Alaska 2018 in Review

Mat-Su Valley

Deshka River King Salmon
Deshka River King Salmon in early May

The 2018 season started off early May in Southcentral Alaska guiding on the Little Susitna and Deshka Rivers for iFishAlaska. The boat was a 24′ flat bottom with an outboard tiller jet seating up to 6 clients at a time. King salmon were the target and numbers were low. Catch-and-release fishing on the Deshka River was good, but mostly because so few people were fishing considering you could not keep or technically even remove fish from the water. Even so, people were still happy to be catching fish.

Matanuska-Susitna Valley is an area in Southcentral Alaska south of the Alaska Range about 35 miles north of Anchorage, Alaska. It includes the valleys of the Matanuska, Knik, and Susitna Rivers.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matanuska-Susitna_Valley
Little Susitna River King Salmon
Little Susitna River Kings

The Little Susitna River was regulated to harvesting fish only on weekends. With low numbers and high, turbid water which made fish counting difficult, it went to all catch-and-release and shortly after closed completely to king salmon fishing.

Deshka River King Salmon
Deshka River King Salmon
Deshka River King Salmon
Deshka River King Salmon
Deshka River King Salmon
Deshka River King Salmon with Trevor Smith of TSFLYCO

The Deshka River soon after closed to fishing for king salmon as well as pretty much everywhere else in Southcentral Alaska and the Kenai Peninsula.

Deshka River King Salmon
Deshka River King Salmon

Someone must have been looking out for me because shortly after the closures, one thing led to another and I was offered a position guiding halibut and salmon in Lower Cook Inlet for King of Kings Guide Service and Lodge. We fished out of 20′ Bayrunners with a center console and 4 passengers at a time.

Beach launching Lower Cook Inlet
Launching and landing on the beach requires a special 1980’s “beach rig” suburban with deflated tires
Feeding Eagles in Alaska
Early in the summer, eagles are plentiful along the beach and willing to eat from your hand. Once the salmon start moving into the rivers, the birds follow.
Alaska Range Lower Cook Inlet
Late night sunsets were spectacular.
Mount Iliamna Volcano Lower Cook Inlet Alaska
Mount Iliamna looking approximately 35 miles across the inlet from the lodge.
Mount Iliamna Volcano Lower Cook Inlet Alaska
Mount Iliamna
Halibut Fishing Lower Cook Inlet Alaska
Mount Iliamna on the left, Mount Redoubt on the right. Halibut in the middle.

King of Kings Lodge is a family run service located on the Kenai Peninsula. Our halibut and salmon charters are very unique when compared to most of the other Alaska fishing charters. If you’ve ever experienced a halibut or salmon charter where it felt like they were herding cattle, you will enjoy the refreshing difference of our personalized service.

Halibut Fishing Lower Cook Inlet Alaska

We Fish Near Shore – No long boats rides, wasting time, and being beat up by rough seas. We Fish Shallow Water – No tired arms and back, or reeling up 300 feet of line with a 5# weight.

Halibut Fishing Lower Cook Inlet Alaska
Halibut Fishing Lower Cook Inlet Alaska
Halibut and Salmon Fishing Lower Cook Inlet Alaska
King Salmon Fishing Lower Cook Inlet
King Salmon Fishing Lower Cook Inlet
Fly Fishing Silver Salmon Kenai River Alaska
Once in a week I had a day off to do some fishing myself. This day I did some fly fishing for silvers on the Kenai River.
Fly Fishing Silver Salmon Lower Cook Inlet
Fly Fishing silver salmon on a local stream down the beach.
Fishing Ling Cod and Tiger Yellow Eye Rock Fish Alaska
Later in September we squeezed one last trip in to chase after ling cod with a bonus tiger rockfish.

I will be returning to King of Kings and looking forward to 2019.


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