After three decades of guiding in Southwest Alaska, I’ve noticed something interesting: the decision to book a wilderness float trip isn’t just about wanting to catch fish. It’s about feeling ready for something different — something real.

The Trust Factor
People spend months researching Alaska fishing. They compare lodges, scroll through photos, read reviews. But what finally tips the balance isn’t another picture of a rainbow trout. It’s trust.
Trust in the person who’ll be responsible for them in genuine wilderness.
That’s why I’m direct about what our trips involve. When I tell you we’re floatplane‑access only, that means you’re truly remote. When I describe the Kanektok’s mouse fishing in July, I’m not overselling it — those fish really do smash mice in the evening. When I mention our Arctic Oven tents, it’s because quality gear matters when weather moves in.

What “Ready” Looks Like
Clients who are ready usually share a few things:
- They’ve done their homework and know what questions to ask
- They understand this isn’t a luxury lodge (and they’re fine with that)
- They’re excited about camp‑based fishing, not intimidated by it
- They value exclusive USFWS permit access to protected waters
- They want authentic wilderness, not a sanitized version
If that sounds like you, you’re closer than you think.
The Investment Mental Game
A week on the Kanektok or Goodnews is a serious investment. What helps people commit is understanding what they’re actually buying: exclusive access to rivers protected by strict regulations, small groups of 4–6 anglers, three decades of my knowledge of these systems, and camps set up properly from day one.
Compare that to lodges where you’re fishing pressure zones with rotating groups of 20+ people. Our clients pay for solitude — and for fish that aren’t educated.

Making It Real
The trips that fill fastest are the ones people can picture themselves on.
July Kanektok trips go quickly because anglers imagine those mouse sessions at dusk. The Goodnews draws people who want char and dollies along with rainbows. The Arolik (by request only) attracts those who’ve already done other rivers and want something even more remote.
Visualization is readiness.
How Booking Actually Works
Booking is simple: a deposit and a trip agreement. I answer questions directly — weather possibilities, physical requirements, what happens if conditions shift. No corporate runaround. You’re dealing with me, and I’ve been running these rivers since 1993.

If You’re Wondering Whether You’re Ready…
You probably are.
The real question is whether this style of fishing — true wilderness float, camp‑based, weather‑dependent but incredible when conditions align — matches what you actually want.
If it does, reach out and tell me what week you’re considering. I’ll help you find the right fit.
Paul Hansen
Alaska Rainbow Adventures
akrainbow.com


