LLTK joins research network modeling Puget Sound ecosystems

Long Live the Kings is part of a new collaborative project led by the Puget Sound Institute to create the […]

Read More

Piloting a New Way to Manage Stormwater in Ohop Valley

In the late 1800s, settlers converted the Ohop Valley to pastures and farm fields, turning a once meandering Ohop Creek […]

Read More

Fighting for Survival in the Salish Sea

Finding solutions to save the resident orcas and the salmon they depend on. By Emily Crawford, published originally in Harbor’s Magazine. […]

Read More

Endangered No More

A milestone for salmon recovery in Hood Canal By Mark Glyde, originally published in Harbors Magazine In the estuary flats […]

Read More

LISTEN: Microsoft Grant Shows How Artificial Intelligence Could Help Salmon Recovery (KNKX)

By Bellamy Pailthorp, KNKX One of the biggest mysteries among people working on salmon recovery in Puget Sound and the […]

Read More

Long Live the Kings (Duke's Chowder House)

Long Live the Kings is proud to have Duke’s support. Check out one of Duke’s locations for sustainable salmon and keep […]

Read More

Sponsor, track steelhead as they make trek to Pacific (King 5)

Alison Morrow, KING 6:13 PM. PDT April 14, 2017. “As juvenile steelhead make their treacherous trek through Puget Sound people […]

Read More

Take an online trip with a real-live salmon navigating the perils of Puget Sound, and pick which one will make it out to sea first (Geekwire)

Lisa Stiffler wrote a great piece on salmon and steelhead marine survival and our Survive the Sound campaign. “Salmon — whether […]

Read More

Puget Sound Salmon Recovery Threatened by Proposed EPA Cuts (Seafood Source)

LLTK’s Deputy Director, Michael Schmidt, was recently interviewed by Seafood Source regarding the current administration’s proposal to eliminate Environmental Protection Agency […]

Read More