In Sheet’ká, Łingít fishers share herring harvests with a surprise influx of grey whales
In Sheet’ká, Łingít fishers share herring harvests with a surprise influx of grey whales

By Amy Romer, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, IndigiNews Growing up, Yanshkawoo (Harvey Kitka) never saw many grey whales in the waters of Sheet’ká Sound. The Łingít (Tlingít) Elder and subsistence yaaw (herring) fisherman recalled harvesting gáax’w (herring eggs) in his territories before “Alaska” became a “U.S.” state in 1959. It was a time when yaaw were plentiful and sightings of whales were rare — just a handful at most. “There was food everywhere,” mused Yanshkawoo, tracing a slow circle in the air with his hand — a gesture toward the abundance the ocean once held. He sat at a crowded café in Sheet’ká (Sitka), his voice calm but thoughtful. “They had no reason to come into the Sound back then.” But things changed in 2019, when fishers, researchers and community

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