Reid Inlet

Reid Inlet

Natural Attr
Last Updated: July 2026

Type

Glacial Inlet

Accessibility

Water access required; kayak or tour boat needed

Best Season

Late May through early September; July is peak for stable weather and glacial melt observation

Busiest Season

July peak season; daily tour boat traffic from Bartlett Cove

Features

Reid Glacier descending from Brady Icefield, calm inlet waters, glacial melt (milky-blue), pioneer vegetation (dryas, lupine, fireweed, willows, alders), homesteader-planted spruce trees, beach and shore meadows

Overview

About This Attraction

Reid Inlet is a sheltered cove where Reid Glacier descends directly from the Brady Icefield to the western shore—a rare convergence of tidewater glaciation and serene saltwater. The glacier's melt creates the signature milky-blue water, while the surrounding terrain displays active plant succession: lupine, fireweed, and dryas colonize bare glacial sediment, willows and alders establish footholds, and large spruce trees at the inlet entrance mark the frontier of forest recovery. This landscape captures glacial recession in real time—Reid's 1890 surveys documented the glacier reaching tidewater; today it terminates in the valley, a measurable retreat visible to every visitor.

Quick Facts

Type

Glacial Inlet

Access

Water access required; kayak or tour boat needed

Main Features

Reid Glacier descending from Brady Icefield, calm inlet waters, glacial melt (milky-blue), pioneer vegetation (dryas, lupine, fireweed, willows, alders), homesteader-planted spruce trees, beach and shore meadows

What You'll See

Reid Glacier flowing from Brady Icefield to the inlet's western shore; glacial-flour milky water; active plant succession on recently deglaciated slopes; beach meadows with pioneer wildflowers; harbor seals on inlet beaches; bald eagles; large spruce trees marking forest recolonization frontier

What Makes It Special

Named after pioneering glaciologist Harry Fielding Reid (1890–1892 surveys); 130+ year record of measurable glacial recession (1890 tidewater terminus to today's valley terminus); active plant succession in real time; homesteader-planted spruce forest relics; gold mining history (Ibach claim, mid-1920s)

Best Time to Visit

Late May through early September; peak viewing July when weather is most stable and glacial melt activity highest. Early morning tours (6am departure) offer calmest water and clearest visibility.

Safety Considerations

Glacier hazards: calving ice and deep crevasses on Reid Glacier; expert mountaineers only. Water: tidal currents, 45–50°F temperature, hypothermia within 15 minutes—wear immersion suit and U.S. Coast Guard–approved life jacket. Wildlife: maintain 100 yards from bears/wolves, 25 yards from other wildlife. Weather: rapid fog/wind changes, afternoon squalls common. Never swim or wade in glacial melt water.

Visitor Tips

  • Arrive on the early tour boat for calmest waters and clearest glacier views; afternoon fog common
  • Bring binoculars: harbor seals haul out on inlet beaches; bald eagles hunt over the water
  • Large spruce trees at the inlet entrance are planted by 1920s homesteaders—unique for Glacier Bay, as native conifers have not naturally recolonized recently deglaciated terrain
  • Reid Glacier is negotiable by expert mountaineers with crampons and rope to reach the Brady Icefield, but deeply crevassed snowfield makes this technical-only
  • Watch tidal timing: low tide exposes mudflats and sheltered coves; high tide provides better deep-water kayak access
  • Glacial melt water is silt-heavy ('glacial flour'), extremely cold (45–50°F), and not drinkable—never treat it as swimming water
ℹ️ Data Sources

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