Alaska

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  • WHY HAVEN’T YOU BEEN TO ALASKA?

    WHY HAVEN’T YOU BEEN TO ALASKA?

    We just returned from our first trip to Alaska since 2020, and the one remaining question is why we waited so long.

  • Alaska 2023 — Mid-August

    Alaska 2023 — Mid-August

    I recently sent you an email describing the trip we plan to take to Alaska next year.

  • Have You Been to Alaska?

    Have You Been to Alaska?

    By

    The fishing is exceptional — salmon and trout mostly, although we’re going to try to add some halibut on the front or back end — but...

  • Summer Fishing Guidelines for Alaska

    Summer Fishing Guidelines for Alaska

    The Alaska Sport and Personal Use Fishing COVID-19 Response Group today released guidance to promote responsible fishery access for individual anglers and Alaska fishing businesses.

  • Alaska Salmon Study

    Alaska Salmon Study

    The species are, from top to bottom: Chinook, coho, sockeye, chum, and pink salmon. Photo: NOAA Fisheries

  • Why would a hard core bass angler want to go to Alaska?

    Why would a hard core bass angler want to go to Alaska?

    By

    After all, while a single misplaced largemouth was caught there in 2018, it was likely either a hoax or an anomaly.

  • Pacific Cod May Hunt Seabirds

    Pacific Cod May Hunt Seabirds

    Example of seabird remains from stomachs of Pacific Cod caught off Unimak Pass, Alaska, from mid-January through April, 2011. (a) partially digested Thick-billed murre (Uria lomvia) (b) complete, undigested carcass of Crested Auklet (Aethia cristatella) (c-f) Crested Auklets in various stages of digestion. A 150-mm white ruler is present for size relationship. Alaska SeaLife Center

  • Alaska, B.C. Anglers Support Shared Watershed Protection

    Alaska, B.C. Anglers Support Shared Watershed Protection

    Two new polls show Alaskans and British Columbians overwhelmingly support increased protection for water, fish, jobs and culture from mining development taking place in northwest British Columbia (B.C). The region includes the transboundary watersheds of the Taku, Stikine and Unuk Rivers that originate in B.C. and flow into Alaska.

  • Invasive Species Could Impact Alaska

    Invasive Species Could Impact Alaska

    Invasive Impact: What's the Status of Invasive Species in Alaska?