Hop aboard an Alaskan commercial fishing vessel for a front row seat of bountiful catches, breath taking scenery and unforgettable landscapes! All photos are high resolution and local available for fast browsing (no need to download from internet after app is installed). Use the preview button to crop the picture to your liking then exit back to home screen and take a look. After ten seconds the Seascape app will reappear and you can preview again or make your final selection with the set wallpaper button. Try as many wallpaper as you like but we ask you buy the pro version if you need more then two wallpapers a month.
Professional photographer Chis Miller captures the scenery while set net fishing in Bristol Bay, drift gill net fishing also in Bristol Bay, Trolling for Salmon in the outside waters of Southeast Alaska, Prawn fishing, and long lining Halibut and Black cod (Sablefish).
Chris Miller is a Freelance Photographer based in Juneau, Alaska who focuses primarily on Commercial Fishing, Backcountry Skiing, and photojournalism. His work has appeared in: Newsweek, the New York Times, Alaska Magazine, Anchorage Daily News, Juneau Empire, the Worcester Telegram and Gazette, on CNN and the Daily Show with Jon Stewart, and various other international publications as well as several books. Currently he is working on a long term photo project on the commercial fishery in Bristol Bay.
If you’d like to see some more photographs visit:
www.csmphotos.com
About commercial fishing in Alaska by WikiPedia:
Alaska supports one of the most productive commercial fishing economies in the world. Fishermen typically receive well over $1 billion for their catch; while the value of Alaskan seafood sold at first wholesale easily tops $3 billion. The economic impact of the seafood industry was estimated at approximately $4.6 billion in a 2003 study. Subsistence and personal use fisheries managed by the Division of Commercial Fisheries feed thousands of Alaskans.
Commercially important species of seafood from Alaska include five species of salmon, five species of crab, walleye pollock, Pacific halibut, Pacific cod, sablefish, herring, four species of shrimp, several species of flatfish and rockfish, lingcod, geoducks, sea cucumbers, and sea urchins. Sixty-three aquatic farms also produce oysters, littleneck clams, and geoduck clams.
Salmon is the most valuable commercial fishery managed by the State of Alaska. Commercial fisheries for salmon extend from Ketchikan to Kotzebue, as well as deep into the interior of Alaska along the Yukon and Kuskokwim rivers. Salmon are harvested using a variety of fishing gear and more Alaskans are employed in harvesting and processing salmon than in any other commercial fishery.
Bristol Bay is the largest sockeye salmon fishery in the world and the most valuable single salmon fishery in Alaska. Pink salmon, the most numerous salmon species harvested in Alaska, often produce statewide harvests of over 100 million fish. Southeast Alaska, Prince William Sound, the Alaska Peninsula, and Kodiak are the major pink salmon producing areas.
Alaska's commercial fishermen work in one of the world's harshest environments. They endure isolated fishing grounds, high winds, seasonal darkness, very cold water, icing, and short fishing seasons, deadliest catch, where very long work days are the norm. Fatigue, physical stress, and financial pressures face most Alaska fishermen through their careers. The hazardous work conditions faced by fishermen have a strong impact on their safety. Out of 948 work-related deaths that took place in Alaska during 1990-2006, one-third (311) occurred to fishermen. This is equivalent to an estimated annual fatality rate of 128/100,000 workers/year. This fatality rate is 26 times that of the overall U.S work-related fatality rate of approximately 5/100,000 workers/year for
the same time period.