
The pioneers who came — the Mullens, the Hershbergers, and dozens of others — took up homestead claims of up to 160 acres, grew gardens under glass against the short northern season, fished the river for their tables, and slowly turned a clearing at the highway junction into a real community. Soldotna incorporated as a city in 1967, one of the rare Alaska towns whose founding generation lived to see it. Many proved up their claims with little more than a tent, a stove, and a few hard seasons of clearing and building.
And then there is the river that made it: the Kenai. Glacier-fed and an almost unreal turquoise, it runs eighty-two miles from Kenai Lake through the Kenai National Wildlife Refuge to Cook Inlet, and the Lower River — the famous water — begins right at the Soldotna bridge. All five Pacific salmon run it, along with trophy rainbow trout and Dolly Varden. It is the most popular sportfishing river in Alaska. On a clear day the water glows almost neon against the dark spruce, the color of glaciers somewhere far upstream.
Why People Visit Soldotna
Visitors come to Soldotna for the Kenai River and stay for everything around it — the salmon runs, the wildlife refuge, the homestead history, and an easy, river-centered pace. It is the natural base for the whole central Peninsula, with drift boats and fish camps along the water in summer and the northern lights overhead in winter. Active, welcoming, and built around its river, Soldotna rewards anyone drawn to the great Alaska outdoors in any season.