Alaska Aurora Guide
Seward Highway, Alaska: The Most Scenic Drive in North America
The Seward Highway between Anchorage and Seward is an All-American Road — one of 41 in the entire country. A photographer who has driven it over 100 times shares the best stops, what to photograph, and why Day 3 of the Alaska Northern Lights Tour covers the entire route.
Learn moreDog Sledding at an Iditarod Kennel in Alaska: What Actually Happens
What actually happens when you dog sled with an Iditarod-heritage kennel in Alaska's Mat-Su Valley. A firsthand guide — the harnessing, the sprint, the dogs — and why winter departures of the Alaska Northern Lights Tour include this as a fully included Day 2 experience.
Learn moreMatanuska Glacier, Alaska: What It's Actually Like to Walk on 10,000-Year-Old Ice
Walk on 10,000-year-old blue ice at Matanuska Glacier, two hours from Anchorage. A National Geographic photographer shares what it actually feels like — the color, the sound, the scale — and why this is Day 2 of the Alaska Northern Lights Tour.
Learn moreDo Animals React to the Northern Lights? What Alaska's Moose, Eagles & Dogs Actually Do
A hundred aurora nights gives you time to watch. Hasan shares what he's witnessed — including the sled dogs at Happy Trails Kennel on the night the sky exploded green.
Learn moreThe Best Month to See the Northern Lights in Anchorage, Alaska
September, February, or March? Hasan maps out aurora probability, crowd levels, and what Alaska looks like in each window — so you can choose your season with confidence.
Learn moreFairbanks vs Anchorage for the Northern Lights — Which Is Better?
Both cities promise the aurora. But the geography, accessibility, and what you see in the sky are very different. Hasan breaks it down after 3 years of chasing both.
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