Inletkeeper Blog
Defend the Bear Coast from Pebble Mine
Alaska’s bears and salmon are inextricably linked. During the summer months, while Alaskans are filling our freezers with salmon, the brown bears on the Alaska Peninsula are storing up their salmon for the winter. Bears of the Alaska Peninsula are incredible — eating...
Living as Conservation Medicine Experts in Alaska
By Kayla Walsh, Alaska Conservation Foundation Intern What brings a city girl like me to Cook Inlet, a place I hadn’t heard of just 6 months ago? Well, I started a graduate program in Conservation Medicine and I’m here to learn all about it from the real experts:...
Tell the EPA to Finish the Job & Defend Bristol Bay
On May 26, we started what we hope will be the LAST comment period advocating for strong protections under the Clean Water Act to defend Bristol Bay from destructive mining by a Canadian company. Many of you have been with us in this fight for years and years. Bristol...
Meaningful Community Action: Let’s Get to Work!
Working together, Alaskans are a powerful force for positive change in our communities. Let's roll up our sleeves and put local solutions into action! We’ve all seen what happens when outsiders come in and do things without meaningful input from locals: We get cookie...
Oil & Gas Lease Sale 258 in Lower Cook Inlet Canceled
Another red herring is that canceled lease sales like Lease Sale 258 continue to contribute to rising gas prices. This isn’t true. There are thousands of active leases that the industry has that could be developed at any time. Even if these leases were issued tomorrow, it would be years before any oil and gas would be produced from Lower Cook Inlet. These leases have no impact on our current oil and gas prices.
Cold-water Treasure Maps
The blue lines on topographic maps necessarily under-represent the complex movement of freshwater across floodplains, through wetlands and gravel bars. For a juvenile fish, the blue lines are experienced as a maze of currents, temperature, food and hiding places,...
Energy Democracy in Alaska
An abbreviated version of this piece was initially published in our Spring 2022 newsletter. When America began to electrify, lights came on first in cities. It made commercial sense: the city's affluent could easily foot the cost of power, and urban density meant less...
Electronic Recycling: Inletkeeper’s Annual Game of Tetris
After a short winter lull, Inletkeeper’s programs start revving up come spring. One program that Kenai Peninsula residents have grown to count on are our annual spring electronics recycling events. This year is no different. Mark your calendars for April 30th for our...
How to Be an Advocate!
Are you ever on social media and you see articles titled something like “All the Things You’ve Been Doing Wrong Your Entire Life” or “Apparently eating chips isn’t as simple as popping them inside your mouth. No, there is a proper way to truly enjoy these crispy...
Mouth to Mouth Wild Run & Ride 2022
I stood at the finish line of the Mouth to Mouth Wild Run & Ride at the end of Cannery Road in Kenai, on an extremely cold February afternoon (the race is still over three months away). There was a mean wind that bit at any exposed skin, making my eyes water. I...
