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Corey Arnold
While documenting the treacherous waters and fishing culture of the Aleutian Islands, photographer and salmon fisherman Corey Arnold captured this image. “Every night in Unalaska, I'd spot this red fox near the side of the road, charming drivers with its irresistible cuteness into throwing it snacks out the window,” he writes. “On this evening, I spent a few hours watching this fox at work, using my headlights to light the scene.”
Spring chinook salmon come of age in a hatchery. Once their eggs mature, they will be released back into the wild. Chinooks that migrate in the late spring are becoming rarer primarily due to dams and climate change.
”I just arrived home from out of state, and it’s hard not to worry that I could be carrying a sleeping virus,” says photographer Corey Arnold. “I’m hoping to turn my new inability to travel into a positive with more time spent with my family. My partner, Aly Nicklas, and I live in Portland with our six-week-old son, Wolfgang. I normally fly out of state at least twice a month for work, but now, quarantined in my home, I find myself documenting a health and economic crisis looming in the not-so-distant future.”
A couple embraces at Crater Lake in Oregon.
An exhausted fisherman takes a nap on a commercial fishing skiff in Bristol Bay, Alaska.
Inspired by images on Instagram, Jonathan Farrar and Marty Castro ventured outside and discovered a love for nature and camping. They drove up the West Coast, visiting national parks, including Crater Lake in Oregon, the country’s deepest lake.
Steven Donovan, flipping into a pool, took a seasonal job at Glacier National Park to sharpen his photography skills. This photo was originally published in "Can the Selfie Generation Unplug and Get Into Parks?" in October 2016.