(980) stories found containing 'alaska fish & game'


Sorted by date  Results 1 - 25 of 980

  • State doubles next year's Zarembo elk hunt to 2 permits

    Jake Dye, For the Wrangell Sentinel|Dec 11, 2025

    The number of elk hunt permits issued for Zarembo Island will be doubled next year, from one elk bull available for harvest to two. It’s a slow climb after the state shut down elk hunting on the island from 2006 to 2023, then allowing just one permit per year in 2024 and 2025. The Alaska Department of Fish and Game has been able to develop a better understanding of Zarembo’s elk population, and believes the herd can handle the additional harvest, said Frank Robbins, the Petersburg-based game biologist for the Wrangell-Petersburg area. The Wra...

  • Board of Game to consider hunting proposals affecting Petersburg area

    Orin Pierson, Pilot writer|Dec 4, 2025

    The Alaska Board of Game will consider nearly 70 proposals affecting Southeast Alaska during its January 23-27, 2026 meeting in Wrangell, including several that would directly impact hunting regulations around Petersburg and on Mitkof Island. The meeting will be held at the Nolan Center in Wrangell, with remote participation available via Zoom. Written comments are due by January 9 to be included in the board’s meeting materials. The Petersburg Fish and Game Advisory Committee is reviewing the proposals ahead of the January meeting. The c...

  • Yesterday's News: News from 25-50-75-100 years ago

    Nov 27, 2025

    December 4, 1925 – Governor George A. Parks, who passed through on the Watson from Ketchikan to Juneau, told Petersburg residents that one of the very largest government dredges would be employed in the work of dredging the Narrows here. It will be of the self-dumping type and will scoop up the gravel and sand and then empty it in deep water. Colonel Steese is now in Washington D.C. to look after the appropriation. Major L.E. Oliver is now in Seattle to arrange for the dredge. Work will start in the spring. Delegate Dan Sutherland, who a...

  • Alaska Timber and Truss secures Thomas Bay stewardship contract:

    Orin Pierson, Pilot writer|Nov 13, 2025

    Petersburg District Ranger Carey Case announced at the Nov. 3 Petersburg Borough Assembly meeting that the Thomas Bay timber stewardship contract has been awarded. The Petersburg Pilot has confirmed that Alaska Timber and Truss, owned in partnership by Brett Martin and Mike Duman, was awarded the contract. The stewardship project represents a significant milestone for the local sawmill and the broader second-growth timber industry in Southeast Alaska. The contract encompasses 4.6 million board feet of timber spread across approximately 140 acre...

  • Yesterday's News

    Nov 13, 2025

    November 13, 1925 – Harry J. Raymond, pioneer Juneauite and for many years engaged in the grocery business there, has purchased the Warm Springs Bay (Baranof Post Office) property from Doty and a health and pleasure resort. The Warm Springs Bay hot springs are said to be among the best on the coast. Warm Springs Bay is situated on Baranof Island and is a perfectly landlocked harbor. One of the prettiest fresh water lakes in the country lies just back from the bay and its outlet flows into the bay, terminating with a beautiful waterfall. Mr. Ray...

  • Fish and Game concerned about northern spread of invasive green crab

    Jake Dye, For the Wrangell Sentinell|Nov 13, 2025

    European green crabs, a particularly invasive species known for aggressively displacing native species and damaging important vegetation, have been found on Etolin Island just southwest of Wrangell. A monitoring effort that spans much of Southeast is working to identify and possibly mitigate their continued spread northward. The crabs were first found in Metlakatla in the summer of 2022. Since then, they've been found increasingly farther north, with Etolin Island the northernmost confirmed...

  • Police report

    Oct 30, 2025

    October 22 - An officer responded to a noise complaint on S 2nd Street. Prisoners were transported. An officer assisted the Petersburg Volunteer Fire Department (PVFD) when an alarm was activated due to testing on 12th Street. Meat was salvaged when a vehicle hit a deer in the area of Libby Straight. An officer responded to a report of suspicious behavior on Unimak Street. It was determined to be unfounded. October 23 - An officer provided a courtesy transport to Petersburg Medical Center (PMC). Extra patrols were requested on 3rd Street. A...

  • Hunters take notes on backcountry bear safety

    GARLAND KENNEDY, Sitka Sentinel|Oct 30, 2025

    SITKA — Dozens of hunters turned out to hear details and best practices meant to deter, defuse and survive bear encounters while in the field, at a presentation last week hosted by the Alaska Department of Fish and Game. In a wide-ranging discussion that touched on self-protection in active bear encounters, first aid, electric fences and communications equipment, ADF&G wildlife biologist Steve Bethune and wildlife education and outreach specialist Abby McAllister said their goal is to make sure hunters are safe when they go afield. “We wan...

  • Southeast Alaska's commercial red king crab fishery opens Nov. 1

    Olivia Rose, KFSK Radio|Oct 30, 2025

    Southeast Alaska’s first competitive commercial red king crab fishery in eight years opens on Saturday. Ten different areas will be open for the fishery. They’ll be managed individually based on how much crab are available in each spot. State regulations require at least 200,000 pounds of harvestable crab to be available for a commercial opener in the region. The Alaska Department of Fish and Game (ADFG) announced earlier this fall that over 211,000 pounds of crab are available this season. Red king crab in Southeast Alaska is a low... Full story

  • Record moose harvest caps stormy season; Anderson takes moose of a lifetime

    Oct 23, 2025

    The 2025 moose season closed with record-breaking numbers for Game Management Unit 3, as hunters checked in 145 moose - exceeding the previous record of 141 set in 2023, according to Petersburg's office of Alaska Department of Fish and Game. The season started relatively slow, due largely to wind storms during the first two weeks. Hunters extended their hunts, slogged through miles of muskeg, and a record number were eventually rewarded for their patience, with at least one bull so...

  • Police Report

    Oct 23, 2025

    October 15 – Property found on Fram Street was turned in to the Petersburg Police Department (PPD). Christopher Hoover was issued a citation for limitations on backing following a motor vehicle incident on North 1st Street. An officer spoke with an individual concerning a civil issue. Property found on Fram Street was turned in to the PPD. An officer provided lockout assistance on Birch Street. October 16 – There is an on-going investigation into a report of suspicious behavior on Excel Street. Papers were served. An individual completed the...

  • Dungeness season open for fall fishery

    Sitka Sentinel Staff|Oct 9, 2025

    Dungeness crab fishing is back on for a full fall season that began Wednesday and extends through Nov. 30, although Alaska Department of Fish and Game harvest projections show that Southeast Alaska fishermen might not achieve the harvest threshold for a full season. The commercial Dungeness fishery opened for 55 days this summer, beginning June 15 and closing Aug. 9, six days earlier than usual. Across Southeast, 162 Dungeness fishery permit-holders this summer harvested 567,839 crab totaling 1,180,494 pounds. Participation and harvest were...

  • Alaska's Bristol Bay sockeye run and harvest increased this year, with fish sizes a bit bigger

    Yereth Rosen, Alaska Beacon|Oct 9, 2025

    The commercial salmon harvest in Alaska’s Bristol Bay, site of the world’s largest sockeye salmon runs, held a mixture of good news and bad news this year. The run of sockeye salmon, also known as red salmon, exceeded preseason expectations and totaled 56.7 million fish, the seventh highest since 2005, the Alaska Department of Fish and Game reported in its preliminary summary of the summer harvest. The commercial sockeye harvest was also bigger than expected, totaling 41.2 million fish. That was 18% above the preseason forecast and 23% higher t...

  • Stormy weather slows start of moose season

    Orin Pierson, Pilot writer|Sep 25, 2025

    The first week of moose season has been relentlessly windy and rainy across Southeast Alaska, but there was a break in the weather on Tuesday, September 16 so Joe Willis pounced on the opportunity and harvested the first moose of the season on Mitkof Island. "When I left in the morning, I told my wife, 'don't expect me back till after dark,'" Willis said. "It was still really wet at daybreak... my enthusiasm level was not what you would call epic," Willis recalled. "The phone says it's going to...

  • SE Alaska red king crab area-specific harvest limits

    Sep 18, 2025

    Alaska Department of Fish and Game released detailed management plans this week for Southeast Alaska’s commercial red king crab fishery, which opens Nov. 1 with the region’s highest red crab populations in decades. The fishery will operate across 10 separate areas with harvest limits ranging from 5,115 to 44,705 pounds, totaling 211,573 pounds regionwide. Legal male crab populations increased 55% from last year while mature males jumped 42%. Two high-concentration areas near Juneau and at Gambier Bay will operate as 24-hour “derby” fisheri...

  • Southeast Alaska red king crab fishery to open after stock levels exceed expectations

    Orin Pierson, Pilot writer|Sep 11, 2025

    Southeast Alaska's commercial red king crab fishery will open Nov. 1 after stock assessments revealed the highest red crab populations in decades. Last week, the Alaska Department of Fish and Game announced a regionwide guideline harvest level of 211,573 pounds for the 2025/2026 season, exceeding the 200,000-pound threshold required for a traditional competitive commercial fishery. The biomass numbers and the available surplus for harvest, came as somewhat of a surprise to fishery managers fishermen who had been preparing for a different type o...

  • Southeast pink salmon harvest falls to lowest odd-year level since 1980s

    Orin Pierson, Pilot writer|Sep 11, 2025

    The 2025 Southeast Alaska Purse Seine Fishery closed in early September with just under 20 million pink salmon landed - well below the forecast of 29 million and marking the lowest odd-year harvest since the 1980s. "Fair to say that the season was a disappointment as far as pink salmon harvest goes," said Troy Thynes, Alaska Department of Fish and Game Region I Management Coordinator. The disappointing harvest adds pressure to an industry already facing high fuel costs, inflation, and low...

  • Trollers to get third limited king opening this Thursday

    Sitka Sentinel Staff|Sep 11, 2025

    Each Southeast troll fisherman can harvest another 15 Chinook salmon during a “limited harvest fishery” opening that’s set to begin Thursday, the Alaska Department of Fish and Game announced Monday. In the ten-day fishery, which is the third limited harvest opening of the summer season, trollers can take about 5,400 Chinook that remain in the allocation for all the commercial gear groups that harvest Chinook in Southeast. By state regulation, ADF&G at the end of the summer season may give trollers the opportunity to harvest any Chinook alloc...

  • Yesterday's News: News from 25-50-75-100 years ago

    Aug 28, 2025

    August 28, 1925 – The Alaska Fisherman in its August number makes some very serious charges about the waste of herring that should be investigated. It mentions the names of several persons and alleges that these dumped large quantities of herring into the bay. Herring as a food fish is as valuable, if not more so, than salmon. Its fine qualities are becoming known. It is being put up for the market in increasing quantities each year. Over $12,000 was this season expended in Petersburg by one firm alone for herring for the middle western m...

  • High-tech multi-year deer population research wraps up on Mitkof Island

    Orin Pierson, Pilot writer|Aug 28, 2025

    After six years of collecting data using trail cameras, radio collars, and DNA analysis, a deer population research project on Mitkof Island, currently led by Ketchikan-based Alaska Department of Fish and Game Wildlife Biologist Tessa Hasbrouck, is entering its final phase. Historically, deer population monitoring in Southeast Alaska relied on relatively simple methods. Biologists would walk through the woods each spring counting deer pellets, or fly over alpine areas in summer tallying visible...

  • Rae C. Stedman Elementary gets a school counselor again

    Orin Pierson, Pilot writer|Aug 28, 2025

    The elementary school's new counselor Dave Fonken comes to Petersburg from Southern Oregon. He says he found Petersburg's thriving school community and endless local outdoor recreation opportunities very appealing. "I was looking for a combination of a really healthy district with a lot of places to play," Fonken explains. "Both of those things really came together here." Fonken brings eleven years of school counseling experience to his new role. His journey in education began as a Spanish...

  • Fall dungeness will get full length season

    Orin Pierson|Aug 21, 2025

    Fisheries managers cut short this summer's Southeast Alaska commercial dungeness crab season by six days because initial harvest projections fell below the required threshold for a full season. But now, after determining that a high number of soft-shelled crabs contributed to low harvest projections, managers have opted to open fall dungeness fishing for its full length. The Alaska Department of Fish and Game announced Monday that the fall dungeness crab season in Southeast Alaska will proceed f...

  • Guest Editorial

    Larry Persily|Aug 21, 2025

    Help Wanted: Unique opportunity to lead the largest state in the country, with more miles of coastline, taller mountains, more fish and game, more dreams and less reality than those other 49 pipsqueaks. Dynamic, convincing decision maker with strong personality needed to lead the second youngest state in the nation into the future, albeit without enough money to meet all its needs. It’s a fixer-upper job; the current employee has let a lot of things go bad, never learned to get along with co-workers, and hasn’t been working all that hard. Whi...

  • Mini heat wave in July triggers king salmon die-off in Blind Slough, emergency rescue effort by hatchery team

    Orin Pierson, Pilot writer|Aug 14, 2025

    Hatchery managers had hoped that June's steady rainfall would spare them from having to intervene in this year's king salmon run, allowing fish to reach Crystal Lake Hatchery naturally without the stress of human handling. Those hopes evaporated in late July when a few hot days right at the wrong time caused a significant mortality event for king salmon transiting the shallow waters between Blind River Rapids and Crystal Lake Hatchery. On July 20, after observing a hundred or more king salmon...

  • Yesterday's News

    Aug 7, 2025

    August 7, 1925 – There was a time when trollers in Alaskan waters lived on a crust of bread and enjoyed few luxuries and far between, but now ‘all the comforts of home’ are available for the fleet, even unto a fresh milk diet. For instance the Dairy and Grocery of Petersburg ships some 90 gallons of fresh milk on every mail boat to Port Alexander. Whether trollers do better on a ‘milk diet’ than they formerly did on ‘sourdough goulash’ or whatever they could rake together quickly on a gasboat for a meal, is something for the scientists to...

Page Down