Is Your Trip APLIC-able?

Have you ever wanted to...
Go birding, see Denali, visit the Fairbanks Recreation Areas, catch a fish, drive the Alaska highways, hunt wild game, try mineral collecting, visit the National Parks, Preserves, & Wildlife Refuges, stay in a Public Use Cabin, float a river, plot a route on a trail map, purchase USGS Maps, watch wildlife, & more?
The Fairbanks Alaska Public Lands Information Center (FAPLIC) is an integral component of the community of Fairbanks which supports the appropriate use and enjoyment of Alaska's public lands and resources through "one-stop shopping" for public lands information, trip-planning assistance, and resource education. The interagency partnership embodied as FAPLIC encourages visitors and residents to seek meaningful, safe and enjoyable experiences on public lands and inspires to conserve and sustain the natural, cultural and historic resources of Alaska. The APLICs were established by an act of Congress in Section 1305 of the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act of 1980.


FAPLIC has all the information you're looking for to go on your next adventure. Stop in the Morris Thompson Cultural & Visitors Center to plan your trip, watch a movie, and see our expansive interpretive exhibits on Alaska.
Click on the links to the right to start planning your Alaskan adventures!


Monday, April 26, 2010

The Birds Return

Check out the progression of returning birds as they are observed in and around Fairbanks at the Alaska Bird Observatory website.
Keep your eyes and ears at full attention, for you never know when you'll see something rare!

Interior Alaska Top 10 Spring To Do's:

1. Get your bike tuned-up to ride to work 2. Build and put up a birdhouse 3. Be the first to float the Delta-Clearwater 4. Listen to all the bird songs of spring 5. Go for a hike and get a glimpse of Denali 6. Plug in your freezer 7. Participate in the Spring Bird Count 8. Go fishing for grayling 9. Witness hundreds of cranes fly in to Creamer's Field 10. Search for the first flowers of spring

Alaska Top 10 To Do's

1. See the Aurora Borealis dance in the sky
2. Travel north of 66ยบ 33', beyond the Arctic Circle
3. Pan for gold in a wild Alaskan stream
4. Float part of the Yukon River, the longest in Alaska
5. Set foot on one of Alaska's many glaciers
6. Take a photo of Denali, the "Roof of North America"
7. See the 800 mile long trans-Alaska pipeline
8. Catch some rays under the midnight sun
9. Mush a dog team through the Alaskan wilds
10. Catch a salmon on its annual upstream migration

What the Bear Dug Up: October

Tanana Valley State Forest

The Tanana Valley State Forest's (TVSF) 1.81 million acres lie almost entirely within the Tanana River Basin, located in the east-central part of Alaska. The Forest extends 265 miles, from near the Canadian border to Manley Hot Springs. It varies in elevation from 275 feet along the Tanana River to over 5,000 feet in the Alaska Range. The Tanana River flows for 200 miles through the Forest. Almost 90 percent of the State Forest (1.59 million acres) is forested, mostly with paper birch, quaking aspen, balsam poplar, black spruce, white spruce, and tamarack. About half of the Tanana Basin's productive forest land (1.1 million acres) is located within the State Forest. About 85 percent of the forest is within 20 miles of a state highway.
The Forest is open to mining, gravel extraction, oil and gas leasing, and grazing, although very little is done. Timber production is the major commercial activity. The Bonanza Creek Experimental Forest, a 12,400-acre area dedicated to forestry research, is also located within the TVSF.
The TVSF offers many recreational opportunities including hunting, fishing, trapping, camping, hiking, dog mushing, cross-country skiing, wildlife viewing, snow machining, gold panning, boating, and berry-picking.

Above photo: The Tanana Valley State Forest, overlooking the Middle Tanana Valley in summer.

Click for Fairbanks, Alaska Forecast
Click for Fairbanks, Alaska Forecast

Did You Know?

When the land of all the National Parks, Preserves, and Monuments in Alaska are combined, they total over 46 million acres and encompass more than 55% of all the land in the National Park Service.