Klawock Indigenous Stewards and partners are working to a once prolific sockeye salmon run.
Colors are produced by cell structure, which can scatter light rays, making iridescence, and by pigments, which absorb or reflect particular wavelength of light. Pigments… Continue reading
When my little Ford pickup chugged into Alaska 36 years ago this month, I didn’t know a wheel dog from a dog salmon. You could… Continue reading
Like the berries, the language lives on the land.
“This work is restorative…”
There were good minus tides in May and June, and I went out with some friends to take a look at the intertidal zone in… Continue reading
“It’s the largest sockeye hatchery in the world. Two-hundred and sixty miles from the ocean.”
I was going to title this essay, “Inflation 101,” but the number keeps going up
There’s way more than blue genes.
It’s not that anglers want things to be difficult, we just enjoy the payoff of time and experience…
A walk near a shallow lake was the highlight.
“Stretching as far as the eye could reach … were hundreds — no, thousands — of little volcanoes.”
Tasting 13,000-year-old volcanic ash.
At the mouth of Cowee Creek, sometime in mid-June, we’d found a vigilant pair of black oystercatchers, presumably with a nest nearby. A couple of… Continue reading
We didn’t find the fish. We found a fish. A fish that was too small.
By Ned Rozell A GREEN PLATEAU NORTH OF LITUYA BAY — “These are museum-class bonsais,” Ben Gaglioti says as we walk through an elfin forest.… Continue reading
What says love like a Forest Service cabin?
“Chasing Lakes: Love, Science, and the Secrets of the Arctic.”