Hi Guys,
I do not know anything about the camp grounds in the Kenai area. This area is the playground for Anchorage and it is very crowded. When the salmon are running I’ve seen them shoulder to shoulder on the Kenai River close to the road. Do drive all the way to the end of the spit in Homer. Used to be a cool bar and restaurant there shaped like a light house (small one). As you drive close to the end, take notice of the little shanties and tents and whatever else will shed rain. These house some of the workers that slime and clean fish. Usually college kids saving money for next semester. If you like fishing and can stand the tariff, hire a charter to take you way out. The good ones will guarantee you fish. Excellent halibut and they usually will arrange shipping your fish home. You can fish off the boat dock in the harbor. This may sound mundane, fishing from a dock, but I’ve seen the salmon jump up on the dock and people were trying to catch them with their hands. It was quite a circus. Go down on the docks and look at the boats. We have purchased crab and fish right off the boats. As you travel around Alaska, keep in mind you can camp anywhere you wish as long as you are not on private property, which there is very little of. Gravel pits are my favorite, no hook ups though.
When you leave Denali National Park heading north, you might consider taking the Denali Hwy. east at Cantwell. It is paved for about 10 miles on each end and gravel the remaining 115 miles. It cuts right through the Alaskan range and is beautiful. There is not a lot of traffic on this road and it is not maintained during the winter. There are primitive camp sites along this road. Tangle Lake is good fishing and there are many rivers and streams along the way. It dumps you out on Hwy #4 at Paxson Lake. Take a left onto #4 and go to Delta Junction. From here you have a choice to go left towards Fairbanks or right to Tok and Canada. I’m about 30 miles towards Fairbanks. If you take this route and as you are about to arrive at Paxson Lake, there used to be a garbage dump on the right. This was always a good place to see bears, not exactly in their natural habitat but interesting. Be very careful of moose. They can appear out of nowhere and are hard on vehicles. This is everywhere in Alaska. I’ve never seen a vehicle drive away from a moose encounter.
I hope this helps.
George