Campsite #S11 at Baranof Lake Cabin, AK
Cabin Site #S11
6 people | |
0 | fair |


Campsite Reviews (6)
5.0 out of 5
5 star | | 50% |
4 star | | 33% |
3 star | | 0% |
2 star | | 17% |
1 star | | 0% |
The cabin is only accessible by float plane--it cost ~$950 (each way) to charter a Cessna 206 with Ward Air for the 45-minute flight from Juneau. On clear days you can fly from Sitka, but on overcast days the surrounding mountain tops are in the clouds, so you'd have to fly completely around Baranof Island, which might take about as long as flying directly from Juneau anyway. The small fishing resort at Baranof Warm Springs is ~1/4-mile past the easterly end of the lake, down a trail to Chatham Strait. Unfortunately, we couldn't row that far because one of the oarlocks on the skiff was broken.
You are truly on your own here, although incredibly, there is cellular coverage from the same tower that serves Warm Springs. Bears weren't a problem; I only saw one set of brown bear tracks on the westerly shore--none near the cabin. But you might want something if you hike down the trail to Warm Springs, because brown bears fish in the river that runs along it during salmon runs.
Be sure to bring warm clothes, sleeping bags and pads, and enough food. We used a Coleman propane stove with extra 1-lb cylinders. There is a woodshed next to the cabin for the wood stove--bring firestarter sticks for the stove. I used UV disinfection for the water we hauled from a creek about 100 yards west of the cabin.
The cabin is only accessible by float plane--it cost ~$950 (each way) to charter a Cessna 206 with Ward Air for the 45-minute flight from Juneau. On clear days you can fly from Sitka, but on overcast days the surrounding mountain tops are in the clouds, so you'd have to fly completely around Baranof Island, which might take about as long as flying directly from Juneau anyway. The small fishing resort at Baranof Warm Springs is ~1/4-mile past the easterly end of the lake, down a trail to Chatham Strait. Unfortunately, we couldn't row that far because one of the oarlocks on the skiff was broken.
You are truly on your own here, although incredibly, there is cellular coverage from the same tower that serves Warm Springs. Bears weren't a problem; I only saw one set of brown bear tracks on the westerly shore--none near the cabin. But you might want something if you hike down the trail to Warm Springs, because brown bears fish in the river that runs along it during salmon runs.
Be sure to bring warm clothes, sleeping bags and pads, and enough food. We used a Coleman propane stove with extra 1-lb cylinders. There is a woodshed next to the cabin for the wood stove--bring firestarter sticks for the stove. I used UV disinfection for the water we hauled from a creek about 100 yards west of the cabin.