Wide Open Spaces
Wide Open Spaces
Wide Open Spaces
Wide Open Spaces
Experience the Energy of Alaska
Experience the Energy of Alaska
Cultural Connections Await
Cultural Connections Await
Cultural Connections Await
Cultural Connections Await
Cultural Connections Await
Cultural Connections Await
Cruise the great rivers of the Last Frontier

Your three-hour tour will take you into the heart of Alaska and a family who has made the rivers of Alaska their way of life for five generations.

Chena Indian Village Walking Tour

Be immersed in frontier living first hand with a guided walking tour of an Athabascan Indian village. You’ll see an Athabascan Indian village with cabins made of spruce logs, a cache used for storing supplies, a primitive spruce bark hut and fur pelts. Our guides will explain how the wolf, fox, martin and beaver were used to provide food and protection in the harsh Arctic climate. They will also share how the Athabascans skillfully survived for over 10,000 years and how they adapted to village life and Western culture in the past century.

At the end of your guided tour, you will have time to explore the village on your own, interact with our guides and visit dogs from Susan Butcher’s kennels.

Bush Pilot Demonstration

See an Alaskan bush pilot takeoff and land right next to the boat! Our pilot will share his stories of village life and explain the vital role planes play in remote Alaska.

Susan Butcher Kennels

Visit the home and kennels of the late four-time Iditarod champion Susan Butcher as we pass Trailbreaker Kennels along the Chena River. Learn first hand about kennel life and the challenges that go into making a champion dogsled team. Dave Monson, Susan’s husband, or a senior handler at Trailbreaker Kennels share stories of life on the trails as puppies play in anticipation of joining the team. Keep your cameras ready; you will not want to miss the dog mushing demonstration!

Steamboat Landing

Trading posts in the early days of Western contact were popular with people in Alaskan Villages, and that tradition continues with the Discovery Trading Post (on-board Discovery III) and Steamboat Landing (onshore). Both stores offer gifts and products that are unique to Alaska and the Native culture. To this day, we strive to follow Captain Jim’s commitment to give visitors “the best value at the best price” by offering Fairbanks’ largest selection of Alaskan souvenirs and gifts.

Alaska at 40 Below

Winter in Alaska can be really cold and chill you to the bone. Winter in Fairbanks, where it often drops to 40 degrees below zero or more, can be downright brutal. With “Alaska at 40 Below”, you’ll step into our specially designed subzero chamber where we keep it a brisk — you guessed it — 40 degrees below zero. That’s a mid-winter day in the upper Alaskan interior. It’s a truly unique experience and visiting Alaska wouldn’t be complete until you’ve tasted 40 below. That is, if your taste buds could function in that cold. Can you take the challenge?

Discovery Dining Hall

If you are hungry, join us for a hearty meal at Steamboat Landing at the Riverboat Discovery. Lunch is $13.95 per adult and $5.95 per child (not included in the Riverboat Discovery ticket price) and is all you can eat hearty miner’s stew (gluten-free beef stew with vegetables), rustic roasted vegetables (vegetarian), apple pecan salad, sourdough rolls and a brownie. We can accommodate every dietary need. Iced tea, ice water and coffee are complimentary; beer, wine and soda are available for purchase. Your meal is all you can eat and will be served family style; each component of the meal will be brought to your table and guests may serve themselves.

Our Story

A family business

The Binkley family’s steamboating tradition goes back over 100 years and five generations. In 1898, when Charles M. Binkley hiked over the Chilkoot Pass with other stampeders, he was not so much in search of gold as he was the chance to build and operate boats on the Yukon and its tributaries. He became a respected pilot and boat builder in the North. His son, Captain Jim Binkley, Sr., followed in his father’s footsteps and piloted freight vessels on the Yukon and Tanana Rivers in the 1940's.

As transportation systems changed in the north, railroads and airplanes began to carry much of the freight. In 1950, noting the coming changes in the freighting business, Captain Jim and his wife, Mary, began a river excursion business focusing on sharing their love of Alaska and its culture with visitors. Over the coming years, Captain Jim and Mary B’s business grew from the Godspeed, a 25 passenger vessel, to the Discovery III, a 900 passenger vessel. Today, Captain Jim’s grandchildren run the company and Mary B is still active in the business.

In addition to growing their sternwheel business, the Binkley’s have added a gold mining attraction: Gold Dredge 8. The family has developed a tour in the heart of the gold fields where the first gold strikes attracted miners from the Klondike. They have incorporated large scale industrial mining and the smaller 'Mom and Pop' side of mining into an all-encompassing tour that also features the Trans Alaska Pipeline and a replica of the Tanana Valley Railroad.

Recommended and environmentally friendly
Check out our other experiences
Strike it rich — guaranteed! Join the Binkley family for a trip through Alaska’s gold mining history at Gold Dredge 8.
Sustainable, wild-caught salmon from the Southeast Alaskan ocean waters; filleted, smoked and packaged to be enjoyed around the world.