For those wishing to visit the Pribilofs, a unique experience awaits you on St. George Island.
The Pribilof Islands of Alaska are known worldwide for their vast fur seal population, numbering well over a million, and the myriads of seabirds that migrate to the islands each summer. Indeed, because of the great abundance of wildlife found on the islands, naturalists and birders often compare the Pribilofs to their counterpart in the southern hemisphere – The Galapagos Islands.
Located in the quiet seclusion of the Bering Sea, St. George Island remains in a natural, undisturbed state. Due to its past inaccessibility, few people have ever been to St. George Island; however, the island is now surprisingly easy to visit. You can travel by scheduled prop-jet and commuter airline from Anchorage, some 800 miles over the Aleutian Islands and the Bering Sea.
Upon arrival at St. George Island, you will find a volcanic landscape bordered by steep cliffs, the highest of which rises well over one thousand feet from the rocky shoreline below; the village of St. George, just lightly touched by the twentieth century; a native people, the Aleut/Russian history; lush fields of treeless tundra covered in summer with a multitude of wildflowers; and an exotic array of wildlife–tens of thousands of northern fur seals clamoring on the beaches.
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