13 May 2026 Predicting the 2026 Bristol Bay & Kodiak Salmon Runs — And Why Real-Time Counts Still Decide the Day Bristol Bay and Kodiak Island sit at the heavy end of Alaska’s salmon map. Bristol Bay’s sockeye returns are measured in the millions, with peak weeks that move more fish in a few days than most rivers see in a season. Kodiak runs smaller in total volume but trades volume for variety — Chinook, coho, sockeye, and a powerful even-year pink cycle that completely changes the character of the fishing. This post does two jobs. First, it pulls daily passage data for the major counted rivers in each region — Alagnak, Kvichak, and Naknek in Bristol Bay; Ayakulik and Dog Salmon on Kodiak — and turns it into concrete 2026 expectations: when each species’ run is likely to start, peak, and tail off. Second, it draws the honest line: where the data supports a real forecast, where it doesn’t, and where the only reliable signal is the live count. The first half is the seasonal playbook. The second half is where Salmon Finder (iOS : Android) lives. How We Read the Numbers For each species at each river, we computed four timing anchors per year of available data: the day on which 5% of the annual run had passed (season start), 50% (midpoint), and 85% (late-season threshold), plus the consecutive 10-day window with the largest total passage. On Bristol Bay sockeye and Kodiak pinks, the peak 10-day window frequently delivers 40–60% of the entire season’s fish. Show up the wrong week and you’ve fished a different season. We weight lifecycle analogs over linear trend. Sockeye return on 4- and 5-year cycles, Chinook and coho on 3- to 5-year cycles, pinks on a strict 2-year cycle. For 2026, that means the most informative comparison years are 2022 (4-year), 2021 (5-year), and 2023 (3-year) — and for pinks, the most recent even years (2024, 2022, 2020, 2018) carry far more weight than any odd year ever could. We separate timing confidence from magnitude confidence. Timing — when...
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