About Homer Alaska and it's communities:
You Are Here! Where the water sparkles, glaciers glimmer and volcanoes
stand sentry.Where monstrous fish bite, thousands of shorebirds take
flight and dazzling wildflowers bloom.
If your mouth drops open at the first sight of Kachemak Bay, Cook Inlet
and the surrounding mountains, you aren't alone. Pull out your camera,
but save room for the many sights that await.
Beckoning for attention is Homer's most famous attraction: the Spit,
a curved finger of land left behind thousands of years ago by glaciers
that once blanketed Alaska's Kenai Peninsula. Today, commercial, sport
and charter fishing boats, water taxis, ferries, research ships and U.S.
Coast Guard cutters tie up in the harbor located on the Spit. Small shops
open their doors to Spit guests in the summer. Restaurants, ice cream
stands and espresso shops provide points where thousands of guests from
around the world converge for a taste of spectacular Alaska scenery.
The waters of Cook Inlet and Kachemak Bay are home to salmon and "barn
door" halibut, as well as orca and humpback whales. The pristine
conditions support world-class oyster farms. Surrounding forests are
claimed by black and brown bear, moose, wolves and other creatures.
A pulsing creative spirit energizes this community of 5,400 residents,
the Kenai Peninsula's second largest city. Its spark is evidenced in
area galleries, theaters, musical productions and brightly painted shops.
Must-see attractions include the award-winning Pratt Museum; the Center
for Alaskan Coastal Studies, which provides in-town and across the bay
opportunities for learning about the environment; and the Alaska Islands
and Ocean Visitor Center, which opens the door to the Alaska Maritime
National Wildlife Refuge that stretches along most of Alaska's 47,300
miles of coastline.
Article courtesy of http://homeralaska.com/
See also Homer
Data