Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. It’s 10 o’clock on a fine morning in late June, the second week of summer sockeye season in the Hanford Reach. I arrive at the ...
ANDREW LYONS Alaska's Bristol Bay is home to the world's most abundant wild sockeye salmon run. Every summer, around 50 million salmon swim through Bristol Bay on a homecoming journey that stirs me ...
Bristol Bay in the Alaskan wilderness is one of the country's best places to fish. Just watch out for bears.
A salmon fisherman throws a cast net into a river to catch Sockeye Salmon. This area serves as a drainage basin for the Tongass National Forest. Disclaimer: AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible ...
Spawning sockeye salmon returning from Bristol Bay swim in 2013 in Lake Clark National Park and Preserve's Tazimina Lake. (Photo by D. Young/National Park Service) The number of Alaska salmon ...
This year in Bristol Bay, fishing crews have noticed that sockeye salmon were on the small side — an observation confirmed this month by the Alaska Department of Fish and Game. Fish and Game officials ...
Anglers might face low sockeye catch rates due to lower run size and heavy weeds. Success hinges on locating river 'sweet spots' shaped by current and terrain shifts. Dam operations affect river ...