$1,500-3,000/night
Kamchatka River Camp is a seasonal fly-out fishing operation based on the remote Zhupanova River in Russia's Kamchatka Peninsula, one of the last truly wild places on Earth where Pacific salmon, steelhead, and rainbow trout exist in numbers that recall the great runs of centuries past. The camp provides access to rivers and streams that flow through a volcanic landscape of steaming fumaroles, snow-capped stratovolcanoes, and tundra valleys patrolled by Kamchatka brown bears — the largest brown bears in Asia. The fishing experience here exists on a scale and in a setting that has no parallel in the modern angling world.
The camp itself consists of comfortable weatherproof tents erected on wooden platforms along the riverbank, with a central dining tent, sauna, and gathering area. Helicopter flights from the camp deliver anglers to a rotation of rivers each day, accessing water that may see fewer than fifty anglers in an entire season. The Zhupanova's resident rainbow trout, known locally as mikizha, are powerful, aggressive fish that readily attack mouse patterns, streamers, and large dry flies, with specimens routinely exceeding twenty-five inches. Pacific salmon runs — chinook, sockeye, coho, chum, and pink — cycle through the rivers from June through October, providing an ever-changing tableau of fishing opportunities.
The guiding staff combines Russian field expertise with international fly fishing knowledge, and the camp's logistics are managed with military precision to ensure safety and quality in this extraordinarily remote environment. Brown bears fish alongside anglers on virtually every outing, and the proximity to active volcanoes adds a geological drama that makes every day on the water feel like an expedition into the primordial wild.
Book directly with Kamchatka River Camp for the best rates and availability.
June through October
10 guest capacity
$1,500-3,000/night