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February 19, 2012 11:27 am

Cause of Alaska seal deaths a mystery

Feb 17 2012 in Environment, Slider by Deborah Bach

This seal, photographed in August near Barrow, Alaska, is afflicted with the same mysterious illness that has killed dozens of ring seals. Photos courtesy of North Shore Borough of Wildlife Management

Scientists in Alaska are trying to determine what has killed and sickened more than 130 seals since the summer, but say they don’t think radiation from Japan’s Fukushima nuclear plant is to blame. Since mid-July, more than 60 dead and more than 75 diseased seals, most of them ring seals, have turned up in the [...]

First group of boatyards deemed ‘clean’ under new program

Feb 1 2012 in Boat Show 2012, Business of Boating, Environment by Deborah Bach

The NMTA's Peter Schrappen, left, and Ben Lee, right, with Ivaylo Minkov, general manager of Canal Boatyard. The yard was among the first four to be certified under a new program. Photo courtesy of NMTA

Four Washington boatyards recently became the first to be certified under a new program that aims to help protect Puget Sound from water-borne pollutants. Cap Sante Marine in Anacortes, Seaview and Canal boatyards in Seattle and Swantown Marina and Boatworks in Olympia were certified as “clean” under the new Certified Boatyard Program, run by the [...]

Extreme tides blamed for near-breach of jetty in La Push

Jan 9 2012 in Currents, Environment by Deborah Bach

Extreme tides are blamed for threatening a breach of the South Jetty in La Push, on the coast of Washington. Following a request for assistance from the Quileute Nation, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ Seattle District sent a flood fight team to the Quillayute River on Saturday to stop an imminent breach of the jetty. [...]

Agencies respond to sinking off Shaw Island

Dec 29 2011 in Currents, Environment by Deborah Bach

Crews are working to contain an oil spill after a vessel sunk in Blind Bay off Shaw Island. The 72-foot wooden boat St. Mary sunk about 200 years off the bay’s southwestern shore and was first reported on Tuesday morning. The boat’s owner reported that the vessel sank with about 50 gallons of diesel fuel [...]

Boaters, get your cameras – the king tides are coming

Dec 21 2011 in Environment by Deborah Bach

A high tide on Jan. 6, 2010 floods Olympiad Drive in Southworth, Washington. Photo by Ray Garrido

Extreme tides are starting on the Washington coast and the Strait of Juan de Fuca today, and the state Department of Ecology is inviting people to share photos of this naturally occurring event. The extreme high tides, known as “king tides” in British Columbia and some West Coast states, occur when the sun and moon’s [...]

World’s largest creature spotted off Washington coast

Dec 15 2011 in Currents, Environment by Deborah Bach

Seattle Times reporter Craig Welch has this story about a sighting of six blue whales off the coast: He spotted the geyserlike spray from its blow hole first. Biologist John Calambokidis was tracking humpback whales about 25 miles off Westport late last week when he saw what he presumed was an exhalation from a much [...]

Record high pressures causing unusually low tides

Dec 9 2011 in Environment by Deborah Bach

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Record high sea-level pressures around Puget Sound since the start of December are also causing unusually low tides, according to local weather guru Cliff Mass. As Mass reported on his blog, sea level pressure at Seattle-Tacoma Airport hit a high of 1043.4 mb on Dec. 1, the highest since record-keeping started at the airport in 1948. Over [...]