
Gulo gulo
Photo: Esquilo / CC BY-SA 3.0 (Wikimedia Commons)
Crikey, the ghost of the north country! The wolverine is the biggest weasel on Earth and one of the toughest predators going. You almost never see one out here, but knowing this little tank prowls the Glacier Bay wilderness is a thrill on its own. Absolute unit, so give him room.
📏 Keep your distance: No park-specific distance is recorded. Treat it as a wild predator: keep a wide, respectful distance and never approach or crowd it.
Stay safe
Treat it like any wild predator: keep your distance, store food and scented items securely, and never try to corner or feed it. Encounters are exceptionally unlikely.
If you encounter one
Back away slowly, give it a clear escape route, and never run, chase, or crowd it. Let it move on undisturbed.
Never feed or approach wildlife — it's dangerous for you and often fatal for them.
Where to look
Remote, roadless backcountry only. Glacier Bay is wilderness reached by boat and on foot, and the wolverine ranges its most isolated forest and alpine reaches. No specific viewing hotspot is recorded.
Spotting tips
Accessibility
Not viewable from a vehicle. Glacier Bay is a roadless wilderness reached by boat and on foot, so any wolverine habitat lies deep in the backcountry.
With kids
There is no realistic sighting hazard for families given how rarely wolverines are seen. In the backcountry, keep children close and food stored as you would around any wildlife.
Bring
A long telephoto lens and a great deal of patience. This is strictly a distance-only subject, and binoculars are essential for scanning open backcountry.
Shoot ethically
Never bait, lure, or pursue. Photograph from a distance, keep quiet, and let the animal set the terms of the encounter.
Threats
Trapping, range reduction, and habitat fragmentation have driven a steady decline since the 19th century, pushing wolverines out of the southern edges of their former range.
Protection efforts
As a National Park and Preserve, Glacier Bay safeguards vast tracts of the remote, undisturbed wilderness habitat that wolverines depend on.
How visitors help
Almost certainly not, and that's the honest truth. Wolverines are solitary, elusive, and confined to the most remote backcountry. They are confirmed present, but sightings are extraordinarily rare.
As a dedicated mission, no, the odds are too long. But knowing this legendary carnivore shares the wilderness with you adds real magic to any Glacier Bay backcountry trip.
In practical terms, no. They are famously ferocious toward prey, but they avoid humans and encounters are almost unheard of. Still, treat any wild predator with respect and distance.
No. Glacier Bay has essentially no road system, and wolverines roam deep, isolated forest and alpine country far from the water and any facility.
It is the largest member of the weasel family, a stocky, muscular animal built more like a small bear than a weasel. Exact weights are not recorded in our park data.
Back away slowly, give it a clear path to leave, and never run or crowd it. Then note the location and report the sighting to park staff.
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