A man fishes in the Kenai River on July 16, 2018, in Soldotna, Alaska. (Peninsula Clarion/file)

A man fishes in the Kenai River on July 16, 2018, in Soldotna, Alaska. (Peninsula Clarion/file)

Fishing report: Sockeye fishing good on local rivers

Sockeye are still running

A Northern Kenai Fishing Report published by the State Department of Fish and Game on Thursday says the sockeye are still running.

Freshwater Fishing

The Kenai River is open for fishing for all species other than king salmon. The report says fishers are reporting catching their sockeye limits as fish continue to move into the river. The sockeye bag limit from the mouth of the Kenai River to Skilak Lake is six per day and 12 in possession until Aug. 15.

The Kenai River personal use dipnet fishery is closed.

More than 1.9 million sockeye salmon have been counted by sonar on the Kenai River during the late run. This year’s count far outpaces each of the last four years. The escapement goal for the species on the river is 750,000 to 1.3 million and has been exceeded.

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The Kenai River’s late-run of king salmon, which cannot be retained or removed from the water, has as of Wednesday only seen 5,700 large kings. More than 10,000 had been counted at this time last year. This year’s count is also far below the optimal escapement goal for the species of 15,000 to 30,000 fish.

Silver salmon are expected to begin entering the Kenai River this month, and the limit is two per day and two in possession. None have been reported, the department says.

Russian River and the Russian River sanctuary area are open to sockeye fishing. Sockeye are “showing up,” the report says. The daily limit for sockeye salmon on the Russian River and in Russian River Sanctuary is three and the possession limit is six.

On the Russian River, 32,000 sockeye have been counted as of Wednesday in the late run. Numbers have begun to jump up, with Wednesday’s being the highest daily count so far this year at almost 3,600.

The Kasilof River is closed by emergency order to all king salmon fishing, including catch and release or for hatchery salmon. More than 1 million sockeye have been counted on the river, and the report says “Kasilof River sockeye salmon continue to arrive.”

The Kasilof River personal use dipnet fishery is closed.

The escapement goal for Kasilof sockeye is 140,000 to 370,000, exceeded on July 9. Daily counts have fallen to around 5,000 per day from a peak of 99,000 in July.

Saltwater Fishing

Fishers have been successful shore fishing for both halibut and cod at local beaches, the report says.

Local Lakes

Fishing on local lakes “has been good.”

Emergency Orders

Please review the emergency orders and advisory announcements below in their entirety before heading out on your next fishing trip.

Emergency Order 2-KS-1-44-24 closes the Kasilof River to bait and restricts gear to single hook only through Sept. 15.

Emergency Order 2-RS-1-27-24 order increases the bag and possession limit for sockeye salmon, 16 inches or longer, to six fish per day and 12 in possession in all portions of the Kasilof River open to salmon fishing.

Emergency Order 2-KS-1-09-24 closes the Kenai River to fishing for king salmon and prohibits the use of bait and multiple hooks in the Kenai River from its mouth upstream to ADF&G markers located at the outlet of Skilak Lake from 12:01 a.m. Monday, July 1 through 11:59 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 15.

The 2024 sport fishing license can be purchased through the Alaska Department of Fish and game mobile app, or at their website, adfg.alaska.gov.

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