The Healing Totem Pole, Yaa Naa Néx Kootéeyaa

The Healing Totem Pole, Yaa Naa Néx Kootéeyaa

Natural Attr
Last Updated: July 2026

Type

Cultural Monument

Accessibility

Walk-up view in the Bartlett Cove developed area

Best Season

Late-May through early-September, when Glacier Bay's visitor services are operating; July is the peak.

Busiest Season

July is the peak of Glacier Bay's late-May through early-September visitor season.

Features

A 20-foot yellow cedar totem pole depicting the Huna Tlingit's migration from the Glacier Bay Homeland, the period of alienation, and recent collaboration with the National Park Service, topped by two human figures holding Xunaa Shuka Hit, the Huna Ancestors' House.

Overview

About This Attraction

What you see first is 20 feet of carved yellow cedar rising in Bartlett Cove, capped by two human figures - one in a woven cedar hat, one in the iconic ranger hat - together holding Xunaa Shuka Hit, the Huna Ancestors' House. Yaa Naa Nex Kooteeyaa, the Healing Totem Pole, compresses centuries of history into a single column: the Huna Tlingit's tragic migration from their Glacier Bay Homeland, the painful period of alienation, and the more recent collaborative work between the tribe and the National Park Service. Dedicated in 2018, it stands as a visual record of a relationship still being repaired, and a focal point for conversations about true partnership.

Quick Facts

Type

Cultural Monument

Access

Walk-up view in the Bartlett Cove developed area

Main Features

A 20-foot yellow cedar totem pole depicting the Huna Tlingit's migration from the Glacier Bay Homeland, the period of alienation, and recent collaboration with the National Park Service, topped by two human figures holding Xunaa Shuka Hit, the Huna Ancestors' House.

What You'll See

Carved yellow cedar figures compressing centuries of Huna Tlingit history, crowned by two human figures - one in a woven cedar hat, one in a ranger hat - jointly holding the Huna Ancestors' House. Benches and interpretive exhibits sit alongside the pole.

What Makes It Special

Yaa Naa Nex Kooteeyaa was designed to convey the difficult relationship between the National Park Service and the Huna Tlingit and to honor the work of healing - a rare monument to a park-tribe partnership, capped by paired cedar-hat and ranger-hat figures.

Best Time to Visit

The main visitor season at Glacier Bay runs from late-May through early-September, with the peak in July; outside that window services in the park may be extremely limited.

Safety Considerations

No recorded hazards at the pole itself - it stands in the Bartlett Cove developed area. Parkwide, keep 100 yards from bears and wolves and 25 yards from other wildlife.

Visitor Tips

  • Read the pole bottom to top - it compresses centuries of Huna Tlingit history into 20 feet of yellow cedar.
  • Look closely at the two figures at the top: one wears a woven cedar hat, the other the iconic ranger hat, together holding Xunaa Shuka Hit, the Huna Ancestors' House.
  • Use the benches and interpretive exhibits at the site to take in the full story before photographing.
  • Pair your visit with the nearby Bartlett Cove shoreline and the Glacier Bay Visitor Center.
ℹ️ Data Sources
📖 National Park Service — The Healing Totem Pole, Yaa Naa Néx Kootéeyaa (official page) (checked 2026-07-12) 📖 National Park Service — Glacier Bay National Park & Preserve fees, hours & conditions (checked 2026-07-05) 📖 Climate data: Glacier Bay, Ak Us, 40 ft (NOAA 1991-2020 normals, station USC00503294) 📝 YourNPGuide Editorial

Information is compiled from official sources, verified traveler reviews, and editorial research. Learn how YourNPGuide works →