Great Alaska Sportsman Show: Homer Ocean Charters
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How To Find REAL Alaska Seafood Processing Jobs 2019
If you are looking for real Alaska Seafood Processing Jobs go here:
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gold rush museum pioneer park Fairbanks ALASKA 1
gold rush museum pioneer park Fairbanks ALASKA
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Day Trippin': Sailing in Seward, Alaska
KTUU reporter Ashton Goodell and photographer Jessica Hoffman learn to sail with Sailing Inc.'s instructor Jesse Osborn. 06/08/2011
Allison Point City Campground, Dayville Road, Valdez, Alaska
A CampgroundTour.com exclusive tour of Allison Point City Campground located along Dayville Road outside Valdez, Alaska.
Discover more campground tours at
Suicide awareness ride in Nikiski Alaska
A ride promoting suicide awareness
Alaska Salmon Fishing | Dipnetting the Copper River, Chitina | Alaska Haven
Alaska Salmon Fishing | Dipnetting the Copper River, Chitina | Alaska Haven
We recently had the opportunity to Dipnetting for Salmon. While there are many locations in Alaska to fish, the Copper River in Chitina offers some of the best Salmon in the entire State.
Dipnetting can become very dangerous if not equipped properly, and it is best to prepare before hand by learning more about the Copper River, equipment needed and safety.
As a household of 5, we are permitted to catch up to 65 salmon. This time, however we did not catch any which only means we will be back soon.
Please find dipnetting resources below to learn more and please don't hesitate to send any questions you may have.
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We are a family owned and run business. Our deepest desire is to connect our guest, clients and subscribers with the beauty of Alaska’s nature, culture and way of living. Explore Alaska's breathtaking beauty and experience the true Alaskan lifestyle with Alaska Haven. We are blessed to have you part of or journey.
With Love,
The Proctors
Alaska Department of Fish and Game
Chitina Dipnetters Association (Fish Count, Water Level, Fishing Reports)
Online Permits
ATV Tours at Alpine Creek Lodge Alaska
We provide ATV tours in remote Alaska! This is true backcountry travel in some of the most amazing country that few have seen! Wildlife viewing, scenery, and more! You can combine the tours with fishing, gold panning, rock hounding, hiking, shed hunting and more! From 1 day to a week or more, we can take you to a different area every day! Come on up this summer and check it out!
Alaska Travel Guide: Anchorage
From the Alaska Experience Travel Guide to Alaska
for stock footage and complete Alaska Travel Guide info
Transcript:
To any big city dweller, anchorage seems like a small town,
yet fully half the population of this immense state
resides here. This gives you some idea how
Sparsely populated the rest of the state is.
despite it's small size by lower 48 standards,
Anchorage has its share of city husle and bustle.
The city of anchorage dates back to the late 19th
Century when it was a tent city for gold miners and fur trappers.
fur trapping is still a major industry in alaska,
And anchorage is the central marketplace for some
Of the most exotic and high quality furs in the world.
The fur rendezvous celebration that takes place
In anchorage each winter , has been called the
mardi gras of the north . It evolved from a gathering
of fur trappers to a rip-roaring celebration which
Features such delightful events as outhouse and canoe races.
In addition to furs, anchorage offers unique opportunities
To buy native art and craft items from throughout the state.
To the alaskan native, art was, and is a way of life.
every object used in the routines of daily life
Was turned into an object of art.
Scrimshaw, ceremonial masks, and ivory carvings
Are but a few of the art forms available in these shops.
There's no shortage of things to do in anchorage.
For the more adventuruos spirit, an evening ballon ride
Provides an unforgetable experience.
(there are several commercial balloon ride concessions
offering these rides to visitors, and the sky above
anchorage is dotted with these colorful forms drifting
Silently across the sky almost every evening during the
Summer months.
Above Seldovia (An aerial view of Seldovia, Alaska)
A glimpse of Seldovia, Alaska. This showcases just a small percentage of what Seldovia's beauty is all about.
In June 2015, Seldovia Native Association, Inc. (SNAI) commissioned a local photographer/videographer to shoot some landscape photography. While on the project, he brought along with him his drone and caught some gorgeous footage of the town.
Thank you to filmmaker/photographer Bryan Pentecostes for the beautiful work and sharing this video with SNAI.
Katmailand, Inc & Angler's Paradise Lodges
Since 1950 the Angler's Paradise Lodges have offered the world's finest freshwater sport fishing. Katmailand operates the only lodging concessions inside Katmai National Park authorized by the National Park Service, right next to the World Famous Brooks Falls with unsurpassed bear viewing opportunities! Excursions to the volcanic Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes, the abundance of wildlife in the park and the incredible fishing opportunities make Katmai National Park Alaska's most exciting destination.
Founding the first sport fishing lodges in the entire Bristol Bay area gave Alaskan aviation pioneers Ray Petersen and John Walatka the pick of the hot spots. Operated today by Ray Petersen's son, Sonny Petersen, the Angler's Paradise Lodges are the standard of excellence, located in spectacular wilderness settings with superb fishing on the home waters next to each lodge. Centrally positioned in the best trout and salmon fishing area of Alaska, the lodges give Angler's Paradise guests the best and easiest access to hundreds of miles of breathtaking lakes and streams in the area.
Proposed coal mining 11-miles of Alaskan salmom stream -- The Twlight Zone
1/19/2011 - Heated meeting on Chuitna Mine proposal (Excerpt) The Department of Natural Resources will makes its decision in 60 days. Online comments are also being taken. DNR is considering adding another public comment period because of the bad weather.
1/12/2011 - (Excerpt)
Common sense and considerable scientific data should prompt decision-makers to say, what is there to discuss? Who would want to ruin a very productive spawning process that feeds the critical salmon industry in the northern Cook Inlet? It seems that both state and local decision-makers do.
Hope remains that the result of the Jan. 19th hearing will be that the decision-makers will review the overwhelming data showing the Chuitna basin unsuitable for coal mining and reject Pac Rim sending them back to Texas. Thus far in the process there has been little to be optimistic about.
Is there anyone out there?
Ward Grant
Beluga
===
Biggest fish blunder - DNR not posting public comment notices for the Chuitna coal mine project
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12/26/2010 - (Excerpt)
Two new coal strip-mine proposals are under serious study in Southcentral Alaska. Also, the state's single coal producer, Healy-based Usibelli Coal Mine Inc., is weighing expansion.
The bigger of the proposed new mines, called the Chuitna project, would ratchet up the state's total coal exports from about 1 million tons per year to 12 million tons. Exporting coal from the mine, about 45 miles southwest of Anchorage, would require building a massive dock for oceangoing cargo ships on the west side of Cook Inlet.
12/15/2010 -
Alaska Gov. Sean Parnell's stock answer to anyone raising environmental questions about any mineral development project is to praise the fairness of the state's permitting process. Let the process work, is Parnell's mantra. In their handling of the proposed Chuitna coal mine the state Department of Natural Resources, and its commissioner Tom Irwin, are making a mockery of that process and threatening Cook Inlet salmon stocks, not to mention the livelihoods of those who catch them.
Proposed by PacRim Coal LP, the Anchorage subsidiary of Delaware-based PacRim LP, the project is located about 45 miles west of Anchorage on the west shore of the Inlet. It would, literally, sit atop decades-old commercial setnet sites but potential conflicts between harvesters and miners probably won't occur because the mine would dig 300 feet deep, for 11 miles, into Chuitna River tributaries to get to the coal seam. After the projected 25-year life of the mine the stream would be rebuilt, according to the developer's plans and presumably the children of today's setnetters could get back to work.
That level of stream destruction by a mine project is unprecedented in Alaska state history and no such reclamation project has ever been attempted anywhere, let alone succeeded. According to DNR it could be fully permitted within seven months. If that timeframe strikes you as surprising, review the record of DNR's website posting, public documents and statements by Irwin and other senior permit managers. Try real hard to come away believing DNR's permit review will be anything other than as much of a rubber stamp as the department can get away with. I couldn't.
(Continued)
12/26/2010 - (Exccerpt)
Two new coal strip-mine proposals are under serious study in Southcentral Alaska. Also, the state's single coal producer, Healy-based Usibelli Coal Mine Inc., is weighing expansion.
The bigger of the proposed new mines, called the Chuitna project, would ratchet up the state's total coal exports from about 1 million tons per year to 12 million tons. Exporting coal from the mine, about 45 miles southwest of Anchorage, would require building a massive dock for ocean-going cargo ships on the west side of Cook Inlet.
Deep-seated opposition in Chickaloon, for example, persuaded a Canadian company to abandon its coal exploration leases on 230,000 acres several years ago.
The debate is still raging over the two pending coal projects, Chuitna and Wishbone Hill, a small mine that could reopen north of Palmer.
---
Three new scientific reports conclude that critical salmon fisheries along the Chuit River will suffer severe long-term damage and never fully recover from the impacts of PacRim Coal LP's proposed Chuitna coal strip-mine.
This clip is from (3/27/2007): (Note: Sarah Palin is no longer the governor of Alaska)
Hatcher Pass, Top 100 Drives in the USA
One of the top scenic drives in the United States of America is Hatcher Pass, from Wasilla to Willow. Typically the pass opens the weekend before July 4. It is closed until July 4 or so typically due to snow and wet road conditions that would deteriorate the road quickly. The road goes from The Matanuska-Susitna Valley up to Independence Mine then all the way through the steep narrow pass to quaint Willow, Alaska. The entire drive is about 50 miles one way.
Music:
Deep Haze Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License
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Tools we use to make our videos:
SmartPhone Mic:
Camera Mic:
Cameras: Canon 6D Mark I, Samsung S10+, Samsung S9, Samsung S8 Active
Drone: DJI Phantom 3 SE (personal)
North to Alaska
David Case has over 35 years experience as an attorney representing Alaska Native interests. David represented Alaska Native village corporations, tribes, and rural municipalities from Ketchikan in Southeast Alaska to Kotzebue in the Northwest Arctic, and Anaktuvuk Pass on the North Slope to the Aleutian Islands. He has written law review, cited scholarly articles and taught classes on Alaska Indigenous issues. David was also the lead attorney for the Alaska Federation of Natives on two United States Supreme Court amicus briefs, one on behalf of a land claim brought by the Office of Hawaiian Affairs. David and his wife Dorothy retired to Hawai’i in 2011. He is active in the coffee and farming community on the Big Island. David incorporated and served as the Board Secretary of The CBB Task Force, formed to assist coffee farmers in the fight against the Coffee Berry Borer.
ThinkTech Hawaii streams live on the Internet from 11:00 am to 5:00 pm every weekday afternoon, Hawaii Time, then streaming earlier shows through the night. Check us out any time for great content and great community.
Our vision is to be a leader in shaping a more vital and thriving Hawaii as the foundation for future generations. Our mission is to be the leading digital media platform raising pubic awareness and promoting civic engagement in Hawaii.
Discovery campground Nikiski Alaska beach
Bon fire Boddy
ABC Motorhome Rental Orientation Video
We hope that your motorhome rental helps you have your own great Alaskan adventure. Please use this video to familiarize yourself with all of the features and functions of your motorhome rental.
We are located at:
3875 Old International Airport Rd.
Anchorage, AK 99502
Please contact us at: (907) 279-2000 or 1 (800) 421-7456 during our business hours. Our summer hours (May 15th - September 15th approximately) are 7:30am to 6:00pm, 7 days a week. Our winter operation hours are Mon.-Fri. 8:00am - 5:00pm, Saturday 9:00am - 4:00pm, and Sunday 10:00am - 3:00pm
If your question involves an emergency that cannot wait until our business hours the next day, you may call our Emergency After-Hours phone number at (907) 301-8538.
Alaska's Water Highways (1978)
Excerpt from Alaska Review 16. In this segment, Alaska Review reports on the status of the state-owned Alaska Marine Highway System, its vessels, passengers and employees. Interviewees include: Bill Hudson, director of the Alaska Marine Highway System; John Sund of Ketchikan; Captain Gary Cramer of the M/V Taku; Captain Herb Story of the M/V Columbia; Ken Beselin, chief engineer of the M/V Columbia; Greg O'Clary of the Inland Boatmen's Union (IBU); Pat Tarte of the Port of Bellingham; Jube Howe of the Port of Seattle; Mary Fabry of Ketchikan, travel agent; Erv Hagerup, chief mate of the M/V Taku; and Len Laurence (misspelled in title screen) of Ketchikan, travel agent. Report contains views of coastal Alaska communities, marine highway vessels, dock workers, passengers, and scenes aboard ferries. (Color/Sound/2-inch quad videotape).
Airing from 1976 to 1987, Alaska Review was the first statewide public affairs television program in Alaska. The show was designed to explore public policy issues confronting Alaska, and to assist citizens in making decisions about the future of their land. Produced by Independent Public Television, Inc., (IPTV), the series eventually consisted of 16 one-hour shows, 46 half-hour shows, and one three-hour special broadcast. Funded through the Alaska Humanities Forum and State of Alaska, the series won multiple awards for public service and educational programming. IPTV dissolved in 1988. Videotapes for all finished productions and raw footage were later moved to the University of Alaska Fairbanks (UAF), where they became housed with the Alaska Film Archives, a unit of the Alaska and Polar Regions Collections & Archives department in the Rasmuson Library at UAF, shortly after the unit was founded in 1993. The Alaska Film Archives is currently seeking funding to preserve and digitize all of the original full interviews gathered in the making of the Alaska Review series. Copies of finished productions are also held by Alaska State Library Historical Collections in Juneau. For more information, please contact the Alaska Film Archives at University of Alaska Fairbanks.
This sequence contains excerpts from AAF-4961 from the Alaska Review collection held by the Alaska Film Archives, a unit of the Alaska and Polar Regions Collections & Archives Department in the Elmer E. Rasmuson Library, University of Alaska Fairbanks. For more information please contact the Alaska Film Archives.
Slammin' Sitka Salmon - Full Version 2
Sitka Fishing - Trailer and Full-Length Movie. Alaska Premier Charters & Wild Strawberry Lodge
Arctic Futures 2050 Conference: Day 1
Live stream of the Arctic Futures 2050 Conference, 4-6 September 2019:
Kodiak, Alaska
Kodiak is one of seven communities and the main city on Kodiak Island, Kodiak Island Borough, in the U.S. state of Alaska. All commercial transportation between the entire island and the outside world goes through this city either via ferryboat or airline. The population was 6,130 as of the 2010 census.
Originally inhabited by Alutiiq natives for over 7000 years, the city was settled in the 18th century by the subjects of the Russian crown and became the capital of Russian Alaska. Harvesting of the area's sea otter pelts led to the near extinction of the animal in the following century and led to wars with and enslavement of the natives for over 150 years. As part of the Alaska Purchase by the United States in 1867, Kodiak became a commercial fishing center which continues to this day. A lesser economic influence includes tourism, mainly by those seeking outdoor adventure trips. Salmon, halibut, the unique Kodiak bear, elk, Sitka deer, and mountain goats invite hunting tourists as well as fishermen to the Kodiak Archipelago. The Alaska Department of Fish and Game maintains an office in the city and a website to help hunters and fishermen obtain the proper permits and learn about the laws specific to the Kodiak area. The city has four public elementary schools, a middle and high school, as well as a branch of the University of Alaska. An antenna farm at the summit of Pillar Mountain above the city historically provided communication with the outside world before fiber optic cable was run. Transportation to and from the island is provided by ferry service on the Alaska Marine Highway as well as local commercial airlines.
This video is targeted to blind users.
Attribution:
Article text available under CC-BY-SA
Creative Commons image source in video