Aloha Winnie-the-Pooh Friday!
On this day in 1926 Winnie-the-Pooh made his literary debut. The popular children’s book character was created by British author A.A. Milne and first appeared in a collection of short stories called Winnie-the-Pooh. Winnie, a teddy bear, lives in Ashdown Forest, Sussex, England. The book followed his adventures in the forest with his friends Piglet, Owl, Rabbit, and Eeyore.
Why
the country’s largest shellfish farm is struggling to hire
and retain workers
It used to be that [Taylor Shellfish] could fill a job opening
within a few weeks. Now, amid a remarkably tight labor market,
that process can take four months.
Historic
drought behind B.C. wildfires, salmon die off could
continue, experts say
Thousands of dead fish, a prolonged wildfire season and
intense water shortages leading to ice rink closures are all
symptoms of record-setting drought in parts of British
Columbia. The Lower Mainland, Sunshine Coast and West
Vancouver Island areas are experiencing Level 5 drought
conditions — the most severe in the province's classification
scale.
Conservation
concerns cancel Alaska’s Bering snow, king crab seasons
Alaska officials have canceled the fall Bristol Bay red king
crab harvest, and in a first-ever move, also scuttled the
winter harvest of smaller snow crab. The move is a double
whammy to a fleet from Alaska, Washington and Oregon pursuing
Bering Sea crab in harvests that as recently as 2016 grossed
$280 million.
West
Coast gray whale population continues to decline but
scientists remain cautiously optimistic
U.S. researchers say the number of gray whales off western
North America has continued to fall over the last two years, a
decline that resembles previous population swings over the
past several decades.
Seattle’s
record-setting warm and dry weather is both random and a
dress rehearsal, experts say
Seattle’s identity has been synonymous with drizzle, moss and
the angsty grunge music and compulsive coffee drinking that’s
fueled by its notoriously damp, gray weather. But this year’s
summer and start of fall are threatening to wring those traits
from the city’s long-held character.
Puget
Sound salmon habitat restored with tribes leading the way
Reconnecting estuaries — the place where fresh and salt water
meet — is an effort largely led by Washington’s tribes and
backed by local and state leaders... At 353 acres, the Port of
Everett’s Blue Heron Slough restoration project is among the
largest along the Puget Sound.
We
need to talk about B.C.’s drought
In the depths of this record-breaking B.C. drought, pretty
much everyone I know is tormented by two opposing sentiments:
1) Overwhelming joy at the endless summer we’re having and 2)
A growing sense of anxiety about how nearly three months with
no rain in much of B.C. is impacting, well, all other living
things.
Groups
working to remove thousands of tires from Puget Sound
The Washington Scuba Alliance (WSA) has teamed up with Coastal
Sensing and Survey to locate 500,000 tires that were put
underwater in Puget Sounds and Hood Canal in the 70s to create
fish habitat. The organization said a recent study revealed
the decomposing tires are poisoning sea life including Coho
salmon.
These news clips are a selection of weekday clips collected
in Salish Sea
News and Weather which is compiled as a community
service by Mike Sato. To subscribe at no cost to the weekday
news clips, send your name and email to mikesato772 at
gmail.com. Your email information is never shared and you can
unsubscribe at any time.
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