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  • Migrating salmon enter the Issaquah State Salmon Hatchery, a government facility built in 1936 where the fish are artificially raised. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Issaquah State Salmon Hatchery
  • Why did the salmon cross the road? A male chum salmon tries to get across the Skokomish Valley Road to reenter the Skokomish River and continue its journey to the salmon hatchery up stream. This fish and the others along the side of the road seemed to wait for the wake from passing vehicles to make their dash across the road. (Harley Soltes / The Seattle Times)
    Why did the salmon cross the road?
  • A big angry chinook bites all the other nearby salmon. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Eyeball-to-eyeball with big salmon
  • A 20-mile-long mass of sea ice drifts over the Bering Sea fishing grounds, covering buoys that mark the location of crab traps. Ice can seize the buoys and drag crab pots for miles, making it difficult for fishermen to find their gear. (Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times)
    Sea ice
  • One crow shares the stage with a Chinook salmon weather vane at the Issaquah Fish Hatchery. (Alan Berner / The Seattle Times)
    Salmon weathervane
  • This salmon is about to complete it's lifecycle as it returns to Issaquah Creek a little battered after a likely four-year journey from the hatchery to Alaskan waters and back, led mainly by its nose and the imprinted smell of the waters it came from. (Alan Berner / The Seattle Times)
    Heading home
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