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Alaska's Sadie Cove Wilderness Lodge
A private beachfront lodge serving couples, families, and
groups, and offering the entire lodge to private parties of 8 or more.
Seen on The Discovery Channel, ESPN, The Travel
Channel, and in "E" The Environmental Magazine.
Where the Mountains meet the Sea in beautiful
Kachemak Bay State Park, across the Bay from Homer, Alaska
"One of North America's top ten Eco Resorts"
- Natural Home magazine
One of Forbes Traveler's 10 best green hotels
in America.
Beginning in the summer of 2007, a new tree will be
planted in Alaska for each and every guest of the lodge to help reduce global
warming.
Celebrating 28 years of wilderness
fun and adventures
This
beautiful Wilderness Lodge is located on a privately owned, remote beach
inside Alaska's Kachemak Bay State Park, midway between the villages of
Seldovia and Halibut Cove, and only 10 miles by boat from Homer, Alaska,
the “Bear Viewing Capital of the World.” (and also the gateway town for
the Kenai Fjords National Park, Lake Clark National Park, and Katmai
National Park.)
Custom built in the mid 1970's from driftwood that was milled by hand,
piece by piece, into lumber by owner/artist Keith Iverson and accessible
only by boat, float plane, or helicopter, Sadie Cove Wilderness Lodge
offers the visitor a unique opportunity to participate in Alaska's
wilderness lifestyle in a genuine, year-round, Alaskan home and lodge.
It has been said by many guests of Sadie Cove Lodge that few places on
earth can match the natural, untouched wilderness setting and natural
ecology of Sadie Cove. Built as a year-round home in 1973 and
established as a full-fledged beachfront / ancient forest / ecologically
conscious lodge in 1981, owners Keith and Randi Iverson invite you to
celebrate 36 years of residency and 28 years of full-service lodgings
in 2009.
The early Alaskans camped here seasonally to make stone
tools and gather berries, clams, mussels, seals, and sea birds for their
subsistence. This historic link was recognized by anthropologists who
explored the bay in the 1940's searching for the middens and the cave
paintings that are on what is now the lodge property. Today, to retain
it's peaceful atmosphere, Sadie Cove Wilderness Lodge serves a small
number of overnight guests only. Additional patrons are never brought in
for meals, equipment rentals, the lodge's signature tours, or sales
of any kind. With a small guest capacity and a non-commercial, homey
atmosphere, you will have the time and space to feel comfortable and
form new friendships. At Sadie Cove Wilderness Lodge you can surround
yourself in wilderness, not tourists.

The Lodge is run completely on a
non-polluting, alternative energy system of wind and hydro power which
supply the entire grounds with energy to spare. The crystal clear
mountain spring water is the purest on earth and may well be the most
delicious, well oxygenated, and freshest natural water you have ever had
the opportunity to drink.
Standing
between the dramatic vertical peaks of Sadie fjord are a variety of
accommodations in private, hand-crafted cabins - a sauna and bath house
next to a rushing creek; a family entertainment lounge, a dining hall
complete with professional chef and an Alaskan sized fire pit.
Surrounding the Lodge is a network of trails and seacoast walks. There
is a fleet of sea kayaks for you to explore the ocean waters with and at
low tide you can see starfish, sea anemones, shells, and a tremendous
variety of sea life from your kayak or by simply walking the beaches. A
team of guides from the Lodge will introduce you to sea otters, bald
eagles, seals, whales, harbor porpoise, tiny eels, bears, mountain
goats, and Alaska's unique birdlife and ancient forests.
The atmosphere is laid back, peaceful, and extraordinarily
different from the buzz of everyday life - a great place for a wedding,
a honeymoon, a holiday, a family reunion, or a long-needed rest.
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Bald eagle chicks snug in their nest |
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Humpback breaching |
Activities
include bear viewing, whale watching, eco-tours, beachcombing,
hiking secret nature trails for use of lodge guests only, wildlife
photography, sea kayaking, glacier kayaking, river rafting,
clamming, fishing, touring the neighboring villages of Seldovia and
Halibut Cove, glacier touring, flightseeing, beach fires, saunas, or
just relaxing in the hammock with a good book. Sea kayaks,
shore-fishing, and halibut fishing gear are provided to guests at no
extra charge. Full of character in every aspect, Sadie Cove is
unique, personal, fun, adventurous, and positively memorable.
Through the years, Sadie Cove Wilderness Lodge has attracted
artists, writers, ecologists, conservationists, adventurers, and
peace-seekers alike yearning to experience the beauty, friendship,
service, and tranquility that can be found at this very special
place.
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Come join our adventure! |
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Recommended by "E" The Environmental Magazine,
Forbes, Conde Nast Traveler, Small and Elegant Hotels, Uncharted
Outposts, Earthfoot, Adventure Quest, Green Globe, Green Hotels,
Luxury Travel Magazine, and Natural Home Magazine. |

Let's take a walk around the lodge

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Green Star Award
winner
for waste reduction and
pollution prevention efforts. |
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For a translation
en français, auf Deutsch, in italiano, en español,
dans les portugais click here!
Alaska's Sadie Cove Wilderness Lodge
Inside Kachemak Bay State Park
Box 2265
Homer, Alaska 99603
1-888-283-7234 (Toll free)
907-235-2350
email@sadiecove.com
Systems fail everywhere from time to time, especially in
Alaska. If you leave us a message and you don't hear back from us within
24
hours, your message was lost so please contact us again. We return all messages
within 1 day.
Beginning in the summer season of 2007 a
new tree will be planted in Alaska for each and every guest of the lodge in
order to offset the carbon emissions that are the inconvenient result of travel.
We look forward to a new forest of Birch and Spruce one day as a fond
remembrance of everyone that has shared our adventure and as an example of what
2 folks in the wilderness can accomplish for the environment with the help of
others. When we say "Thank you for sharing our adventure", we really mean it.

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