Sockeyefest on the Alagnak: Alaska Rainbow Adventures’ Early July Float If you’ve fished Alaska long enough, you already know what early July means on the Alagnak. The sockeye are running, the bears are on the gravel bars, and the river smells like it’s alive — because it is. We call it Sockeyefest. Not because we…
Alaska Float Fishing Trip
The Reality of Alaska Weather:
Why Our Camp Systems MatterAlaska doesn’t care about your plans. Out here, weather is a living thing—unpredictable, fast-moving, and capable of reshaping a day in minutes. On a multi-day wilderness float, you’re not dipping in and out of the elements. You’re living in them. A bluebird morning can turn into a cold front by lunch….
Are You Ready for a Wilderness Float Trip? Here’s How You Know
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…
“Thinking about fishing this year? Read this before another year slips by”
The Arithmetic of the River Why 65 Isn’t 45 I’ve been guiding anglers in Southwest Alaska since 1993. That’s over three decades of watching people step out of float planes onto remote gravel bars, and there’s one thing I hear more than anything else: “I should have done this twenty years ago.” They’re not wrong….
August Rainbow Trout Fishing on Moraine Creek: Why Float Trips Matter, and Why We’re Different
Let’s be straight about something: Moraine Creek in Katmai National Preserve is not a secret. Multiple lodges fly clients there daily. Other float operators run trips. DIY rafters access it. Some sources estimate dozens of anglers on peak days during the August salmon spawn. The creek is popular because it delivers consistently massive rainbow trout,…
Why We Do Trips the Way We Do: The Alaska Rainbow Adventures Approach to Alaska Float Fishing
Why We Do Trips the Way We Do Spend a week on any of the Epic Alaska float trip waters we can take you to, and you’ll understand something that took us decades to refine: the wilderness already provides all the challenge you need. The river, the weather, the miles, the daylight that never really…
Solo Anglers Welcome — You’re Not Really Alone Out Here
A lot of anglers dream about Alaska but hesitate because they don’t have a partner ready to commit to a float trip. It’s understandable—but unnecessary. Some of the strongest, most memorable guests we’ve ever had stepped off the floatplane alone. Here’s the truth: on these rivers, you’re never really solo. Our boats carry two anglers,…
The Togiak National Wildlife Refuge: Where Rivers Run Free and Cultures Thrive
In the heart of Southwest Alaska, where the Ahklun Mountains meet Bristol Bay, lies one of North America’s most remarkable wilderness sanctuaries. The Togiak National Wildlife Refuge sprawls across 4.7 million acres—an expanse the size of Connecticut and Rhode Island combined—encompassing a landscape so diverse and pristine that it defines what true wilderness means in…
Fishing the Dolly Llama on Southwest Alaska Float Trips
On Southwest Alaska’s rivers, you need a fly that sinks fast, fishes itself, and survives log jams. The Dolly Llama delivers on all three counts, which is why it’s overtaken even the legendary Egg Sucking Leech as the go-to pattern on Alaska Rainbow Adventures floats from the Kanektok to the Arolik. This articulated predator is…
The Early Season in Southwest Alaska: When Wilderness Rivers Come Alive
Remote, unspoiled, and accessible only by floatplane—the wild rivers of Southwest Alaska’s Bristol Bay region represent some of the finest trout fishing on earth. The Alagnak River flows through wilderness that has supported salmon runs and trophy rainbow trout for thousands of years. This is leopard rainbow country, where heavily spotted trout grow to massive…









