Russian River - Kenai, AK - RV Parks

 
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Welcome to Russian River 
The Russian River general area is very well-developed, while maintaining a beauty that is distinctly Alaskan. There are trails, campgrounds, and restrooms. While most of the access points on the Russian River require climbing stairs and walking, there are also areas at Sportsman’s Landing specifically designed for the mobility impaired. There is fishing for everyone!  The Russian River itself is fairly shallow with a nice, hard-packed gravel bottom, which makes it very easy to navigate. The Russian River is a 13-mile-long (21 km) river on the Kenai Peninsula in the U.S. state of Alaska. It flows northward from Upper Russian Lake in the Kenai Mountains through Lower Russian Lake, draining into the Kenai River at the town of Cooper Landing. The native Denaina people called this river Chunuk'tnu. Like the Kenai, the Russian River is famous for its fishing, especially for salmon. There are two runs of sockeye salmon each year, in mid-June and mid-July, and a run of silver salmon in August. There is no direct road access to the river. It can be accessed either by hiking in from several Parking lots in the Russian River Campground (1/2 mile beyond Gwin's Lodge at Milepost 52) or by the Russian River ferry that crosses the Kenai and takes fishermen to the mouth of the Russian. There is a parking and ferry fee. The first parking lot in the Russian River Campground (past the toll booth, lot on the left) is the 2.3 mile walk to the Russian River Falls. This is a moderate relatively flat walk to great viewing platforms of the falls. Bears frequently fish below the falls, and further down stream.

Amenities

Within Facility
+More than 200 remote cabins. Cabins are rustic—as in, no running water, usually no mattresses, and an outhouse rather than a toilet. But they offer solid basics: bunks or sleeping platforms (some even sleeping up to 10), a heating stove, table and chairs, and sometimes a cooking stove. You bring anything else you’ll need to sleep and eat: food, water, bedding and cook stove or utensils.
+Cabins on lakes often have a rowboat you can use to go fishing, explore the shoreline, or set off on hikes.



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