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Photo Contest: Changing seasons

There are many ways to mark the change of seasons in Juneau: When the fireweed blooms, fades to…

A squirrel out on the trail to Nugget Falls. (Photo by Janice Gorle)

Neighbors

Wild Shots: Photos of Mother Nature in Southeast Alaska

The Empire Outdoors page is looking for superb images of Alaska’s wildlife, scenery or plant life. Send your…

UAF graduate student Claire Montgomerie handles a lynx kitten she found at a den site near Wiseman this summer. Photo courtesy Claire Montgomerie. (Courtesy of Claire Montgomerie)

Neighbors

Finding a far-north lynx den

In her study of one of the farthest north lynx populations in North America this summer, Claire Montgomerie…

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The high cost of being a bird

If you walk along a shore beside a channel where salmon run in late summer, you may find…

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Group organizes events around fish, food and the future

Each academic year, the University of Alaska Southeast Sustainability Committee determines how best to serve the university community…

Playwright Vera Bedard speaks as poet Joan Naviyuk Kane listens at a 49 Writers Crosscurrents panel on Friday, Sept. 29. Bedard, who is currently a three-year resident at Perseverance Theater, wrote the 2016 Perseverance-produced play “Our Voices Will be Heard,” which addressed childhood sexual abuse. She was born in Craig and has Tlingit and Dena’ina heritage. Kane is the author of “Milk Black Carbon,” “Hyperboreal,” “The Cormorant Hunter’s Wife,” and “The Straits.” She is Inupiaq, with family in King Island and Mary’s Igloo.

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Discussing an Alaskan apocalypse

Zombies, North Korea’s threats, a rogue virus: the end of the world may not be upon Juneau at…

Skagway Burlesque twirls into Juneau

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Skagway Burlesque twirls into Juneau

Five mudboot-clad, umbrella-twirling women danced their way onto the stage of the Red Dog Saloon as the opening…

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Wrestlemania: “The Elaborate Entrance of Chad Deity” at Perseverance Theatre

I’ll say this for the 2017-18 Perseverance Theatre season: it certainly starts off with a bang. Actually, not…

A camper excitedly tries the beginnings of a cedar hat on while learning to weave. (Photo by Bethany Goodrich)

Neighbors

Strength and Xaat (Salmon): Haa Yaakwdáat Kusteeyi Yanshuká (Yakutat Culture Camp)

From sea to summit, Yakutat’s horizon boasts the tallest, most rapidly ascending mountain on Earth. It is here,…

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Thank you, from the food bank

On Wednesday Sept. 27, the Alaska National Guard Counterdrug Support Program conducted a very successful food drive at…

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Have you been in crisis lately?

At some point we all experience our own crisis or that of a family member, friend, or co-worker.…

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Recent births

Recent births at Bartlett Regional Hospital: • On Sept. 18, a daughter, Grace Bahiyyih Bauer, weighing 7 pounds,…

A spittlebug nymph inside its spittle. (Photo by Bob Armstrong)

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Life of Spittlebugs

If you can remember back to our so-called summer, you may remember seeing little clots of whitish bubbles…

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Summer trails work roundup

Juneau trails have been improved with new bridges, brushwork and replaced boardwalk this summer. Trail Mix, Inc., a…

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Invaders making their presence seen

Rhododendrons are generally immune to most insect pests, the concentration of toxic substances in their leaves is so…

Gulls congregate on downtown condos. (Photo by Linda Shaw)

Neighbors

Wild Shots: Photos of Mother Nature in Southeast Alaska

The Empire Outdoors page is looking for superb images of Alaska’s wildlife, scenery or plant life. Send your…

Neighbors

Tribes, enviros petition commerce secretary on mines

Alaska Native and conservation groups asked the U.S. Secretary of Commerce to investigate six hard-rock mines in British…

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Goat hunting closed near Skagway River

Goat hunting has closed in a management area near Skagway, the Alaska Department of Fish & Game announced…

This April 2015 photo shows marine sea slugs from a derelict vessel from Iwate Prefecture, Japan which washed ashore in Oregon. On Thursday, Sept. 27, 2017, researchers reported nearly 300 species of fish, mussels and other sea creatures hitchhiked across the Pacific Ocean on debris from the 2011 Japanese tsunami, washing ashore alive in the United States. (John W. Chapman)

Neighbors

Sea critters hitchhiked across the Pacific on tsunami debris

WASHINGTON — Nearly 300 species of fish, mussels and other sea critters hitchhiked across the Pacific Ocean on…

Aroon on the Isis with Megan and JoDean on the Westerner in the background. (Photo by Tara Neilson)

Neighbors

Boat parties at remote docks

The axis around which our rural community of Meyers Chuck revolves is the state-installed dock. So we decided…