Kenai Peninsula College, Homer: Sponsored by the
Kachemak Bay Campus-Kenai Peninsula College/UAA, this highly acclaimed, nationally-recognized conference features workshops, craft talks, public readings, and panel presentations in literary fiction, poetry, nonfiction.
We love taking a boat or water taxi from Homer 20 minutes to Tutka Bay, at the western end of the
Kachemak Bay State Park to camp at the Sea Star Cove cabin, The cabin is nestled on the hill above the beach in mossy trees, with a fire ring and covered porch overlooking Cook Inlet and the est of Tutka Bay.
Kachemak Bay had uncommon paralytic shellfish poisoning events and oyster farm closures in 2015 and 2016.
Catriona Reynolds, Clinic Manager of the
Kachemak Bay Family Planning Clinic in Homer, Alaska, attributes the 12-percentage point drop in uninsured visits there to the staff's efforts to both enroll clients in marketplace coverage and educate them about using their insurance.
Group of 20 in
Kachemak Bay was composed of 14 white, 6 grays.
Because it was difficult to access most sites in winter, on-ground assessment was limited to the mouths of the Beluga, Kasilof, and Kenai Rivers and portions of
Kachemak Bay near Homer (Fig.
During two surveys in
Kachemak Bay, Alaska, strings of 16-20 sablefish, Korean hair crab, shrimp, and Kodiak wooden lair pots were set at depths ranging between 62 and 390 meters.
Alaska Maritime Refuge staff and an intern collect more than 60 of the carcasses from the beaches of
Kachemak Bay in south-central Alaska.
nest on islands in
Kachemak Bay? Ann, no news of recovery arrived, but
To further investigate serologic evidence and necropsy findings, we looked for morbilliviral nucleic acid in nasal swabs archived from live otters and in tissue (brain, lung, lymph node) from 9 stranded carcasses from
Kachemak Bay (southcentral stock, Figure 1, panel A) examined during 2005-2008.
Abookire AA and Norcross BL: Depth and substrate as determinants of distribution of juvenile flathead sole (Hippoglossoides elassodon) and rock sole (Pleuronectes bilineatus), in
Kachemak Bay, Alaska.