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  • Drayton Harbor Oyster Company seeks oyster farm expansion in face of water concerns

    Grace McCarthy, The Northern Light|Updated Feb 6, 2023

    Drayton Harbor Oyster Company (DHO) is seeking to expand its oyster growing operations to add an off-bottom farm in a cleaner area of Drayton Harbor as water quality issues continue to be a pressing challenge. The farm would be in addition to the company's existing tideland farm on the eastern side of the harbor. DHO co-owner Steve Seymour said he began looking into the benefits of off-bottom farming a few years ago after seeing it used on the east coast, Australia, New...

  • Jellyfish Stranded in Staggering Numbers

    Chris Rurik, Key Peninsula News|Updated Sep 8, 2022

    A mass stranding of lion's mane jellyfish shocked Key Peninsula beach walkers during the second week of August - and made swimmers think twice about getting in the water. "I have never seen so many in all my life," said third-generation Home resident Leila Luginbill. She counted over 70 near the Home boat ramp. Most of the stranded jellies were 1.5 to 2 feet in diameter. The full extent of the stranding is unknown, with reports coming from Von Geldern Cove and Glen Cove. A...

  • Aleutian Isle fishing vessel still underwater 10 days later

    Julia Lerner, Cascadia Daily News|Updated Aug 24, 2022

    Ten days after it sank, the Aleutian Isle is still on the seafloor. The 49-foot fishing vessel, which sank off the west coast of San Juan Island on Aug. 13, is sitting in waters around 200 feet deep. Specialized gear will be required to remove it. Salvage crews are waiting for equipment from Seattle to begin the process, which will require a crane and a barge to lift it off the seafloor. Representatives from the Unified Command, made up of the United States Coast Guard...

  • Green burial provides families meaningful experience

    Leora Watson, Lynden Tribune|Updated Aug 18, 2022

    WHATCOM - A grassy field, open skies, fresh air and birds in song. Trees and plants whose colors change with the seasons. These are ways someone might describe The Meadow. The Meadow, located at Greenacres Memorial Park in Ferndale, offers the option of green burial, a relatively new alternative method of laying a loved one to rest. Green burial at The Meadow provides families the option to bury loved ones in a serene and natural environment that utilizes sustainable burial...

  • World's largest hornet renamed northern giant hornet

    Grace McCarthy, The Northern Light|Updated Aug 11, 2022

    Scientists are now asking the public to refer to the world's largest hornets as "northern giant hornets," opposed to the previously dubbed names "Asian giant hornets" and "murder hornets." The name was changed in late July to avoid using a geographical region in the insect's title. The Entomological Society of America (ESA) adopted "northern giant hornet" in its list of common names of insects and related organisms. ESA didn't have an official name for the hornets until now, a...

  • Fish and Wildlife Commission rejects proposed wolf rule

    Ann McCreary|Updated Aug 4, 2022

    Washington's wildlife commissioners have chosen not to enact a new rule that was developed with the goal of reducing the number of wolves killed under state orders due to conflicts with livestock. The rule would have designated areas of "chronic conflict" and required state wildlife officials to verify that livestock owners in those areas have taken appropriate measures to prevent conflicts before the state kills wolves after attacks on livestock. The vote by the Washington Fi...

  • Cascade Carnivore Project Reports Wolverines Have Reproduced at Mount Rainier for Third Consecutive Year

    News Staff, Nisqually Valley News|Updated Jul 28, 2022

    Wolverines have reproduced at Mount Rainier National Park for a third year in a row, according to an announcement last week by the Cascade Carnivore Project. The news marks another positive development for the project as well as the National Park Service and the U.S. Forest Service, which have been working together to document and study the "natural recolonization of wolverines in Washington and the impacts of climate change on their mountain home." Back in 2019, a female...

  • Yakama Nation, Confederated Tribes launch fish habitat projects

    Olivia Palmer, Methow Valley News|Updated Jul 28, 2022

    This month, the Yakama Nation and Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation began construction for fish habitat restoration projects along the Twisp and Methow rivers. The two entities, which are working independently on adjacent sites along the Twisp River, oversaw the transport of hundreds of logs to project sites via helicopter earlier this month. Now, that timber is being used to create log structures in the water, designed to restore critical habitat for endangered...

  • Inslee gives Asian Giant Hornets his full attention

    Julia Lerner, Cascadia Daily News|Updated Jul 14, 2022

    Though there are no confirmed sightings of Asian giant hornets yet this year, scientists and entomologists from the Washington Department of Agriculture (WSDA) were ready to talk about new research related to the massive bugs during a training session in Birch Bay State Park Tuesday. The training session was designed to teach attendees about the trapping, tracking and eradication of the invasive hornets. Among the small group of trainees: Washington Gov. Jay Inslee. "I'm here...

  • Flood victims rebuild: Whatcom County seeks money to buy out, elevate properties

    Cal Bratt, Lynden Tribune|Updated Jul 7, 2022

    This could be the next image of flood recovery: Houses raised up from their foundations to be repositioned several feet higher, if rebuilt at all. Several homeowners in hard-hit Sumas have taken the action already, without knowing for sure if they will be reimbursed part of their costs of doing so. Their effort is through the National Flood Insurance Program of FEMA, which offers a maximum of $30,000 for personally doing “flood risk mitigation” such as raising a house out of floods’ reach. Usually it is only partial reimb...

  • Lummi Nation awarded $595,000 after 2017 salmon pen collapse

    Julia Lerner, Cascadia Daily News|Updated Jul 7, 2022

    The King County Superior Court jury awarded the Lummi Nation close to $600,000 in damages Wednesday over the 2017 collapse of an Atlantic salmon net pen in Puget Sound. The collapsed net pen, owned by Cooke Aquaculture Pacific LLC, triggered statewide studies, new regulations and bans on farming non-native fish when it collapsed five years ago, releasing close to a quarter-million Atlantic salmon into the sea near Skagit County. When the nets failed, between 243,000 and...

  • First Asian giant hornet nest eradicated in east Blaine now on display at the Smithsonian

    Grace McCarthy, The Northern Light|Updated Jul 7, 2022

    A piece of Blaine is now displayed for the world to view at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History in Washington, D.C. The first Asian giant hornet nest found and eradicated in the U.S., or "nest zero," was displayed July 1 in the Smithsonian's new "Our Places: Connecting People and Nature" exhibition. The exhibit explores how peoples' experiences with nature across the globe motivates them to care for and protect the environment, according to a National Museum of...

  • A New Day for Lakebay Marina

    Lisa Bryan, Key Peninsula News|Updated Jul 7, 2022

    Washington State Commissioner of Public Lands Hilary Franz visited Lakebay Marina June 4 in part to celebrate the partnership to save the iconic facility and to see for herself what the Department of Natural Resources now owns. "This was a long, long haul here," said Bob Wise, president of the Recreational Boaters Association of Washington. "There were a lot of ups and downs, a lot of very dark days. Number one, I thank Hilary Franz for having the courage to do this." Doug...

  • Southern resident orca pod calf identified last week

    Julia Lerner, Cascadia Daily News|Updated Jun 2, 2022

    The latest addition to the Southern Resident orca J pod has been identified as a girl, according to observers from the Center for Whale Research (CWR). This orca, the first calf born in the pod since September 2020, was first seen in early March and is named J59. Last week, researchers with the CWR observed the pod. The orcas were "very socially active with lots of splashing and horsing around," according to a post on the group's blog. "J37 was pushing her new calf around and...

  • A new invader: European green crabs pose a threat

    Evan Caldwell, Stanwood Camano News|Updated Jun 2, 2022

    Voracious invaders are seeking a foothold in the region's tidelands. And you've been enlisted in the battle. The enemy is the European green crab - considered one of the world's worst invasive species for how it feeds on shellfish such as clams, mussels, young oysters, small fish and even young Dungeness crab. They can destroy marsh habitats by burrowing into the mud, -obliterating eelgrass beds and disrupting critical habitats for juvenile salmon, herring and other animals....

  • Researchers look at salmon habitat above Enloe Dam

    Marcy Stamper, Methow Valley News|Updated Jun 2, 2022

    Tens of thousands of endangered salmon could access high-quality habitat in the Similkameen River watershed if Enloe Dam were removed, but any plans to demolish the dam would have to address arsenic contamination in sediment that's collected behind the dam under deep gravel. At a community meeting on Enloe Dam in Tonasket last week, federal, state and tribal biologists and hydrologists, along with representatives from the Colville Tribes, presented conclusions from...

  • Holy halibut: Local charters relish bottom fish bonanza

    Luke Whittaker, Chinook Observer|Updated May 26, 2022

    ILWACO - Fishing roughly 20 miles off the Washington coast near a vast submarine canyon, it took the bait more than two minutes to reach the bottom in an ink-black abyss. It's in this deep-water habitat, near the rim of the Astoria Canyon, where one of the most prized fishes in the Pacific Northwest lurks. Pacific halibut eat their fill in this nutrient-rich environment, where a gradually sloping Washington seafloor drops precipitously from a few hundred feet into a dizzying d...

  • Kelp help is on the way

    Brooklynn Hillemann, Washington State Journal|Updated May 2, 2022

    Below the surface of Puget Sound, disappearing kelp forests and eelgrass beds are threatening the stability of dependent species. The shrinking population is now drawing the attention of lawmakers, with a variety of approaches encouraging restoration of the building block of this aquatic ecosystem. A bill signed into law by Gov. Inslee earlier this year will provide the Department of Natural Resources with funding to create a plan to conserve 10,000 acres of kelp and eelgrass habitats by 2040. The department will work with...

  • Morel harvesting permits available in May

    Staff, Methow Valley News|Updated Apr 28, 2022

    People hoping for a share of the earthy mushrooms that often pop up after a wildfire can apply for a commercial harvesting permit for morels from the Methow Valley Ranger District starting Monday (May 2). People can collect up to 5 gallons a day for their own use without a permit, as long as they carry a copy of the Free Incidental Use Mushroom Information Sheet while they’re foraging. Commercial permits are required for anyone who plans to sell mushrooms or collect more than 5 gallons per day. Permits are $30 for two d...

  • State's gray wolf population increased in 2021

    Ann McCreary, Methow Valley News|Updated Apr 21, 2022

    The gray wolf population in Washington topped 200 animals last year, with 33 packs in the central and eastern parts of the state at the end of 2021. The Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) recently released its yearly wolf population report, which tallied 206 wolves, a 16% increase over the 2020 count of 178 wolves. Of the 33 packs documented in 2021, 19 had successful breeding pairs. In 2020, WDFW counted 29 packs with 16 breeding pairs. Three packs with...

  • Legislature Funds Increased Derelict Boat Removal on Puget Sound

    Lisa Bryan, Key Peninsula News|Updated Apr 21, 2022

    Removing derelict or abandoned boats from the waters of Puget Sound is a high priority for the Department of Natural Resources. The department's underfunded Derelict Vessel Removal Program got a big boost from legislators with the passage of HB 1700 in March. Twenty-five percent of the money generated from watercraft excise taxes, roughly $7.5 million, will go toward funding the program each biennium. To read more from this article, visit: https://keypennew...