Returning from a trip in Iceland, gardening writer Jeff Lowenfels reflects on an asset that sets the state apart from others.
Wake up, Taakw eetí is almost here! Black bear is yawning, marmot has left her burrow, and spotted frog is groggy. Humans are cleaning out closets, rearranging furniture and shaking out rugs. We clean ...
Nearly every state sets aside a month to celebrate its native plants. In the Lower 48, that month is April. For obvious reasons, that doesn’t work so well in Alaska. Starting in 2023, by formal ...
Volunteers work in Anchorage’s Tikishla Park on Aug. 19 to pull out invasive chokecherry trees, also known as European bird cherry trees. The volunteers were participating in a “weed smackdown” that ...
This field book contains a catalog of botanical specimens collected in Alaska from 26 May to 3 September 1892 and 3 May 1893 to 8 September 1894. The book is divided into two sections. The first ...
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (KTUU) -Attention gardeners: with frost creeping into parts of Anchorage, now is the time to put those ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results