Dolly Varden
Among the most beautiful fish in Alaska, Dolly Varden char are spotted with brilliant red, orange, and yellow spots on an olive-green back. They're the perfect companion species to salmon — and when the egg bite is on in September and October, they are absolutely ravenous.
The Dolly Varden Fishery
Dolly Varden are distributed throughout the Kenai Peninsula's rivers and streams, from the main Kenai River down to the smaller roadside streams like Anchor River, Deep Creek, and the Ninilchik River. They share habitat with Rainbow Trout and are often targeted simultaneously.
During salmon spawning season (late August through October), Dolly Varden shift their diet almost entirely to salmon eggs. This "egg bite" is one of the most exciting freshwater fishing phenomena in Alaska — fish after fish hammering a bead or egg pattern drifted through a spawning riffle.
While the bag limit is 2 fish per day in most waters, we practice catch-and-release for Dolly Varden to protect the population. These beautiful fish deserve to be admired and released to fight another day.
Techniques
Beads — The #1 Method
A 10–12mm bead in orange, pink, or red rigged 1.5 inches above an octopus hook is the most deadly method during the egg bite. Dead drift under a float through spawning areas.
Fly Fishing
Egg patterns (Glo Bugs, Crystal Meth Eggs), flesh flies, and classic wet fly patterns. A 6-weight rod with a floating or light sink-tip line handles 90% of Kenai Peninsula Dolly situations.
Spin Fishing
Small spinners, spoons, and plugs work throughout the season, particularly in June and July before salmon spawn. Gold and silver blades with red or orange accents are proven producers.
Fish for Dolly Varden & Rainbows
Our fall trout and char trips (Aug–Oct) target both Rainbow Trout and Dolly Varden on the egg bite. These are some of the most technical and rewarding fishing days on the entire Kenai Peninsula.
Trout & Char Trips