Fishing For The Future
410 Calhoun Ave Juneau
AK  99801

info@fishingforthefuture.org


The Longline Pioneers Pacific halibut... Of all the Northwest and Alaska fisheries, this one has the most tradition, the greatest mystique. Like few modern professions, it is an enterprise steeped in its own history.

Halibut fishing along the North Pacific Coast began more than one hundred years ago, when the schooners Oscar and Hattie, Edward E. Webster and Molly Adams sailed ’round the horn from Massachusetts in search of the bounty of the last frontier. Amazingly, vessels built near the Turn of the Century remain viable competitors in the contemporary race for profits, and the fishing style, called longlining, is little changed since its inception more than fifty years ago.

Now, hear the story from the lips of the longline pioneers.

Pots of Gold, The Profit and the Sorrow If you were lucky, like I was you found your destiny. If you were unlucky you found your fate.” That’s how one veteran fisherman described the remarkable Alaska king crab fishery that made millionaires out of men who had no particular qualifications other than a willingness to work ’round the clock whenever they were on the crab, and to risk their lives in one of the most dangerous occupations on earth. See first-hand the efforts of the original pioneers who explored the Bering Sea...the boom era when fortunes were made and boats and shore plants paid off within a single season... and the crash that killed the golden crab. For all those who fish, or simply love adventure.
Sockeye and the Age of Sail: The story of the Alaska Packers Association More than gold, more than furs, salmon was the lure that led men north. And, at the turn of the Twentieth Century, the Alaska Packers Association dominated the Pacific salmon industry from San Francisco to Bristol Bay, beyond the Aleutian Chain.

In the Alaska territory, where frontier capitalism was utterly unfettered, the salmon cartel used its size, its capital and its Great Star Fleet to subdue the competition.

Sign on with the APA and board the last square-rigged ships to work the Pacific Coast, travel to the remotest corner of American industry, brail the traps and haul the gillnets as you enjoy Sockeye and the Age of Sail.

The Salmon Capitol of the World: The story of Ketchikan In Southeast Alaska, where the salmon runs are as abundant today as at any time in history, diverse cultures and communities have always depended on the great fish for sustenance of the body and the spirit. This program takes you to Ketchikan, The Salmon Capital of the World, to visit the historic George Inlet Cannery and see first-hand how Southeast Alaska’s native inhabitants, the Tlingit and Haida, and subsequent waves of immigrants from the far corners of the earth, have established modern lifestyles with a common bond, their reliance on salmon.

Produced in conjunction with the Cape Fox Native Corporation.

Centuries of Fish, Seattle's Dynamic Distant Water Fishing Fleet During the latter half of the 19th Century, square-rigged sailing ships propelled by the wind and the strength of men's arms left the Seattle waterfront, bound for the Alaska fishing grounds. At the dawn of the 21st Century, factory ships armed with technology worthy of the Starship Enterprise leave the Seattle waterfront, bound for fishing grounds throughout the North Pacific. For well over 100 years, this Northwest city has been arguably the world's greatest fishing port and the hub of an industry that has played a surprisingly important role in shaping the culture and economy of the Pacific Northwest region.

Centuries of Fish is a documentary videotape that tells the story of an industry that operates largely out of sight and out of the minds of those engaged in shoreside pursuits. For those who know the sea, however, this industry, the last enterprise in the modern world in which men and women hunt a product in the wild, is an enduring source of sustenance and fascination.

The Great Age of Salmon and the PAF This documentary videotape brings to life a fascinating era in the history of commercial fishing at the last frontier. Featuring film footage dating back to 1926 narrated by industry pioneer Stan Tarrant, The Great Age of Salmon and the PAF is the story of the early fishing industry in Alaska and the Pacific Northwest, and of the Pacific American Fisheries company of Bellingham.

Sail to Alaska aboard a windjammer! Fish salmon aboard the Bristol Bay sailboats that operated at the mercy of wind and tide! Climb aboard a fish trap! This is a program history buffs, maritime enthusiasts and fishermen will definitely want to add to their collections.

Anacortes - The Perfect Port The land drew white settlers to the place that would be called Anacortes. Good, rich, free, plentiful land…to own, to live on and to farm. Enoch Compton and William Munks and Hiram March arrived around 1860...

Anacortes, The Perfect Port, John Sabella's new documentary, begins with the arrival of the first white settlers at this historic Washington townsite as it emerges from the coastal forest and experiences cycles of growth, decline and rebirth.

The program ranges back and forth through millennia, from the age of ice when glaciers shaped the Pacific Northwest landscape, through the centuries when the Samish and Swinomish were the unchallenged Salmon People of the Pacific Northwest, through generations of European settlement that produced dynamic fishing and timber industries, to the retirement community of the present day.
Petersburg, The Town that Fish Built Since Peter Buschmann founded the community that bears his name a century ago, Petersburg has been purely and simply a fishing town. Buschmann’s cannery ventures collapsed during the robber baron era of frontier capitalism, but the town referred to as Alaska’s little Norway continues to thrive with an economy built almost entirely on fish.

When Seattle-based Pacific American Fisheries Company threatened to shut down the town’s largest cannery in the Nineteen Sixties, the local fishermen bought the facility and went into business for themselves.

Today, this community situated among the glaciers and fjords of Southeast Alaska is not only remarkably prosperous but uncharacteristically independent.

The Days of Salmon Traps and Fish Pirates This is the story of fishing pioneers in the Pacific Northwest and Alaska, and of the most efficient and controversial type of fishing gear ever devised, the trap.

Listen to the last of the trap men as they tell their tales. Watch historic film footage of the traps that proliferated throughout Puget Sound and Alaska waters. Step inside the tiny shacks where trap watchmen contended with the ever-changing moods of the sea and the lurking presence of the fish pirates. Marvel at the bygone age.

Produced in conjunction with the Whatcom County Parks Museum at Semiahmoo.

Juneau, City Built on Gold Juneau-land of primeval seascapes and towering peaks, of magnificent glaciers, of gold and greed, of forests and fish, of totems and tourists, of government as practiced by rugged individualists.

Juneau: lush land of contradictions. Juneau is surely the most unique of America's capital cities, and this videotape brings the community to life in all its dimensions: its people, its wildlife, its spectacular scenery, its recreational and cultural amenities, its transportation and communications systems, its history, its industry, its role in Alaska politics.

The program depicts the region's native cultures, the era of European discovery, the defining moment when Joe Juneau and Richard Harris discovered gold in Silver Bow Basin, the first half of the 20th Century when Juneau was the hard rock mining capital of the world, and its modern incarnation as a hub of tourism and government. This is a must-see program for Alaska history buffs.

The Southeast Alaska Salmon Industry There are few regions and few industries as mutually-dependent as Southeast Alaska and salmon. In the remote Alaska panhandle, pristine habitat and remarkably successful conservation efforts have produced an enormous wild salmon resource that promises to sustain jobs and nourish consumers for generations to come.

Each summer, sleepy Southeast Alaska villages like Ketchikan, Petersburg and Sitka are transformed into throbbing industrial arenas where tens of thousands of men and women toil in the harvesting, processing, distribution and support sectors of the salmon industry.

This thirty minute documentary videotape takes you aboard the boats, into the processing plants and around the communities where the business of salmon is a way of life.

Syd Wright's Alaska: A tribute to a great story teller Educator, fisherman, raconteur... Syd Wright served as Petersburg's unofficial historian, captivating visitors with his wit and eloquence. Syd Wright's Alaska preserves his tales for all time.

Hear his vivid descriptions of the region's ancestral people, the Tlingit, their art and culture; of Alaska's European discovery by an emissary of Tsar Peter the Great; of the region's surprising role in the conclusion of the American Civil War; of the public treasure that emerged from the discourse between John Muir and Teddy Roosevelt; of Alaska's investiture as the 49th State of the Union; of the region's astonishingly rich fisheries and the people and communities that depend on them; of its land, its creatures, its abundance and its beauty.

A tribute to the art of storytelling, this program is a gem the whole family will enjoy.
Neets Bay: An Alaska Salmon Ranch It’s August on Revillagigedo Island north of Ketchikan, and the salmon are running in Neets Bay Creek. These fish are about to spawn and die. It’s the end of their life cycle, but many other cycles are in evidence here.

When the salmon come, the harbor seals come with them, looking for a meal. The eagles are watching, even if they lack the motivation to hunt right now. The gulls feed voraciously on fish carcasses that litter the stream banks. The carcasses come courtesy of the bears that fish here. With so many fish, the bear population is large and the animals are getting fat. Even the sows and cubs get plenty to eat.

The fishermen are here. Their incentive is profit rather than nourishment. So are the tourists, hungry for an experience of nature that no longer exists in urban America. In the vast wilderness that is Southeast Alaska, every one covets the salmon.