
Salmon built the town and still runs it. Long before the rigs, Cook Inlet canneries packed Kenai reds by the case, and every July the personal-use dipnet fishery turns the river mouth into one of the busiest beaches in Alaska — families with long-handled nets, coolers, and wall tents taking home a winter's worth of fish in a few tide cycles. It is part festival and part harvest, and about as old as the village itself; the salmon that drew the Dena'ina to Shk'ituk't still draw the whole road system south every summer.
What's with Old Town? On a bluff above the mouth of the Kenai River, where the water meets Cook Inlet, stands the oldest piece of Russian Alaska still in use: a white church with blue onion domes, a little log chapel, and the ground where a Russian fort stood in 1791. This is Old Town Kenai, and it holds the longest memory on the peninsula — Dena'ina, Russian, and American, stacked on one windy bluff above the salmon river.
Why People Visit Kenai
Kenai pairs deep history with wide-open Alaska — a living Russian-era church, a salmon river that sets the summer's rhythm, and the long view across Cook Inlet to the mountains. It's accessible, working, and real: a Last-Frontier town that kept its old bones.