Alaska 1993 - Abstracts

Alaska 1993
TitleSubjectAuthors
48 hours on the Iditarod trail.Travel, recreation and leisureRoy Corral
A deep creek prophecy. (fishing)Travel, recreation and leisureMarie Boyd, Chester L. Van de Water
Alaska's best drive-up fishing: roadside spots don't always mean crowds. (The Alaska Sportsman: Annual Fishing Section)Travel, recreation and leisureRon Dalby
Bloodied bureaucrats. (proposed slaughter of wolf and reindeer)Travel, recreation and leisure 
Bridge builder. (tribute to the late author Ralph Soberg) (Obituary)Travel, recreation and leisure 
Catching up: commercial fishing was once a man's world. No more, as Alaskan women assume yet another pioneering role.Travel, recreation and leisureR. Lynn Barnes
Chrome fury: a little-known, bucket-mouthed tempest, Alaska's sheefish combines texture, form and a hard-as-nails attitude into exotic appeal.Travel, recreation and leisureBen O. Williams
Cordova's road to the future: a struggling fishing town ponders a highway that might ease the hard times or rupture its splendid isolation. (includes related article on the conflict between Alaska and the federal government over environmental damages from the state's highway plan)Travel, recreation and leisureCharles P. Wohlforth, Wesley Loy
Cruising Alaska. (special advertising section with many related articles)Travel, recreation and leisureMike Miller
Diamond in the rough: craftsman exposes beauty beneath the willow's drab bark. (wood-carver Bob Espen) (Column)Travel, recreation and leisureTricia Brown
Elemental Alaska: back to basics with the big picture. (photo essay tribute to Alaska's environment) (Illustration)Travel, recreation and leisureNolan Hester
Experience Alaska: Ketchikan 1993 activity guide. (special advertising section)(includes list of 1993 events)Travel, recreation and leisure 
From Ketchikan to Barrow: historic trading rivals merge.Travel, recreation and leisure 
Gray ghosts and rainbow dreams; the once great Chena River grayling fishery had seen better days, which got some anglers to thinking: What if we stocked trout? (includes related article on protection efforts and areas for fishing) (The Alaska Sportsman: Annual Fishing Section)Travel, recreation and leisureGrant Sims
Grimly to the feast. (pike fishing)(includes related article on tackle techniques) (Column)Travel, recreation and leisureGrant Sims
Hidden damage. (Exon Valdez oil spill) (includes related article on cleanup)Travel, recreation and leisureCharles Wohlforth
Hit the water; cool spots, hot gear, true tips: a sea kayak primer. (includes related articles on kayaker John Bauman and types of kayaks) (Cover Story)Travel, recreation and leisureBill Sherwonit
Hot shots: presenting the winners of Alaska's third annual photography contest. (illustration) (Cover Story)Travel, recreation and leisure 
If at first you don't succeed.... (gardening under various environmental and other conditions in Alaska's Far North region)Travel, recreation and leisureJill Shepherd
In a league of its own. (dubious future of Alaska's amateur baseball league started in 1960)Travel, recreation and leisureBen Wear
In Juneau coffee makes a fine umbrella. (Juneau, Alaska)Travel, recreation and leisureScott Graham
Johnny's Girl. (excerpt from 'Johnny's Girl: A Daughter's Memoir of Growing Up in Alaska's Underworld')Travel, recreation and leisureKim Rich
Kenai steelhead myth never dies. (fishing the Kenai River, Alaska)Travel, recreation and leisureLes Palmer
Last barge before winter. (St. Marys, Alaska and other communities on the Yukon River)Travel, recreation and leisureKris Capps, Mike Mathers
Lasting impressions: to hear the unheard. (composer John Luther Adams)Travel, recreation and leisureThomas B. Harrison
Master of the helm. (cruise ship captain Hans van Biljouw)Travel, recreation and leisureNan Elliot
Masters of the shale slides. (hunting mountain goats)Travel, recreation and leisureJerry M. Baker
Medicine bird. (hunting ptarmigan) (includes recipe)Travel, recreation and leisureJerry M. Wylie
Meeting offers native view. (Alaska Federation of Natives convention)Travel, recreation and leisureRobin Mackey HIll
Mountains of fire. (volcanoes) (Illustration)Travel, recreation and leisure 
Play hard, tread lightly. (ecotourism in Alaska) (Cover Story)Travel, recreation and leisureBruce Melzer
Shadow & Light: are you a SAD victim? Glimmer of hope in battling the long Arctic night. (seasonal affective disorder) (includes related article on dawn machines)Travel, recreation and leisureTony Dawson
Summer's pioneer: marking time with fireweed. (plants in Alaska)Travel, recreation and leisureFaith Szafranski
Symbol of the arctic. (polar bears)Travel, recreation and leisureJulia Rubin
Taking charge. (whaling)Travel, recreation and leisureRoger Kaye
The cross and the totem. (religion of Indians in Alaska)Travel, recreation and leisureMarilee Enge
The essence of wilderness. (Lake Clark National Park and Preserve)Travel, recreation and leisureBill Sherwonit
The littlest big game. (deer hunting)Travel, recreation and leisureLon E. Lauber
The longest day: Alaskans do everything under the sun when it comes time to celebrate the summer solstice.Travel, recreation and leisureNolan Hester
The maiden voyage of the Ohh-La-la; folks in Fairbanks agree on two things: Jacques Berthomier's boat is big, very big, and his plan to float it down the Yukon is crazy, very crazy.Travel, recreation and leisureMike Mathers
The nomad. (caribou hunting)Travel, recreation and leisureBob Robb
The Southeastern solution. (fishing in southeastern Alaska)Travel, recreation and leisureBruce Cherry
The world of the Yup'ik: upterrlainarluta - always getting ready. (the village life and fishing world of the Yupik Eskimos living in 52 villages along Alaska's southwest coast; photo essay from book 'Always Getting Ready') (Cover Story)Travel, recreation and leisureJames H. Barker, Robin Barker
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