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Alaskans get ready for Memorial Day weekend plans

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Alaskans get ready for Memorial Day weekend plans


ANCHORAGE, Alaska (KTUU) – Come rain or shine, Memorial Day weekend must go on in the Last Frontier.

Among the many plans put into action for the extra long weekend, one thing no one in Alaska planned for is to let a little rain slow them down. Despite some cloudy weather in the weekend’s forecast, lots of people made plans to take full advantage of everything the state has to offer.

Folks like Charles Fualaau from Seattle don’t just tolerate the rain — they thrive in it.

“I’m born and raised in Washington so we love the rain where I’m from … a vest keeps me just fine,” Fualaau said. “We didn’t think there was going to be a lot to do in Alaska, but there are — surprisingly — there are quite a few things, at least sightseeing, and it’s free, right? So, it’s lovely.”

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Fualaau came up from the Lower 48 with his wife and six children just for one day Friday, flying in early in the morning and flying out late at night. He said though their time was limited, they made sure to soak up every second they were here, even going so far as to let the children weigh in on scenic destinations.

From Beluga Point to Bird Creek Campground, Alaska has no shortage of scenic destinations. Whether it’s whale-watching, sightseeing, or even just packing up the car and hitting the open road, for many, Memorial Day weekend is often the first chance of the year to soak in the great outdoors.

Corbin and Ruby Fraizer and their 17-month-old daughter Ivy are spending the weekend at Thumb Cove. For the longtime Alaska couple, making it a point to get outside for adventures isn’t just important for their own wellbeing, it’s an Alaskan right of passage they now enjoy passing down to their daughter.

The Fraizers said with Anchorage winters being particularly long, Memorial Day weekend is often their first chance to do so.

“We’ve been pretty cooped up over this winter and this is the first chance that most of us can get out and get wild,” Corbin said.

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“Yeah, everybody’s been cheering us on at the grocery store, seeing us unload the vehicle and stuff,” Ruby added. “We’ve had a couple people be like [thumps up].”

Scott Comeaux, along with his wife and daughter, have made a yearly tradition of spending time together at Bird Creek Campground every Memorial Day weekend.

“It’s our family time,” Comeaux said. “When you’re at home, you get distracted by all the electronics and the TV, but you come out here and none of that stuff is here. It’s just nature and us, and it helps us to kind of grow as a family.”

No matter how residents and visitors choose to spend the holiday weekend, the underlining theme from those all throughout Southcentral Alaska is to spend it with family, and as anyone in Anchorage will say, there’s no better place to do so than in the great state of Alaska.

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Coast Guard Sector Western Alaska and U.S. Arctic updates contact information

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Coast Guard Sector Western Alaska and U.S. Arctic updates contact information


A 29-foot Response Boat–Small crew from Coast Guard Station Seattle enforces a security zone at a parade of ships event during during the annual Fleet Week and Seafair Festival celebration in Seattle August 1, 2022. Multiple Coast Guard Cutter crews from around the Puget Sound region joined two Navy ships and two Royal Canadian Navy vessels during the parade along Seattle’s waterfront. (U.S. Coast Guard photo by Petty Officer 1st Class Travis Magee)

ANCHORAGE, Alaska — The Coast Guard has changed the contact information for Sector Western Alaska and U.S. Arctic staff offices and other units throughout Western Alaska as part of a service-wide telephone modernization directive, Thursday, Feb. 12.

The main phone line for the sector can now be reached at (206) 815-7100

Callers will be presented with a phone tree, providing them with options to contact one of the following:

  • Search and Rescue Command Center
  • National Response Center
  • Command Executive Assistant
  • Response Department
  • Prevention Department
  • Logistics Department
  • Emergency Management Division 
  • Other Coast Guard units in Alaska

These other units can be reached directly at the numbers listed below or by dialing the main phone line for Sector Western Alaska and U.S. Arctic and pressing 8 at the automated menu. 

Unit

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New Phone Number

Sector Western Alaska and U.S. Arctic – Phone Tree

(Previously Sector Anchorage)

(206) 815-7100

Sector Western Alaska and U.S. Arctic – 

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24/7 Search and Rescue Command Center

(866) 396-1361

Regional Exam Center Anchorage

(206) 815-6454

Recruiting Office Anchorage

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(206) 815-6345

Coast Guard Investigative Service Anchorage

(206) 815-6738

Marine Safety Detachment Homer

(206) 815-6992

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Marine Safety Unit Kodiak

(206) 815-7145

Marine Safety Unit Dutch Harbor

(206) 815-6842

Marine Safety Unit Valdez

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(206) 815-6945

Arctic District Command Center

(Previously 17th Coast Guard District)

(800) 478-5555

 

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Sector Western Alaska and U.S. Arctic remains physically located on Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson. 

The sector Search and Rescue Command Center watchstanders are available 24 hours a day at (866) 396-1361 and VHF Channel 16.

For media inquiries, please contact uscgalaska@uscg.mil.

-USCG-



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Next winter storm heads to Western Alaska making landfall Monday night

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Next winter storm heads to Western Alaska making landfall Monday night


ANCHORAGE, AK (Alaska’s News Source) – A Winter Storm Watch has been issued from Monday morning across the Western region just shortly after a Winter Storm Warning expired following Friday’s storm.

Across the Western coastline from Kotzebue to Dillingham, weather alerts will be active Monday morning as the next storm will make landfall Monday afternoon, with the second stage of this storm moving in Tuesday night. Heaviest snowfall amounts are likely in Norton Sound, Yukon Valley, and Upper Kuskokwim Valley. Snow totals from this next storm are likely from 6 to 12 inches of snow across the Winter Storm Watch region with wind gusts as high as 60 MPH adding to reduced visibility and white out conditions. Dillingham is under a Winter Weather Advisory as less snow accumulation is anticipated with 3 to 5 inches Monday. Bethel will be under a blizzard warning from Monday morning to Monday night as 3 to 7 inches of snow are likely paired with gusts up to 55 MPH.

The Aleutian Chain will get moderate rainfall, about 0.4 to 0.6 inches, as early as Sunday night into Monday morning with heaviest rainfall from Unalaska up the Alaska Peninsula.

Download the free Alaska’s News Source Weather App.

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Interior Alaska had a snowy weekend, making Valentine’s Day feel a little more like Christmas. Around noon Sunday, Fairbanks reported about 10.1 inches of snowfall but more is expected into the evening hours across the region. By Monday, it’ll feel like the snow never even happened as mostly sunny to clear skies will brighten your day. Temperatures will plummet nearly 20 degrees from Sunday to Monday, but a return in this winter weather should be expected by Tuesday night to Wednesday morning.

The North Slope is staying out of the way of these winter storms as the Brooks Range protects the region from snow, however, the main concern continues with colder temperatures. Lows nearly 25 to 30 degrees below zero will feel a bit colder as wind chill will reach -55 to -60 degrees.

Send us your weather photos and videos here!

In Southcentral, mostly sunny skies are closing out the weekend and kicking off the work week, but colder temperatures are returning as a result of a cooling trend impacting most of the state. Strong wind gusts up to 50 MPH will affect Seward, Valdez, Cordova and Whittier on Monday.

Southeast is on the brink of a high pressure system which will cool temperatures roughly 10 to 15 degrees, also shifting in mostly sunny skies. High wind is a concern for Juneau and Skagway Monday as wind gusts could reach up to 40 and 45 MPH.

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24/7 Alaska Weather: Get access to live radar, satellite, weather cameras, current conditions, and the latest weather forecast here. Also available through the Alaska’s News Source streaming app available on Apple TV, Roku, and Amazon Fire TV.



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NASA launches twin rocket missions from Alaska to study mysterious black auroras

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NASA launches twin rocket missions from Alaska to study mysterious black auroras


NASA launched two rockets from Alaska this week to learn more about the electrical “circuitry” within auroras, the colorful light shows that occur when solar wind collides with Earth’s atmosphere.

The missions saw two suborbital sounding rockets launch from the Poker Flat Research Range near Fairbanks, Alaska loaded with scientific equipment that will fly into the atmosphere for a short period of time to gather data.



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