The five documented landslides may be associated with high rainfall between July and September.
The sockeye salmon are coming back smaller for the Newhalen River and Iliamna Lake, plus not a thick as they once did when I was younger.
An image of a swollen leg on this caribou raises questions that it may be a case of brucellosis.
An unseasonable winter insect sighting in Newhalen.
Blue sap was found on a spruce tree.
I have been speaking with elders in the community and they have never before seen the river break up that soon.
Tim Sands, an Alaska Department of Fish and Game area management biologist, said he is hopeful the strong run throughout Bristol Bay will continue next year.
"It's been sitting up on the beach just putting his head up towards the sky and not making a sound."
Closely resembling a spider, this long legged mite belongs to the family Erythraeoidae and can be found in many different environments across Alaska.
Ichneumon wasp is a new sight to King Cove observer.
A hole cut in the ice has produced a lot of overflow, and flooding is now threatening homes and a state-managed road.
The Bristol Bay Times - Serving Dillingham, Naknek, King Salmon and Southwest villages
As of July 21, fishermen in Bristol Bay’s five districts had harvested just more than 42 million salmon.
“Something” big has shredded fishing gear and long been spotted in the lake. Bruce Wright plans to use a deepwater camera to find it.
More than 2.5 million sockeye have returned to spawn in the Nushagak River this year, one of the highest counts on record. They have filled pools and creeks, jumping and swimming their way to their spawning grounds.
Koliganek and New Stuyahok are still waiting on their first barge of the year. Heating fuel use for residents and businesses in New Stuyahok is limited.
On June 19, some kids spotted an unrecognized creature the size of a large whale offshore near the Alaska village of Iliamna. Other accounts followed.
Furry caterpillar in November.
Taking over my yard
All Topics
All Countries
Any Date
Apply