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From Ocean to Smokehouse: My Sockeye Salmon Story in AlaskaA personal journey through the world of setnet fishing in Naknek, Alaska. From wild ocean waters to the final smokehouse—this is sockeye life.
All that the American West once was, Alaska still is ... helps explain why it is home to the world's largest sockeye salmon runs and one of North America's largest chinook, or king, salmon ...
Deciding between the careers "in the moment was really hard," King said. Now, he is vital to one of baseball's most expensive bullpens.
A new peer-reviewed study in the journal Fisheries shows that a salmon-focused ecosystem protection strategy for the North ...
A Bristol Bay sockeye salmon "mob" gathers in August 2004 in the Wood River, which flows into the Nushagak River just north ...
Lake Clark protects the headwaters of the Kvichak and Nushagak Rivers that flow into Bristol Bay, home to the world’s largest wild sockeye salmon run ... It also puts Alaska Native communities and ...
Alaska Wildlife Troopers have charged an Alaska fishing family with running a permit sharing scheme to bypass individual ...
It was an inopportune time for the 400-foot vessel with the capacity to hold up to 2.3 million pounds of fresh salmon and ...
Suk-kegh means red fish. The sockeye, also called red or blueback salmon, is among the smaller of the seven Pacific salmon species, but their succulent, bright-orange meat is prized above all others.
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