Retired executive Jeffery Scott Fraser co-manages the historic Tsaina Lodge in Valdez, Alaska, which he and his wife restored before reopening it to the public. Visitors to Jeffery S. Fraser’s lodge may participate in a wide variety of outdoor activities, including sport fishing for Pacific halibut, one of two major species of sport fish in Alaska.
A large flatfish found from the Alaskan Bering Sea to the waters of Northern California, the Pacific halibut can grow up to 9 feet long and reach a maximum weight of 500 pounds. Its underwater habitat varies in depth along the continental shelf, ranging from inshore to an approximate depth of 450 meters. Sport and commercial fishers consider the Pacific halibut a prized catch due to its delectable meat, and chefs find it is suitable for a range of cooking techniques. Options for halibut fishing in Alaska include guided and unguided sport fishing, although participation in both forms requires anglers to abide by a series of regulations set forth by Alaska’s Department of Fish and Game, state fisheries, and international fish councils. Additionally, regulations for guided sport fishing undergo annual revision by the North Pacific Fishery Management Council and the International Pacific Halibut Commission.
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AuthorJeffery Scott Fraser founded the National Information Consortium and Kansas Information Consortium in the 1990s as companies that provided individual and corporate clients with efficient ways of interacting with the government via the Internet. Archives
October 2017
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