Find all your Alaska travel planning needs at Alaska.com
About Alaska space Trip Planning space Packages and Deals space Places to Go space Things to Do space Festival and events

square Search Alaska.com
Go go
spacer
square Featured Advertisers
spacer
spacer
spacer
spacer
spacer
spacer
spacer
spacer
spacer
spacer
spacer square Alaska's cities
spacer

Palmer, Alaska

Agricultural settlers came to valley in 1930s

Alaska.com
At a glance
spacer
spacer
Mat-Su recreational overview
spacer
spacer
0
area map Palmer, Alaska, is in the center of the lush farmlands of the Matanuska Valley.

It's 42 miles northeast of Anchorage on the Glenn Highway and about 10 miles east of Wasilla.

The historic town's population is 4,533.

Palmer's economy is based on a diversity of retail and other services and city, Matanuska-Susitna Borough, state and federal government. Some light manufacturing occurs. Many are employed in Anchorage. More than 70 area residents hold commercial fishing permits.

Palmer is home to 200 musk oxen whose underwool (qiviut) is knitted into garments by Alaska Native women from 12 rural villages. Between 2,500 and 3,500 garments are created each year by these women and sold by an Anchorage cooperative. The 75-acre musk ox farm just east of town is also a tourist attraction.

The University of Alaska has an agricultural and forestry experiment station office and a district Cooperative Extension Service office. The university's Matanuska Research Farm is located in Palmer.

Palmer lies on the Glenn Highway. The Palmer Municipal Airport supports private and chartered services with two paved airstrips, one at 6,000 feet and the other at 3,616 feet. There are seven additional privately owned airstrips in the vicinity. Floatplanes may land at nearby Finger Lake or Wolf Lake. The Alaska Railroad connects Palmer to Whittier, Seward or Anchorage for ocean freight delivery.

Twelve percent of the population is Alaska Native or part Native.

Recreation
The valley is renowned for the annual Alaska State Fair, where local farmers produce large vegetables.

Popular recreation sites include Bonnie, Finger and Long lakes. Sport fishing for trout and grayling is popular in the Kepler-Bradley collection of lakes west of town and for salmon in tributaries to the Knik River. Hikers enjoy Bodenburg Butte and Pioneer Peak, as well as trails in the Hatcher Pass area. Winter enthusiasts also use Hatcher Pass for snowmachining, skiing and snowboarding.

The average temperatures in January range from 4 to 21; in July, 44 to 67. Annual precipitation is 16.5 inches, with 50 inches of snowfall. Strong, often dusty winds arrive in winter from over the Chugach Range.

History
Palmer was established around 1916 as a railway station on the Matanuska Branch of the

Page 1 | 2

pixel
square Photo Galleries
spacer
Matanuska Glacier in the fall
spacer
Tern stretches out
spacer
A duck in hand, another in the brush
spacer
Click to enlarge spacerMore
spacer

spacer
spacer
spacer
spacer
spacer
spacer
spacer
Jobs in Alaska Brochures Shopping Site map Contact us Advertising Info
spacer