Alaska
Cancellation alerts

Channel Islands State Marine Park

We watch every site at Channel Islands State Marine Park 24/7, then email you the moment a cancellation opens up.

92% of weekends booked at top sites·Peak Jul–Sep·3 sites
Set up an alert for Channel Islands State Marine Park

Pick your dates, pick the sites you want, we do the watching.

Park favorites

The 3 most popular campsites at Channel Islands State Marine Park

The hardest sites to book at this park, reserving 92% of weekend nights in peak season (Jul–Sep). Set up an alert and we'll email you on cancellations.

Site 951 - Handtrollers Cove Cabin (Rupe Andrews Cabin)

Best here
Ranked #1 of 3
Public Use Cabin · Sleeps 10 · Waterfront

Site 992 - Salamander Cabin

Decent
Ranked #2 of 3
Public Use Cabin · Sleeps 10 · Waterfront

Site 941 - Lincoln Cabin

Wait for better
Ranked #3 of 3
Public Use Cabin · Sleeps 10 · Waterfront

These sites rebook within minutes of being cancelled. Set an alert at Channel Islands State Marine Park and we’ll email you the moment one opens up.

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About this park

Channel Islands State Marine Park is located between 12 and 30 miles Northwest of Juneau along Favorite Channel and Auke Bay. The area is easily accessed by small boat from the Amalga Harbor, Auke Bay, or North Douglas boat launches and is a popular area for wildlife viewing, photography, waterfowl and big game hunting, sport fishing, boating, kayaking, and camping. Access by float plane is also readily available from the Juneau Airport. Within Channel Islands SMP is North Pass a favorite fishing location for salmon and halibut and a popular whale viewing location. The average temperatures in the summer are in the 60's, rare highs hitting 80. The coastal climate is cool, high average rainfall of 60-90 inches creates a wet environment. Have warm clothing and quality rain gear, inclement weather can occur quickly and last for days. Snow can begin to accumulate as early as October. Amongst the islands there will be: abundant bird life (Bald Eagles, white winged and surf scoters, etc.), seals, sea lions, humpback whales and the occasional killer whale. Low tides expose a wealth of intertidal sea life.