Episodes
Tuesday Jun 21, 2022
And Then the Sea Glowed a Magnificent Milky Green
Tuesday Jun 21, 2022
Tuesday Jun 21, 2022
by Sam Keck Scott • A chance encounter with a rare phenomenon called a milky sea connects a sailor and a scientist to explain the ocean’s ghostly glow.
The original story, along with photos and video, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
Tuesday Jun 14, 2022
Warning! Signs Are Not Enough to Save Beachgoers from Deadly Currents
Tuesday Jun 14, 2022
Tuesday Jun 14, 2022
by Chloe Williams • Keeping people out of rip currents is more about reading human behavior than reading warning signs.
The original story, along with photos and video, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
Wednesday Jun 08, 2022
Bonus Episode: Salt, Sweat, and Grit
Wednesday Jun 08, 2022
Wednesday Jun 08, 2022
The Race to Alaska is one of the most grueling at-sea races, taking participants from Port Townsend, Washington, to Ketchikan, Alaska, as they navigate complicated currents, narrow rocky channels, and inclement weather. The premise is simple: travel more than 1,200 kilometers with no motors, no support, and a USD $10,000 award waiting for the winner. Racers prepare sailboats, kayaks, paddleboards, or any manner of non-motorized vessels for a chance to put their paddle to the mettle in the ultimate marine race. But what drives people to take on such extreme adventures?
In this special episode Hakai Magazine editor Jude Isabella and guests discuss what compels people to undertake extraordinary pursuits at sea.
Guests are adventure psychologist Paula Reid, who has spent 10 months racing a yacht around the world and skied to the South Pole; Karl Krüger, the first person to complete the Race to Alaska by paddleboard; and Douglas Smith, who is entering the Race to Alaska for the first time this year.
If you prefer to watch the discussion in video format, you can find it on YouTube, here: https://youtu.be/AFgM2J_CZjY?t=205
Friday Jun 03, 2022
Friday Jun 03, 2022
by Ashley Braun • In the US Pacific Northwest, tribal hatcheries uphold Indigenous communities’ treaty rights to salmon, while buying time to rehabilitate lost habitat.
This is final part of our special four part editorial package on salmon hatcheries. The original story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
Thursday Jun 02, 2022
The Paradox of Salmon Hatcheries, Part 3 of 4 — The Hail Mary Hatcheries
Thursday Jun 02, 2022
Thursday Jun 02, 2022
by Vanessa Minke-Martin • As wildfires, droughts, and floods deal a blow to coastal habitats, wild salmon are disappearing from waterways like California’s Russian River. Can conservation hatcheries save endangered runs?
This is part three of our special four part editorial package on salmon hatcheries. The original story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
Wednesday Jun 01, 2022
The Paradox of Salmon Hatcheries, Part 2 of 4 — Too Many Pinks in the Pacific
Wednesday Jun 01, 2022
Wednesday Jun 01, 2022
by Miranda Weiss • Evidence is mounting that pink salmon, pumped by the billions into the North Pacific from fish hatcheries, are upending marine ecosystems.
This is part two of our special four part editorial package on salmon hatcheries. The original story, along with photos and map, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
Tuesday May 31, 2022
Tuesday May 31, 2022
by Jude Isabella • From their beginnings in the late 19th century, salmon hatcheries have gone from cure to band-aid to crutch. Now, we can’t live without manufactured fish.
This is part one of our special four part editorial package on salmon hatcheries. The original story, along with photos and map, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
Tuesday May 17, 2022
It’s 10 PM. Do You Know Where Your Cat Is?
Tuesday May 17, 2022
Tuesday May 17, 2022
by Egill Bjarnason • In Iceland, traditionally a land of cat lovers, bans and curfews are redefining the human relationship with domestic cats.
The original story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
Tuesday May 10, 2022
Surviving the Race to Alaska
Tuesday May 10, 2022
Tuesday May 10, 2022
by Aldyn Chwelos • This motor-free ocean race—with vessels ranging from paddleboards to pedal-assist sailboats—is less about how fast you can go and more about whether you get there at all.
The original story, along with photos and video, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
Tuesday May 03, 2022
How the Shipping Industry Sails through Legal Loopholes
Tuesday May 03, 2022
Tuesday May 03, 2022
by Paul Tullis • A murky world of shell companies, flags of convenience, and end-of-life flags allows companies to dodge accountability and dispose of ships cheaply.
The original story, along with photos and video, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.