Grewingk Glacier's lagoon sits a short water-taxi ride across Kachemak Bay from Homer, Alaska, and the Glacier Lagoon Packrafting Adventure strings together a full day of saltwater ferry, alpine hiking, and small-boat glacier travel. Departing from Homer Boat Harbor, the trip moves from spruce-studded shorelines into an ancient glacier drainage and finally onto a still, iceberg-studded lagoon at the foot of the Grewingk Glacier. Guides lead every step, from loading water taxis to a thorough dryland packraft orientation before you inflate and push off.
Your day begins with a scenic water taxi across Kachemak Bay where sea otters, harbor seals, and puffins are common companions. On shore you shoulder a roughly 25-pound drybag containing an Alpaka packraft and safety kit, then follow a trail that climbs through alder and Sitka spruce into a glacially carved valley. The hike—about three miles round trip over uneven, sometimes mossy terrain—traces moraines and braided drainages that speak to the glacier’s sculpting power.
At the lagoon, guide-led training covers inflation, paddling technique, water reading, and self-rescue so paddlers of varied experience can feel secure. Once on the water, the scale shifts: towering blue-tinged icebergs drift in glassy water, calved fragments echo against the glacier face, and the active edge of Grewingk looms across the lagoon. The geology is obvious—silty glacial meltwater, moraine ridges, and exposed glacial ice layered with sediment—offering an intimate lesson in how ice shapes coastline and habitat.
This trip is special for its blend: a marine transit, a backcountry hike, and a quiet packraft voyage amid ice. It’s a standout on the Kenai Peninsula because it makes the glacier accessible without heavy mountaineering or motorized landing—packrafts let you move where larger boats can’t, preserving quiet and enabling close frontal views of the glacier and adjacent sea cliffs. Guides focus on safety and low-impact travel; small group size keeps disturbance minimal and improves wildlife spotting.
Expect a full day—8 to 9 hours—of active travel and layered weather. Recommended for people comfortable carrying a moderate pack and hiking uneven trails; minimum age 12. Bring waterproof layers, camera with spare batteries, and a willingness to trade comfort for a front-row view of Alaskan ice country.
Whether you’re chasing iceberg light for photos or simply want to feel the hush of a glacial lagoon, the Glacier Lagoon Packrafting Adventure turns a classic Homer outing into a hands-on wilderness experience that reads like an education in ice, sea, and shoreline.
Local guides point out tide-fluted bedrock, seasonal kelp beds, and bird colonies, explaining indigenous place names and recent glacier retreat observations so visitors leave with photos and context. The full-day format rewards patience; weather can change quickly, but the views and close encounters are worth the effort.