Cook Inlet razor clams await processing after being dug out of the sand. (Jenny Neyman/KDLL) Sport and personal-use harvest of razor clams will open this summer on the east side of Cook Inlet for the ...
OCEAN SHORES, Wash. — It's a hunt that brings thousands of people to the Washington Coast. “More people participate in razor clamming than any other fishery in the state. It brings out the largest ...
OLYMPIA, Wash. — Calling all razor clam diggers: more digging on Washington coastal beaches is set to begin on Feb. 6. TheWashington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) coastal shellfish managers ...
Washington clammers hit the beaches for the first digs of the new season recently, which ran from Sept. 29 through Oct. 2. Diggers found good success during the first open tides. Washington Department ...
Diggers could have as many at 47 days on four Washington beaches to get their share of razor clams this season.
Each year, 100,000 people wake up clamoring to dig in the sand for razor clams. They pull on waders, reach for their clam guns and head to a 58-mile stretch of coastal Washington that extends from the ...
Diggers got the go-ahead from the state Department of Fish and Wildlife Thursday to proceed with razor clam digs running through Sunday. “We had a great tide series of clam digging over Thanksgiving ...
GRAYLAND, Wash. -- Ask the Hansen brothers how long they have been joining the thousands who flock to Washington state's beaches to dig for succulent razor clams, and you will get a typical story.
Usually well known for what they add to chowder or linguine, clams are now inspiring robotics research. Scientists at MIT are studying the digging capabilities of the razor clam to figure out how to ...
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