmed at the zoo is a bald eagle, the symbol of the USA. The sea eagle is another species. 13) The river in Fairbanks (Tanana) is TAN-uh-nah rather than tuh-NAH-nah. 14) The pipeline terminal is located in
    val-DEEZ (Valdez), not val-DEZ. 15) It's called the Arctic Ocean, not the Arctic Sea. 16) The place where you stopped is Coldfoot, not Coldfort, because that's where some folks got cold feet (lost their courage) and turned around in years past. 17) Once again, almost right, but not quite. Barrow is the northernmost point of inhabited USA, not all of North America, since there are a number of small settlements in the Canadian Arctic, culminating in the Canadian military base of Alert on the northern coast of Ellesmere Island, only 500 miles from the North Pole. 18) Although I'm not absolutely certain, the first moose you filmed back in Anchorage I'm almost certain was actually an elk, based on its muzzle shape and that it had antlers rather than a rack.

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