You can call me surprised. After the 4-5 hour Riverboat tour, I'm another happy customer who not only drank the kool-aid, but came away better for it. The family that runs the boat definitely has their act together.
The Riverboat tour on the Chena was on the itinerary of our cruisetour. I was expecting a Disney ride and a full court press to get you to buy souvenirs. I can happily report that they dial the "kitsch" factor WAY down, and manage to give you an imformative and impressive sampling of Alaskan culture without making it feel like you've been shanghaied for your tourist shekels. No minor feat, that.
You get a look at a working sled dog breeder's kennel and a 101 course in floatplanes. Ar the extended stop at a mock-up of an Athabascan native village, the tour guides (mostly native Alaskan teens who are attending the University of Alaska in Fairbanks) do a great job of providing a thumbnail sketch of their culture without giving you the impression that you're standing on a Hollywood backlot. They do a bang-up job.
Free coffee and hot chocolate on the boat. There's a small gift shop on the boat and a larger one at the pier if you're so inclined, but nobody's beating you over the head to go shopping. The boat is a family business. You don't get the sense that you're being herded around by sinister corporate forces.
Gotta give credit where it's due. Normally, I would have looked at the brochure and written off Riverboat as a tourist trap.
I stand corrected.
Much better than I had any reason to anticipate, and a nice way to spend your afternoon in Fairbanks.
Also, accdientally found Big Daddy's BBQ about 2 blocks from the visitor center in town. Nobody on our tour bus mentioned the place. Their AYCE lunch buffet (pulled pork, cornbread, mashed potatoes, etc.) is great, and there's a full bar with a nice spread of Alaskan microbrews. Couldn't believe you could find good "Q" at this latitude, but their stuff's on par with any good joint I've eaten in south of the Mason-Dixon line.




