Alaska tourism expected to take a hit this season
Published Sunday, May 25, 2008
ANCHORAGE — With runaway fuel prices, it’s somehow fitting that Jim and Wilma Fowler’s Airstream Safari sports a green sign, “Alaska or Bust,” on the back window of the 25-foot travel trailer.
The couple’s friends were flabbergasted that they were driving 3,800 miles to Alaska from Oak Park, Calif., for a three-month trek in their son’s adopted state. Still early in their sojourn, the Fowlers have put in 5,000 miles and paid $2,300 for the diesel fueling their Ford F20 — and they’re not bust broke yet, said Jim Fowler, 70, a retired aerospace worker.
“It’s getting closer every day, though,” he laughed at an Anchorage RV park.
“It really hurts to have to pay that, but what do you do? We’re not filthy rich, but we’re lucky enough to afford to do this within limitations.”
Alaska’s tourism leaders anticipate many more like-minded travelers to a state where summer visitors far outnumber its population of 640,000. But with burgeoning oil prices and the U.S. toying with a recession, Alaska’s second largest private industry would be lucky to break even with last year’s record season, which saw 1.7 million-plus visitors who spent more than $1.5 billion in the state, according to the Alaska Travel Industry Association.
“I’m concerned. If we are flat overall, I would be pleased,” said association president Ron Peck. “I hope we reach the same level as last year. If I’m wrong and we get above that, I’ll be tickled pink. But I would not bet my next born child that we are going to have an increase in visitors.”
For many travelers, however, the nation’s largest state is a once-in-a-lifetime dream vacation that can take years to plan and save for. It’s a destination packed with opportunities to see moose, bears, caribou, bald eagles and whales, a hunting and fishing Mecca, a frontier full of glaciers, mountains, fjords, outdoor adventures and Alaska Native culture.
Many tourism businesses are banking on that mystique to keep Alaska from joining a national trend that has folks staying closer to home. A random sampling of hotels and B&Bs suggests a solid summer, although the Bed and Breakfast Association of Alaska estimates that bookings among its members are down by as much as 20 percent.
Particularly optimistic are wilderness guides catering to wellheeled clients.
Hugh Rose, a Fairbanks-based photographer and guide, said he is booked solid for 11 excursions, which can run as high as $8,300 for a 20-day trip that includes treks at Prudhoe Bay, Prince William Sound and Denali National Park and Preserve. He said he’s already filled all seven slots for that trip in 2009 and people are waiting for him to set dates for 2010 so they can put down their $500 deposits.
“The clientele I deal with is, for the most part, fairly upper end,” Rose said. “The mortgage crisis did not affect them because their house is paid for. They are upper middle class and retired.”
Some businesses are seeing more foreign travelers taking advantage of the sagging dollar. For that same reason, Alaska can attract Americans forgoing overseas trips, according to the Anchorage Convention & Visitors Bureau.
“Unlike other parts of the U.S., we have the exotic appeal, but we’re a domestic destination,” said spokeswoman Shelly Wozniak. “That’s a boon for us.”
Cruise ship passengers, the backbone of Alaska’s travel industry, are expected to remain on par with last year’s numbers — slightly more than 1 million. But that’s because the cabin capacity remains unchanged and cruise line companies offer deep discounts when necessary to fill their rooms, said John Binkley, president of the Alaska Cruise Association.
Binkley expects spending will be down away from the ships, with passengers buying fewer souvenirs and taking fewer, less expensive, shore excursions.
“It might seem that the numbers look good, but the economic impact is not as good,” he said.
Binkley said bookings are down about 10 percent in his family’s Fairbanks-based business, Riverboat Discovery, which offers sternwheeler day tours on the Chena and Tanana rivers.
Also down are campground bookings, if two RV parks owned by Scott Reisland in Denali National Park and Preserve are any indication. Bookings of caravans — groups of RVs traveling together — are down 50 percent and there have been a lot of cancelations, Reisland said.
Bookings are up slightly at his 105-room Denali Grizzly Bear Resort, which caters to independent travelers. This year he’s seeing more Europeans booking rooms and RV spaces.
“But I still think it’s going to be a bad year for the state, for highway RV traffic,” he said.
Fuel prices — approaching the $4 a gallon mark for regular unleaded nationwide — could be a significant deterrent, judging by an industry consumer study of people interested in driving to Alaska through Canada. Six percent of the respondents said gas prices would be a deterrent in the fall of 2006, when the national average for unleaded was just under $2.25 a gallon. A year later, when the national average for unleaded was inching toward $3 a gallon, the number had jumped to 21 percent.
Still, workers at the visitor center in Tok — the first major Alaska community after crossing the Canadian border — say they’re seeing the same level of RVs as they did last summer. Some RV rental companies are, too.
ABC Motorhome Rentals in Anchorage is offering fuel credits of up to $250 and expects to match last summer’s bookings, which accounted for nearly 3,400 RV rentals. Much of the business coming to the company in the last couple years is from RV owners, said counter manager Kerri Schiavi. They’re opting to fly here for the trip they’ve waited so long to take.
“A lot of people don’t want to put it off,” Schiavi said. “They’re not letting a few hundred dollars difference stop them.”
Not yet anyway.
This summer looks promising for Dan Oberlatz, owner of guiding company Alaska Alpine Adventures, which is an affiliate of outdoor gear retailer Recreational Equipment Inc. and also runs other guided tours. Oberlatz, however, said he set his fees a year ago, never imagining fuel prices would skyrocket, inflating the cost of ferrying clients in vans and air taxis.
He plans to raise next year’s prices on the assumption the cost of fuel will keep climbing.
“If the recession continues, if gas prices continue to go up, 2009 could be the year of reckoning for Alaska tourism,” he said.
On the Net:
www.alaskatia.org
http://akcruise.org
www.anchorage.net
www.alaskabba.com
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Community Discussion
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I was wondering how the economic issues might affect tourism in AK. I've been blessed to visit/vacation three times in the past two years and have had to delay my own personal plans to do an Alaskan cruise.
Maybe in 2010.
Von
I hope this doesn't mean fewer RVs on the highway. Then who would I swear at on my trips to Anchorage? Subaru drivers?
*I* think its already obvious in Fairbanks that the number of RV's is less then usual. Just drive by the parking lot for Pioneer Park. There are barely any there camping out. Also, it HAS to be down... wading thru the grocery store is less frustrating cause there aren't as many people checking out what we pay for food! haha
Alaskan tourism is just one more evil capitalist enterprise being brought down by the good hearted people that want all fossil fuel energy in this country brought to a standstill. Bit by bit, piece by piece, every capitalist venture in this country will be brought to it's knees for lack of energy. And we shall be green.
Even better, the good news is that this will create much new employment. There will be new government "green" jobs, to dole out energy to those wealthy enough to pay for "carbon credits", and to preserve habitat for all of the endangered species that are there to discover or invent. Of course, the peasants will also have to be kept in their place.
And we will have more new jobs, in our new "socialized" health care programs.
And all people shall be equal. Just some people will be more equal than others.
It certainly would be elucidating for all if you would teach us why "capitalism" and "fossil fuel consumption" are synonymous.
glacierles: I hate to break the news to you, but the run-up on fossil fuel prices has been the result of the commodities market, increased global demand, and a falling dollar. If the workers of the world do unite, it will be at the poorhouse.
I can be a smarmy guy, and I enjoy throwing darts as much as you, but in the end I also realize that big problems like the energy crunch result from a complex multitude of causes. There's going to be some tough years ahead, and there won't be any easy answers. But humanity has faced many challenges, and history shows that we always find a way to muddle through. We won't get there by entrenching ourselves in twentieth century ideological battles, however.
We all want to eat, so let's find a way to keep each other from starving.
(Holy smokes, this posting isn't very curmudgeonly of me, is it? I better make an appointment with my therapist before this gets out of hand!)
BOMH---
While it might be painful to admit, our capitalist society runs on energy. At this particular time in our history, that energy is fossil fuels. You may deny it, and believe that renewable energy runs our capitalist society, but that doesn't change the facts. If we have no fossil fuels, at this stage in history, we have no business. No cars, no trucks, no planes, no farm equipment, no construction equipment, no offices, no factories.
While the 2 are not synonymous, they are intertwined.
Curmudgeon---
Smarmy? My dictionary defines as "fulsomely flattering". From there, it is a leap to curmudgeon. You might want to see somebody about that.
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