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Great to see it in the winter setting. I think of it as "Wety-er", because it gets more rain than anywhere else I've ever been.
The snow there will sink your boat.Great to see it in the winter setting. I think of it as "Wety-er", because it gets more rain than anywhere else I've ever been.
All don't leave.I knew that they moved them out before winter, (I assume to Ballard WA to winter in fresh water, or the panhandle). I figured it was a freezing rain and freezing fog ice issue.
I saw this last summer
Please tell me it's not the Mendenhall.
Could be a lot of placesPlease tell me it's not the Mendenhall.
My family has been in the commercial fishing business in Alaska since about 1900. My opinion of salmon catching may not be the appreciated by other people who happen to have been here just long enough to get a PFD or two.I've got a question-
I know some Alaskans, ( like Todd Palin) are commercial salmon fishermen, others in the interior catch salmon to power their dog teams. I get the impression that most of the rest of the year-round Alaskans catch salmon with rods to help feed themselves. I was wondering what these average people do with the byproducts of their fish. Do they eat the roe? ( I like salmon roe, but it's too salty to eat much or it) Do they spread it in the gravel? Do they filet the salmon and let the head, skin, and roe on the shore for the bears and ravens?
Trappers use Skidoo Tundras or the like. Dogs are a lot of work. I remember talking with the village president in Ekwok out on the Nushagak River back in about 1977. He told me that once the 'machines got good enough to get him around, he shot all his dogs.Thanks, Thor. When I was talking about dog teams, I guess I was thinking about trappers. I knew that the commercial fisheries went to some trouble to save and fertilize eggs so that they wouldn't run low on fish in future years. I've also seen that the big bears only catch females and eat the heads, skin, and roe. As somebody who likes to make chowders and soups, I'd want to take the whole carcass home. The more I thought about it, the more curious I was as to whether most of the civilians tried to sustain the resource, share with the bears, or eats the treats themselves. Forgot about bait. When I lived in PA a number of people bought jars of salmon roe for bait when fishing for trout.
If the waste goes to the dump, don't the eagles still get it?
You're what's for dinner.