Tucked away in a wooden building where the Kenai Peninsula meets culinary excellence, Mykel’s Restaurant has been quietly serving up the most succulent Alaskan crab legs that will make you question ...
Seattle magazine on MSN

A Citywide Toast to Sockeye

Seattle’s fishing culture is something to be proud of. Drive over the Ballard Bridge on any given day and you’ll see the ...
The Alaska Department of Fish and Game released its preliminary summary of the 2025 Upper Cook Inlet salmon fishery season. The report found that although numbers of all salmon species besides sockeye ...
The commercial Dungeness crab fishing season has been delayed for all of California. The California Department of Fish and Wildlife announced that the presence of whales and leatherback sea turtles ...
Every summer, many rivers across Alaska appear as if they have caught fire. The water turns a deep, almost impossible red as if someone spilled paint across the current. Locals know what that color ...
Here’s a fun one: a “fish taxi” is being credited for record sockeye salmon return in Washington’s Skagit River. (Renewable Energy World) Puget Sound Energy reported a record 91,880 sockeye salmon ...
Soldotna is hundreds of miles from Western Alaska, where a massive storm ravaged coastal communities over the weekend. The damage has many Kenai Peninsula residents wanting to help. And from their ...
In the early to middle decades of the 20th century, Great Neck was populated mainly by European immigrants of the Christian faith. As depicted in “The Great Gatsby,” its themes and characters ...
A record number of sockeye have returned to Skagit Bay and the Skagit river on their annual spawning migration, according to the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife. From June through October, ...
An aerial view of the floating surface collector on Baker Lake. Smolts swimming toward the collector (center, top) are guided by nets on both sides of the opening (Credit: NOAA Fisheries) Puget Sound ...
A run of sockeye salmon. A record number of sockeye have returned to Skagit Bay and the Skagit river on their annual spawning migration, according to the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife.