"Many ships enter Tracy Arm around 6am so they can get to Juneau for a port call in time for passengers to go to their shore excursions.
"If yours does: get up early! Then entrance, particularly that first right angle turn is truly spectacular, as the light can be exquisite at that time of day.
"Traveling up Tracy Arm is like going back through geologic history. The fjord's dramatic walls lose their vegetation until they become bare shining rock, shaped and ground smooth by the ice. In many places the mountains plunge vertically into the water, which is more than a thousand feet deep.
"Muir was genuinely moved by the power and the beauty of the glaciers, and he was able to communicate some the this enthusiasm to his companions. Once, when they had the narrow and ice-shoked channel, they turned yet another corner and found what he had come to seek, the glacier itself. While Muir stood in the canoe, sketching the glacier, several huge icebergs calved off, thundering into the water of the narrow fjord. 'The ice mountain is well disposed toward you,' one of the native paddlers said the Muir, 'He is firing his big guns to welcome you.'"
Traveling through the fjord was wonderful. The scenery was absolutely beautiful. The water was this amazing blue-green color. The best part though was that it was the only time during our entire cruise that there was no noise. The fjord is off limits to unnecessary noise. There were no announcements over the intercom and there was no music played on deck. We saw many, many icebergs of various shapes, sizes and closenesses to the boat. Only one cruise ship is allowed in the fjord at a time, so it was only us there.
North Sawyer Glacier - we didn't go down to see the South Sawyer Glacier