| Dave
Duncan and Sons Kanektok Camps: Seasons
The Kanektok River is one of the very few rivers
in all of Alaska that offers world-class rainbow fishing in the
same water as ocean-bright salmon.
So often one has to choose a lodge located near
trout water, then fly to the coast to catch fresh salmon…making
this river a rare exception.
The king salmon run heats up on the Kanektok in June,
and lasts well into July. The lower river is fairly wide –
spey rods are recommended - and comprised of a series of long, deep
beautiful runs, perfect for swing fishing to these brutes. An average
king here will be 20-25 pounds, with fish over 40 an everyday possibility.
As well, the river’s sockeye and chum salmon runs overlap
the kings, and offer good sport for those looking for a bit smaller
game – sockeyes average 6-8 pounds, and the chums 8-12 pounds.
This same early season stretch will also see the river’s big
leopard rainbows aggressively chasing large streamers – trout
in the 2-4 pound range are common, and even larger fish are routinely
hooked. Look for the annual upstream migration of sea run dollies
to begin in this same time period, making this is a great mixed
bag time of year.
As July segues into August,
two major events occur. First, hordes of chrome silver salmon
invade the river, their sheer numbers inundating every slow pool
and calm backwater in the river. These aggressive-to-the-fly battlers
are a flyrodder’s dream, averaging 6-12 pounds, and willing
to take surface poppers as well as streamers. Secondly, as all of
the earlier-run salmon are now laying eggs, or dying and decomposing,
the river’s trout populations are taking up sharply defined
feeding positions; anglers can either catch big numbers of good-sized
rainbows (and dollies) in shallow spawning redds behind procreating
salmon, or plop heavy flesh patterns against the banks behind drowned
alders in search of fewer, but larger specimens. This will remain
the drill into September, when the camps close down.
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