Alaska Cruise
Inside Passage Cruise
Take a 7 night cruise from either Vancouver or Seattle along Alaska’s inside passage and visit some great destinations such as Skagway and Juneau.
The Glaciers Cruise
If you want something a little different then take a glaciers cruise where you can sail amongst the icebergs and the cruise line might even pick up a small one to carve a sculpture from it.

Alaska. Region. Overview.
A cruise on a magnificent ship is a great way to meet new companions and to fall for Alaska, the North Pacific’s Bering Sea, and Russia. The cruise season is from mid May to September when the temperatures vary from 10th to 18th century. In August temperatures can reach the low 20 degrees celcius but the weather can change daily.
Whatever the weather cruises care of Ocean Cruises offer visits to the spectacular forested remote islands, waterfalls and glaciers in the coastal stretch between the mountains and the Bering sea. As you sip a rum punch on deck, watch humpback whales, sea birds, arctic fox, fur seals, eagles, glaciers, bears and puffins putting on a show for you from their natural habitat. These beautiful creatures are just some of the amazing wildlife on offer amongst the remote islands.
The Glaciers seven day cruises which leave from Seattle and Vancouver take you North past huge active glaciers through the Gulf of Alaska and Prince William Sound.
The popular seven day Inside Passage cruises between the coast and offshore islands begin and end in Seattle or Vancouver. As you sail further north you will find astounding Skagway and Glacier Bay. Your ship will go South again, stopping at Ports such as Juneau, Sitka and Ketchikan on the way. The Bering Sea is where some of the most remote islands on earth are.
Getting There:
All Ocean-Cruise flights are with either major airlines - Virgin Atlantic, British Midland International, American Airlines, United Airlines - or household name charters - My Travel, Thomas Cook, Air Atlanta, and so on. We can arrange flights on budget airlines too!




















