This deal has expired.

$71 for a Wilderness Dog-Sled Ride & Tour for Two from Seavey's Ididaride Sled Dog Tours ($142.14 Value)

Seavey's Ididaride Sled Dog Tours
4.8

Similar deals

Family of Iditarod competitors raises champion sled dogs and takes visitors on 2-mile wilderness rides before leading kennel tours

Learning something new requires clearing space in your head, which is best accomplished by sneezing out brain cells until you can't remember cursive. Make room for new skills with this Groupon.

The Deal

The 2-mile wheeled sled ride takes visitors through the base of Resurrection Mountain and along Box Canyon Creek as guides spin stories about raising and racing the dogs. Afterwards, the guides lead a humorous, behind-the-scene tours of the Seavey family kennel.

Need To Know Info

Promotional value expires Jun 26, 2014. Amount paid never expires. Limit 1 per person, may buy 1 additional as gift. Limit 1 per visit. Reservation required. Valid May 1st through June 26th, 2014. Merchant is solely responsible to purchasers for the care and quality of the advertised goods and services. Learn about Strike-Through Pricing and Savings

About Seavey's Ididaride Sled Dog Tours

The Seavey family is synonymous with dogsledding. They've raised sled dogs for three generations—nurturing and training the canines until their legs turn into blurs of speed and power capable of traveling more than 100 miles per day. The decades of hard work have certainly paid off. Today, the family counts six human Iditarod racers and more than 100 champion sled dogs amongst their ranks. Dan Seavey, the man who started it all, was even inducted into the Iditarod Hall of Fame.

Seavey's Ididaride Sled Dog Tours let the general public peak behind the dog-sledding curtain, tour the kennels, and mush these impressive canines first hand. In winter months, the trainers and their dogs take visitors on sled rides past the Resurrection River and right to Exit Glacier. During summer, helicopters transport visitors up to the top of the glacier, where they meet the dogs and learn to drive sleds for themselves. Alternatively, the dogs can pull a wheeled sled along Box Canyon Creek, as guides spin stories of Iditarod races and the sled dogs roll their eyes because they've heard it all before. Whatever the tour, the Seaveys go out of their way to make people feel welcome; they even rent out cabins for overnight stays.

Company Website