I have very few travel regrets. I traveled to Belgium and I didn’t visit Bruges. I went to South Africa and I skipped Cape Town and a side trip to Victoria Falls, Zambia. Every time I hear about these places I think, “Why did I miss that?” As a result, I now do better research to find the “do not miss” places in the vicinity of my travel destinations. Do not, I repeat, do not go to Alaska and skip Denali. It was, without a doubt, the highlight of the trip for me. I only wish I had spent more time there.
The original name of the highest mountain in North America was Denali, a Native American word meaning high one or great one. It was renamed Mt. McKinley by William Dickey in 1896 when gold was discovered and William McKinley was running for President. The 2 million acre tract of land was named McKinley National Park like the mountain when it was established in 1917. Then in 1975, Alaska restored the name Denali to the mountain but the federal government continued to call it Mt. McKinley. In 1980, Congress expanded the park to 6 million acres and changed the name to Denali National Park and Preserve. Finally, in September 2015, the name of the mountain was also restored to Denali at the federal level by executive order. Confused? Needless to say, all of this was mired in politics but suffice it to say the name of the mountain has been restored to the original Native American name and the national park is named after it.

Entrance to Denali National Park and Preserve
In spite of the distance to Alaska and the relatively small state population, Denali National Park and Preserve hosts over one-half million visitors each year. To reduce traffic and emissions, the park restricts traffic beyond mile 15 to shuttle and tour buses. Green shuttle buses are the hop on hop off variety but there is no narration provided. Fares vary from $27.50 to $52.50 based on time and distance. The tan tour buses provide a narrated tour with a box lunch. Prices range from $70.75 to $165 also depending on time and distance. We were scheduled and assigned to the Tundra Wilderness Tour by the cruise line as part of our package. If you visit the park on your own, reservations are not required but you can schedule your tour ahead of time here.
Our tour started in the afternoon so we hiked some of the trails and checked out the Denali Visitor Center in the morning. Free courtesy shuttles provide transportation from the hotels to the entrance of the park where various hiking trails begin. We chose the Horseshoe Lake Trail which was moderately difficult but people in worse shape seemed to handle it and the spectacular scenery was definitely worth it.

Jim and Sheryl setting off for a hike

Our first view from above on Horseshoe Trail. We climbed down then back up on the hike.

Nary a bear to be found but I was alert, nevertheless

Quiet, peaceful beauty of the trail

Horseshoe Lake

Nenana River

Horseshoe Lake

Horseshoe Lake

Jim on Horseshoe Lake Trail

Sheryl on Horseshoe Lake Trail

After the return climb from Horseshoe Lake Trail
After hiking the 3.2-mile loop, it was on to the Denali Visitor Center to check out the informational materials they had to offer. The displays were beautifully presented with lots of mounted animals that are found within the park.

Denali Visitor Center
The only bear I saw happened to be outside the Visitor Center welcoming visitors. I joined the kids in getting a photo.

Laura and the bear
After a bite to eat in the cafeteria we caught our tour bus that would take us further into the national park.
Our tour guide, a trained interpretive naturalist, was engaging and well-informed, providing us with natural history details galore while keeping an eye out for wildlife.

Our tour guide
The “big five” in Denali are bears, Dall sheep, caribou, moose, and wolves. We hoped to see them all and the sign below raised our hopes even further.

Sign on Park Road
Our first wildlife sighting was of Dall sheep high on the far-off slopes but they are just white dots on my photos. Tip: take a good camera with a telephoto lens if you really want to get the shot.

White dots on the ridge are Dall sheep
Fortunatley, the driver had a telephoto video camera that he showed on a screen in the bus.

Video screen on the bus to see distant animals
We saw lots of caribou. I can’t tell you exactly how many we saw but by the end of the tour, most tourists didn’t bother to look when one was spotted. The first views were exciting, however. Our naturalist told us that mosquitoes relentlessly torment the caribou. They are literally covered in mosquitoes and they look for snow or mud to bury themselves to escape the misery.

Caribou

Caribou laying in the dirt trying to avoid mosquitoes
Try as we might, we didn’t see any bears, wolves, or moose but we did see beautiful scenery. Many of us tried to capture a bit of it from the bus and each time we stopped.

Denali National Park and Preserve from the tour bus

Denali National Park and Preserve

Denali National Park and Preserve

Denali National Park and Preserve
And then we saw this. The second day of clear, pristine views of Mt. Denali. Our enthusiasm was not dampened in the least by continued views of this spectacular moutain.

Mt. Denali (aka Mt. McKinley)

A shuttle bus on the Park Road with a view of Mt. Denali

Selfie with Mt. Denali

Mt. Denali

Mt. Denali
Based on events of June 2015.