Skip to main content
x

Think you've captured the perfect underwater moment? Enter the Scuba Diving Photo Contest now for your chance to be featured and win!

Submit your best shots today
Close

Scuba Diving in Kenai National Park, Alaska - Dive Conditions and Information

By Ted Alan Stedman | Published On July 28, 2016
Share This Article :

Scuba Diving in Kenai National Park, Alaska - Dive Conditions and Information

This year marks the 100th anniversary of our National Parks, a century of stewardship first derived from the uniquely American notion that magnificent lands are worth protecting. Now numbering 59, the parks aren’t all purple mountains majesty, but rather a diverse collection that includes islands, seashores, lake shores, reefs and surrounding waters.

MORE DIVES IN THE USA

seals alaska fjords rocks park

Harbor seals rest on rocks in Alaska's 670,000-acre Kenai Fjords National Park. Established as a national park in 1980, Kenjai is the perfect site to explore the pinnacle of cold-water habitats.

Jennifer Idol

Dive Conditions and Facts

Depth: Between 50 and 80 feet
Dive Access: Boat
Water Temperature: 36 to 55 degrees F
Visibility: 30 to 40 feet in summer, 50-80 feet in winter
When to Go: May through September
Dive Shop: Dive Alaska is a full-service dive center based in Anchorage with boat charters into Resurrection Bay.
Price: Two- to three-tank dives cost $150 per person.

Scuba Diving Overview

With soaring mountains, dense forests and about 40 active glaciers capping a rugged coastline chiseled by immense fjords, this 670,000-acre primordial park is the epitome of wilderness diving. Hundreds of inlets, bays, lagoons and small islands form a liquid labyrinth virtually untouched by mankind, a result of both its isolation on the Kenai Peninsula and its establishment as a national park in 1980. The beneficiaries of this protected status comprise a mega-fauna hit list that’s the pinnacle of cold-water habitats: Dall’s porpoises, sea otters, barndoor halibut, Steller sea lions, orcas, wolf eels, salmon sharks, gray and humpback whales, giant Pacific octopuses and humongous ling cod. Add to these a supporting cast of sea stars, anemones, tunicates, ascidians, sponges and other invertebrate life fueled by nutrient-rich waters, and divers can knock off a life-list ensemble as rare as the Pleistocene-era glaciers calving into the Pacific. Of course this e-ticket diving isn’t for the inexperienced or uncommitted. The park is remote. Major tidal currents demand vigilance. Water temps top out in the mid-50s, making drysuits mandatory. But if diving Alaska’s wilderness is a conspicuous blank spot on your dive log, just consider all this in the price.