Division of Sport Fish
Israel Payton, Director

Anchorage Headquarters Office
333 Raspberry Road
Anchorage, AK 99518


Alaska Department of Fish and Game
Doug Vincent-Lang, Commissioner

P.O. Box 115526
Juneau, AK 99811-5526
www.adfg.alaska.gov


Advisory Announcement
(Released: June 22, 2023 - Expired: August 07, 2023)

CONTACT: Jenny Gates
Acting Area Management Biologist
(907) 262-9368

Kasilof River Dipnetting Area Expanded

(Soldotna) - In an effort to allow dipnetters more opportunity to harvest their household limits of sockeye salmon on the Kasilof River, the Alaska Department of Fish and Game (ADF&G) is expanding the Kasilof River personal use dipnetting area.

Personal use dipnetting from the shore will be allowed in an expanded area from ADF&G markers on Cook Inlet beaches upstream to the Sterling Highway Bridge on the Kasilof River. Dipnetting from a boat is allowed from ADF&G markers located on Cook Inlet beaches upstream to ADF&G markers at approximately river mile 3 of the Kasilof River. This regulatory change is effective 12:01 a.m. Sunday, June 25 through 11:59 p.m. Monday, August 7, 2023.

An Upper Cook Inlet personal use permit and a 2023 resident sport fishing license are required to participate. Dipnetting on the Kasilof River is allowed 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Only Alaska residents can participate. King salmon or nonsalmon species may not be kept in the Kasilof River personal use salmon fishery. Any king salmon, Dolly Varden, or rainbow/steelhead trout caught while dipnetting must be released immediately unharmed into the water.

“Current sockeye salmon passage into the Kasilof River is higher than previous years that exceeded the upper bound of the biological escapement goal. To provide more opportunity to Alaska residents, the personal use dipnetting area for boat and shore anglers will be expanded” stated Acting Area Management Biologist Jenny Gates. “The Department would also like to remind dipnetters that king salmon of any size may not be kept while dipnetting and king salmon may not be removed from the water and must be released immediately.”

The biological escapement goal on the Kasilof River is 140,000 – 320,000 sockeye salmon. As of June 21, a total of 38,026 sockeye salmon have passed the Kasilof River sonar site. The current escapement of sockeye salmon into the Kasilof River is proceeding at a rate that is projected to exceed the biological escapement goal.

For additional information, please contact Acting Area Management Biologist Jenny Gates at (907) 262-9368.

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