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I tried searching for Glacier Bay but didn't get any results back. We're planning on visiting some friends (who dive wet) on their sailboat this summer when they are cruising in Glacier Bay. Is there any diving up there, and is it worth bringing dive gear and drysuits when we come to visit them? What is there to see? And how cold does the water really get? My wife thinks I'm nuts for even considering it, but it's probably the only chance I'll have to dive in Glacier Bay off a sailboat anytime
I tried searching for Glacier Bay but didn't get any results back. We're planning on visiting some friends (who dive wet) on their sailboat this summer when they are cruising in Glacier Bay. Is there any diving up there, and is it worth bringing dive gear and drysuits when we come to visit them? What is there to see? And how cold does the water really get? My wife thinks I'm nuts for even considering it, but it's probably the only chance I'll have to dive in Glacier Bay off a sailboat anytime
I don't know about diving Glacier Bay, you might want to contact the Glacier Bay National Park to find out if they have any information. Lots of coastal Alaska bays have great diving if you can get to them. Logistics and cost seem to be the limiting factor. Drysuits are pretty much standard up here, although some diehards may dispute that point. You may be bombarded by steller's sea lions near a haulout and they can be quite aggressive and very big. If you dive in California you will be familiar with some of the sealife, its just shallower and bigger up here. Lots of anenomies, kelp, rock fish, inverts, etc. The Inian Islands near Glacier Bay have some great dive spots. I spent two days diving the Inian Islands with Nautilus Explorer a couple of years ago. Diving off a sailboat is an art at best, so consider it carefully when you factor in drysuit and weights and the narrower beam, higher freeboard, and limited storage space on a sailboat.
You"ll want to contact NPS if you are actually going into the park. Water temps around Juneau in the summer are mid 40 to 50 degrees. Been a long time since I was in GB, but you might run into some silt from Glacier run off, suppose it depends on where you actually dive. Covediver is right about the sea lions, they are a curious creature and can be a blessing or a curse. Take your camera, and good binoculars, never have done any diving from a sailboat, so good luck there.
Thanks for the fast replies! We've dived off their boat several times in the past, and usually put everything in their Zodiac and dive in and out from there. Mid 40s to 50 degree water sounds tropical compared to what I was expecting
With all the snow hitting Alaska this winter, is Glacier Bay going to be frozen solid and snow covered by the time summer rolls around this year?
GB is going to be silly and there isn't a dive shop around. Im going to be working there this summer at the NP as a bio tech and i plan on doing diving around that area, but for clearer water (+10' of vis) you have to head to the ocean side where the clear water dilutes the suspended sediments. Alaska is strictly drysuit, a few nut heads dive wet and they switch to dry after a few dunks.