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Alaska Sports Scoreboard: Feb. 21, 2026

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Alaska Sports Scoreboard: Feb. 21, 2026


From left, Colony’s Raven Spangler and Grace Christian’s Austin Merriner compete. The cross-country skiing state championships opened on Thursday, February 19, 2026, with 5-kilometer freestyle races at Government Peak Recreation Area in Palmer. (Marc Lester / ADN)

High School

Basketball

Girls

Sunday

Chaputnguak 63, Nelson Island 52

Nelson Island 48, Chaputnguak 46

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Chaputnguak 72, Nelson Island 52

Monday

Bartlett 66, Service 55

Tri-Valley 56, Nenana 22

Unalaska 26, Lumen Christi 20

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Tuesday

Mountain City Christian Academy 88, Soldotna 22

Nenana 28, Effie Kokrine Charter 17

Mt. Edgecumbe 62, Sitka 33

West 51, East 24

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Wasilla 47, Colony 45

Service 78, South 35

Susitna Valley 38, Redington 22

Lathrop 41, North Pole 40

Grace Christian 53, Palmer 36

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Homer 40, Ninilchik 15

Bartlett 75, Dimond 28

Chugiak 49, Eagle River 24

Barrow 69, Bethel 9

Monroe Catholic 50, Delta 20

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Wednesday

Ketchikan 48, Sitka 39

Mt. Edgecumbe 47, Ketchikan 32

Barrow 67, Bethel 4

Thursday

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Tok 40, Glennallen 26

Service 65, Chugiak 43

Grace Christian 47, Nikiski 33

Wasilla 65, North Pole 25

Homer 54, Houston 7

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Palmer 37, West Valley 24

Colony 64, Lathrop 24

Galena 56, Delta 42

Mt. Edgecumbe 40, Ketchikan 33

Sitka 64, Nome-Beltz 53

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East 55, Kodiak 39

Friday

Akiachak 43, Akiak 41

Tok 51, Cordova 34

Minto 71, Nenana 28

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Alak 51, Meade River 47

Homer 52, Redington 29

Dimond 61, West 54

Lathrop 40, Palmer 35

Eagle River 49, South 42

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Newhalen 63, Dillingham 36

Anthony Andrews 55, Gambell 51

Wasilla 57, West Valley 26

Mountain City Christian Academy 79, Kodiak 31

Grace Christian 51, Kenai Central 29

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Delta 51, Galena 37

Seward 63, Susitna Valley 22

Bartlett 87, North Pole 50

Unalaska 33, King Cove 23

Mt. Edgecumbe 69, Nome-Beltz 36

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Shaktoolik 60, Shishmaref 44

Alak 73, Nuiqsut Trapper 40

Akiachak 55, Kalskag 50

Anthony Andrews 75, Gambell 45

Meade River 76, Nuiqsut Trapper 46

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Barrow 71, Kotzebue 25

Saturday

Mountain City Christian 79, Kodiak 19

Tuluksak 49, Akiachak 30

Shishmaref 42, Shaktoolik 38

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Newhalen 67, Dillingham 52

Meade River 75, Nuiqsut Trapper 42

Grace Christian 61, Homer 22

Nikiski 47, Redington 31

Seward 73, Lumen Christi 13

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Wasilla 72, Lathrop 32

Meade River 54, Alak 50

Boys

Sunday

Nelson Island 53, Chaputnguak 47

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Savoonga 67, James C Isabell 48

Nightmute Elitnaurviat 73, Ayaprun 60

Chaputnguak 94, Nightmute Elitnaurviat 45

Kake 50, SISD 47

Chaputnguak 70, Nelson Island 66

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Monday

Chaputnguak 57, Nelson Island 56

Savoonga 54, James C Isabell 48

Tri-Valley 75, Nenana 39

Kake 45, SISD 41

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Service 73, Bartlett 38

Unalaska 58, Lumen Christi 53

Tuesday

Mountain City Christian Academy 62, Soldotna 48

Effie Kokrine Charter 67, Nenana 53

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Mt. Edgecumbe 42, Sitka 32

Barrow 54, Bethel 53

Lathrop 78. North Pole 50

West 59, East 44

Grace Christian 79, Palmer 45

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Susitna Valley 65, Redington 50

Service 51, South 49

Wasilla 67, Colony 66

Chugiak 63, Eagle River 39

Dimond 76, Bartlett 28

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Ninilchik 80, Homer 34

Wednesday

Klawock 75, SISD 41

Lumen Christi 54, Redington 48

Skagway 93, Hydaburg 40

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Barrow 71, Bethel 54

Dimond 78, Chugiak 45

Thursday

Tikigaq 87, Birchwood Christian 42

Sitka 55, Nome-Beltz 45

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Hoonah 57, Gustavus 47

Tok 59, Glennallen 55

Skagway 75, Hydaburg 59

Homer 56, Houston 39

Wasilla 71, North Pole 40

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Grace Christian 67, Palmer 40

West Valley 56, Monroe Catholic 12

Lathrop 52, Colony 47

Gambell 94, Anthony Andrews 88

Delta 57, Galena 50

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Friday

Akiachak 75, Akiak 43

Chief Ivan Blunka 57, Manokotak 49

Brevig Mission 52, James C Isabell 45

Alak 96, Meade River 55

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Akiachak 84, Z John Williams 78

Cordova 38, Tok 37

Minto 68, Nenana 21

Nuiqsut Trapper 73, Alak 37

Aniguiin 87, Martin L Olson 76

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Monroe Catholic 55, Valdez 36

Koyuk Malimiut 73, White Mountain 55

Brevig Mission 58, James C Isabell 52

Unalakleet 79, Hooper Bay 19

Juneau-Douglas 53, Ketchikan 41

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Haines 49, Petersburg 41

Mountain City Christian Academy 53, Kodiak 42

Grace Christian 75, Tikigaq 41

Houston 72, Nikiski 50

Homer 56, Redington 43

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Dimond 69, West 57

Seward 57, Susitna Valley 51

South 85, Eagle River 30

Lathrop 83, Palmer 62

North Pole 47, Bartlett 37

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Delta 51, Galena 39

Nuiqsut Trapper 92, Meade River 36

Gambell 92, Anthony Andrews 52

Akiachak 63, Akula Elitnaurvik 54

Wrangell 67, Craig 40

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Barrow 101, Kotzebue 66

Nome-Beltz 79, Mt. Edgecumbe 66

Saturday

Koyuk Malimiut 50, White Mountain 41

Martin L Olson 88, Aniguiin 48

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Unalakleet 103, Hooper Bay 26

Mountain City Christian Academy 61, Kodiak 37

Cordova 37, Glennallen 36

Alak 65, Meade River 34

Kenai Central 62, Ninilchik 50

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Palmer 69, North Pole 61

Lumen Christi 76, Seward 61

Lathrop 76, Wasilla 39

Nuiqsut Trapper 48, Alak 41

Service 48, East 47

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• • •

Nordic skiing

2026 ASAA State Championships

Overall team scores

Boys

1. South 2:54:44.2; 2. Colony 2:55:15.1; 3. West Valley 2:58:59.9; 4. Service 3:00:05.4; 5. West 3:05:13.9; 6. Kenai Central 3:11:00.2; 7. Soldotna 3:14:02.2; 8. Homer 3:15:50.5; 9. Dimond 3:18:30.7; 10. Chugiak 3:29:21.6

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Girls

1. South 3:23:36.5; 2. Service 3:27:07.7; 3. Colony 3:37:57.8; 4. West Valley 3:40:09.9; 5. Chugiak 3:49:13.2; 6. Bettye Davis East 3:49:55.7; 7. West 3:50:35.5; 8. Dimond 3:53:19.1; 9. Soldotna 4:00:36.8; 10. Kenai Central 4:04:40.1

From top, East’s Adele Hayes, Juneau-Douglas’ Kaia Mangaccat and Lathrop’s Anna Stringfellow climb a hill on the race course. The cross-country skiing state championships opened on Thursday, February 19, 2026, with 5-kilometer freestyle races at Government Peak Recreation Area in Palmer. (Marc Lester / ADN)

Freestyle 5K

Boys overall

1. Jack Leveque, Service, 12:29.1; 2. Chase Laker, Kenai Central, 13:11.3; 3. Ethan Elliott, South, 13:13.7; 4. Kieran Kaufman, West Valley, 13:18.2; 5. Vebjorn Flagstad, South, 13:21.0; 6. Gabe Black, Colony, 13:32.0; 7. Nathan Vandelugt, West Valley, 13:36.8; 8. Weston Sensabaugh, Colony, 13:51.2; 9. Finn Dudley, West, 14:01.6; 10. Ethan Styvar, South, 14:06.5; 11. Freedom Bennett, Service, 14:08.9; 12. Ollie Dahl, Soldotna, 14:12.0; 13. Johannes Bynagle, Homer, 14:13.1; 14. Basile Plattet, West Valley, 14:15.2; 15. Raven Spangler, Colony, 14:15.4; 16. Grayson Stanek-Alward, South, 14:22.6; 17. Leif Anderson, Lathrop, 14:25.1; 18. Josiah Sheldon, Service, 14:27.4; 19. Fletcher Darr, Kenai Central, 14:27.9; 20. Easton Roads, Grace Christian, 14:28.8

Girls overall

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1. Mia Stiassny, South, 15:22.2; 2. Miya Kam-Magruder, Service, 15:27.8; 3. Tania Boonstra, Soldotna, 15:43.8; 4. Alise Elliott, South, 15:56.4; 5. Reine Soule, Service, 16:07.3; 6. Talia Smith, Service, 16:07.9; 7. Solvej Lunoe, South, 16:09.1; 8. Olivia Soderstrom, West, 16:18.5; 9. Calista Zuber, South, 16:18.6; 10. Mady Lowen, Dimond, 16:19.7; 11. Elliot Sensabaugh, Colony, 16:24.0; 12. Adah Decker, West Valley, 16:30.2; 13. Olivia Ronzio Pico, Chugiak, 16:36.7; 14. Elin Lunoe, South, 16:40.1; 15. Ellie Abrahamson, West Valley, 16:44.4; 16. Faith Harlamert, Service, 16:49.9; 17. Isela Austin, Colony, 16:56.4; 18. Maya Tirpack, South, 17:00.9; 19. Miriam Armstrong, West Valley, 17:10.1; 20. Kate Cox, Soldotna, 17:14.7

Classic 7.5K

Boys overall

1. Jack Leveque, Service, 20:41.2; 2. Vebjorn Flagstad, South, 20:46.2; 3. Gabe Black, Colony, 20:56.7; 4. Chase Laker, Kenai Central, 21:10.4; 5. Kieran Kaufman, West Valley, 21:13.3; 6. Finn Dudley, West, 21:25.1; 7. Weston Sensabaugh, Colony, 21:34.7; 8. Banyan Smyth, Colony, 21:57.1; 9. Freedom Bennett, Service, 22:02.4; 10. Ethan Styvar, South, 22:03.5; 11. Nathan Vandelugt, West Valley, 22:15.4; 12. Grayson Stanek-Alward, South, 22:24.3; 13. Raven Spangler, Colony, 22:25.5; 14. Braxton Thornley, South, 22:29.1; 15. Jake Black, Colony, 22:29.9; 16. Leif Anderson, Lathrop, 22:37.0; 17. Basile Plattet, West Valley, 22:42.8; 18. Fletcher Darr, Kenai Central, 22:44.3; 19. Owen Harth, South, 22:51.4; 20. Ethan Elliott, South, 22:55.5

Girls overall

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1. Miya Kam-Magruder, Service, 24:49.8; 2. Mia Stiassny, South, 24:51.0; 3. Elliot Sensabaugh, Colony, 25:03.5; 4. Alise Elliott, South, 25:12.4; 5. Elin Lunoe, South, 25:14.1; 6. Tania Boonstra, Soldotna, 25:15.5; 7. Talia Smith, Service, 25:19.5; 8. Solvej Lunoe, South, 25:59.3; 9. Mady Lowen, Dimond, 25:59.9; 10. Reine Soule, Service, 26:02.4; 11. Calista Zuber, South, 26:07.7; 12. Olivia Soderstrom, West, 26:08.5;13. Olivia Ronzio Pico, Chugiak, 26:21.2; 14. Adah Decker, West Valley, 26:46.7; 15. Clara Sensabaugh, Colony, 27:04.3; 16. Ellie Abrahamson, West Valley, 27:10.6; 17. Maya Tirpack, South, 27:19.0; 18. Madeleine Lojewski, Bettye Davis East, 27:20.1; 19. Kyndle LaRousse, Palmer, 27:23.0; 20. Isela Austin, Colony, 27:27.2

4X3K mixed relay

Boys overall

1. South 32:00.2; 2. Colony 32:13.1; 3. Service 32:43.4; 4. West Valley 33:28.9; 5. West 34:13.9; 6. Kenai Central 34:44.2; 7. Soldotna 35:24.2; 8. Dimond 36:28.7; 9. Homer 36:47.5; 10. Chugiak 38:51.6

Girls overall

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1. South 38:35.5; 2. Service 38:50.7; 3. Colony 41:33.8; 4. West Valley 42:05.9; 5. Chugiak 43:01.2; 6. West 43:19.5; 7. Bettye Davis East 43:28.7; 8. Dimond 45:14.1; 9. Soldotna 45:38.8; 10. Kenai Central 46:19.1

• • •

College

Gymnastics

Friday

UAA 192.125, Centenary 188.125

• • •

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Hockey

Friday

UAF 4, UAA 3

Saturday

UAF 6, UAA 2

• • •

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Women’s basketball

Thursday

Montana State Billings 65, UAA 53

Seattle Pacific 78, UAF 63

Saturday

Montana State Billings 80, UAF 53

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UAA 91, Seattle Pacific 52

• • •

Men’s basketball

Thursday

UAA 82, Montana State Billings 75

UAF 78, Seattle Pacific 74

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Saturday

Seattle Pacific 67, UAA 59

UAF 101, Montana State Billings 97

• • •

NAHL

Thursday

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Anchorage Wolverines 2, Janesville Jets 1

Friday

Wisconsin Windigo 5, Anchorage Wolverines 1

Saturday

Anchorage Wolverines 5, Chippewa Steel 2

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Alaska

Inside Alaska’s craft beer scene

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Inside Alaska’s craft beer scene


A server pours a beer at the 49th State Brewing Company location at Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport on Tuesday, Sept. 12, 2023. (Loren Holmes / ADN)

In exchange for living in what is perhaps the country’s most beautiful state, Alaskans sometimes have to do without: professional sports teams, Trader Joe’s and, well, sunlight for half the year. But we make up for it with the Iditarod, reindeer sausages and chasing the aurora borealis. In other words, we often have to make our own fun. And by “fun” I mean “beer.” Those words are interchangeable, right?

Beer is a big part of life for Alaskans. We hike with it, camp with it, boat with it, cook with it and pair it with foods like the stuffiest of sommeliers. We throw it monthly birthday parties like the First Tap events at Broken Tooth Brewing Co. (otherwise known as Bear Tooth Theatrepub and Moose’s Tooth Pub & Pizzeria), complete with national musical acts like Modest Mouse, Clinton Fearon, and Norah Jones. We even occasionally do yoga with it (at downtown’s Williwaw Social). In other words, we take it everywhere and we take it seriously.

Beers from the state’s biggest brewery, Alaskan Brewing Co. based in Juneau, might already be in your refrigerator if you live in one of the 25 states where it’s available. Established in 1986 by Marcy and Geoff Larson, it was the 67th independent brewery to open in the country. With a steady line of signature brews, including their most recent “Wildness” beer, it’s the most well-established of all the state’s breweries. Expect seasonal specialties that incorporate ingredients like cranberries, raspberries, locally roasted coffee, locally grown white wheat from the Matanuska-Susitna area and even Alaska spruce tips. Ubiquitous around Alaska, this is our Papa Beer, if you will (I’ll show myself out).

But Alaskan Brewing is just one out of the more-than 50 breweries, distilleries, meaderies and cideries in the state (for an excellent list visit brewersguildofalaska.org). And while almost half of them are in Anchorage or within a short drive of our state’s largest city (including the relatively populous communities of Girdwood, Eagle River, Palmer and Wasilla), some of our most remote ports of call and tiniest towns are also in on the brewing action (I’m looking at you, Cooper Landing Brewing Company in Cooper Landing, population 231).

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The ever-expanding Denali Brewing Co. in Talkeetna (population 997) may be a small-town hero, but it’s anything but small. Their four signature beers — Mother Ale, Chuli Stout, Single Engine Red and the ever-popular Twister Creek IPA, as well seasonal brews like Slow Down Brown and Flag Stop Milepost #3 — are year-round mainstays of summer barbecues and winter bonfires around the state.

This brewery is also home to the more recently established Alaska Cider Works, Alaska Meadery (featuring “Razzery,” a mead made with raspberries, sour cherries and apples) and Denali Spirits (featuring vodka, gin, whiskey, and “smoke” whiskey), because when you’ve fermented one, why not ferment them all?

(Denali Spirits’ canned cocktails, especially their blueberry mojito, have been so popular in Anchorage that at one time there was a Facebook page largely dedicated to tracking them down. Luckily, supply has since caught up with demand.)

The Kodiak Island Brewing Company on Jan. 24, 2019. (Loren Holmes / ADN)

Some breweries are even more remote. Ports of call and island hopping here can be one way to get your fill of hops. Breweries can be found in Ketchikan (Bawden Street Brewing Co.), Kodiak (Kodiak Island Brewing & Still, Double Shovel Kodiak Cidery, and Olds River Inn), Homer (Homer Brewing Co. and Grace Ridge Brewing Co. for beer, and you can also check out Sweetgale Meadworks & Cider House for hard cider and locally sourced meads featuring ingredients like nagoonberry), Sitka (Harbor Mountain Brewing), Seward (Seward Brewing Co. and Stoney Creek Brewhouse), Valdez (Valdez Brewing and Growler Bay Brewing), and Skagway (Klondike Brewing Co. and Skagway Brewing Co.).

Of course, many trips to Alaska begin and end in Anchorage. And if, during your travels, you’ve foolishly left some beers untasted, you can make up for lost time in our state’s biggest city which boasts — let’s face it — a ridiculous number of exceptional craft breweries.

Downtown’s Glacier Brewhouse specializes in oak-aged English and American West Coast-style beers, 13 of them, from blondes to stouts. Beneath the floor of the Brewhouse is a “Wall of Wood” comprised of casks of special release beers that are conditioned in oak barrels once used to age wine and bourbon. The history of the oak imparts “mother tongue” flavor characteristics, like vanilla and coconut, into these limited edition brews. Opt for one of these unique beers or choose from their flagship choices like raspberry wheat, oatmeal stout, imperial blonde, Bavarian hefeweizen or a flight that includes them all.

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Down the street is 49th State Brewing Co., which expanded into Anchorage from its original location in Healy, at the edge of Denali National Park and Preserve. If you are unable to visit their flagship location, where you can sip beer while playing bocce or horseshoes on the lawn, you can catch up with them here. There’s a unique selection that includes beers like Smok, a smoked lager, as well as seasonal offerings like the Tiger’s Blood Sour, an homage to shave ice described as ”ferociously fruity.” Or there’s “Apple Fritter Ale,” with hints of cinnamon, icing, caramel, and vanilla. This location also boasts some of the best views in Anchorage and an expansive outdoor rooftop patio.

Just about all of the full-service restaurants in downtown Anchorage proudly feature some variety of Alaskan beers. In the heart of downtown, Humpy’s Great Alaskan Alehouse prides itself on a huge selection of beers, both international and local. Tent City Taphouse offers a diverse and carefully curated list of 24 rotating local brews, including their house beer, Tent City Tangerine IPA brewed by Glacier Brewhouse. Tent City regularly hosts “Taste of the North” beer dinners featuring Alaskan brewers. One, in collaboration with Grace Ridge Brewing Company, featured smoked salmon canapes with Black Pepper IPA, classic beef Wellington with an Oystercatcher stout and roasted honey lamb chops with a Winter Cranberry Ale.

Tent City Taphouse on Thursday, April 29, 2021. (Bill Roth / ADN)

If you have transportation around the city, treat yourself to a brewery tasting-room tour. Found in unassuming little side streets in the more industrial areas of Anchorage, some of our best beers can be sipped and savored at the source. Finding these funky little spots can feel like being invited to a secret party. And it’s a glimpse into Anchorage’s most authentic beer culture.

In midtown, Onsite Brewing Co. has unique, small-batch brews in a funky relaxed environment. Further south, King Street Brewing Co., Turnagain Brewing, Cynosure Brewing, Magnetic North Brewing Company, Brewerks, and one of our newest, Ship Creek Brewing Company are all within a stone’s throw of one another. If you’re lucky, you might run into one of Anchorage’s popular food trucks parked outside, so you’ll have something to wash down with your flights. Depending on the day, you might find reindeer sausages, pad Thai, cheesesteaks or pupusas. On the weekends, Anchorage Brewing Company features a top-notch in-house pop-up restaurant, called Familia, with a rotating menu featuring local Alaskan ingredients.

Master brewer Coby McKinnon draws a sample from a fermentor to perform a gravity test on a Mexican lager at Ship Creek Brewing Company located at 5801 Arctic Boulevard on Thursday, Dec. 4, 2025. (Bill Roth / ADN)

One of the newest and furthest south breweries, while still in the Anchorage bowl, is Raven’s Ring Brewing Company, which is a brewery/winery and meadery. From a traditional IPA to a Concorde grape wine called Grape Juice to a rotating Vintner’s pour like Sweet Peach Jalapeno mead, this ambitious operation is challenging the notion that you can’t please everyone.

Other Anchorage points of interest for non-hoppy but still home-grown adult beverages include Anchorage Distillery, Zip Kombucha, Double Shovel Cidery and Hive Mind Meadery.

If your travels are over and you still haven’t had your fill, check out the Silver Gulch Brewing & Bottling Co. inside Terminal C at the Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport on your way out of town. An offshoot of the flagship Silver Gulch brewery in Fox, Alaska (about 10 miles north of Fairbanks), this location has a bar and restaurant, and a retail shop carrying growlers of their own brews as well as those of other Alaskan brewers and distillers. Last-minute souvenir shopping never tasted so good.

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Before you start your great Northern beer safari, bear in mind that tasting rooms often have limited and varying hours, so always double-check before planning a visit.

Whether your travels take you to fine-dining restaurants, low-key alehouses or even rustic cabins in the woods, make like an Alaskan and fuel your adventures with one of our beloved, home-grown brews. When in Alaska, drink as the Alaskans do.

Mara Severin is a food writer who writes about restaurants in Southcentral Alaska for the Anchorage Daily News.





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U.S. Coast Guard announces homeporting of the first two Arctic Security Cutters in Alaska

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U.S. Coast Guard announces homeporting of the first two Arctic Security Cutters in Alaska


 

Artists rendering of the future Arctic Security Cutter that the U.S. Coast Guard said would first be homeported in Alaska. The first of the icebreaking cutters are scheduled for delivery in 2028. (Davie Defense, Inc.)

WASHINGTON — The U.S. Coast Guard announced Thursday that the first two Arctic Security Cutters will be homeported in the State of Alaska. Anticipating delivery of the first Arctic Security Cutters by the end of 2028, the Coast Guard has begun planning to ensure necessary infrastructure and support are in place to receive two icebreakers. Ensuring these vessels are supported by trained and ready crews, and ready homeport facilities including housing, will be essential to delivering full, enduring operational capability required to meet emerging Arctic security challenges.

Homeporting these two Arctic Security Cutters in Alaska is a decisive step forward in securing America’s Arctic frontier,” said Secretary of Homeland Security Markwayne Mullin“I want to thank President Trump for his bold leadership and vision in directing this critical investment, as well as Senator Sullivan and the entire Alaskan Congressional delegation for championing the funding that made these icebreakers possible. These vessels will deliver the enduring operational presence our nation needs to protect sovereignty, deter foreign adversaries, and safeguard vital resources for the American people..

The homeporting of the first two Arctic Security Cutters in Alaska builds on the historic expansion of the Coast Guard’s icebreaker fleet and underscores an unprecedented investment in the Arctic. This announcement marks a national milestone in U.S. Arctic capability, following contract awards for up to 11 Arctic Security Cutters. Fueled by $3.5 billion in funding in the Fiscal Year 2025 Reconciliation Bill and facilitated by a groundbreaking Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) between the United States and Finland in October 2025, the acquisition of Arctic Security Cutters will fulfill President Trump’s directive to rapidly deliver America’s newest icebreaker fleet.

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“Homeporting Arctic Security Cutters in Alaska underscores the United States’ leadership as a maritime power in the Arctic,” said Adm. Kevin E. Lunday, commandant of the Coast Guard. “By strategically positioning these state-of-the-art icebreakers in Alaska, the Coast Guard will maximize our ability to defend our northern border and approaches, while reinforcing America’s maritime dominance in a crucial region of strategic importance.”

Through contract awards to Rauma Marine Constructions Oy of Rauma, Finland, Bollinger Shipyards Lockport, L.L.C., and Davie Defense, Inc. of Vienna, VA, the U.S. will immediately benefit from our Finnish partners’ icebreaker expertise while coordinating the onshoring of that expertise and shipbuilding to the United States. Under the MOU, Finland will construct up to four ASCs for the U.S Coast Guard. U.S. shipyards will build and deliver up to seven additional ASCs. Delivery of the first Arctic Security Cutters is expected by the end of 2028.

Arctic Security Cutters will form the backbone of a revitalized U.S. icebreaker fleet, strengthening American maritime dominance in the Arctic. Fielding specialized capabilities, these icebreakers will defend U.S. sovereignty, secure critical shipping lanes, protect energy and mineral resources, and counter foreign malign influence in the Arctic region. A robust icebreaker fleet will enable the Coast Guard to control, secure and defend U.S. Alaskan borders and Arctic maritime approaches, facilitate maritime commerce vital to economic prosperity and strategic mobility, and respond to crises and contingencies in the region.

Acquisition of Arctic Security Cutters supports the Coast Guard’s ongoing modernization, through which the Service is transforming into a more agile, capable and responsive fighting force.

Memorandum on ASC Homeporting

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‘We never forgot her’: Friends, family of longtime Alaska teacher gather for 100th birthday celebration

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‘We never forgot her’: Friends, family of longtime Alaska teacher gather for 100th birthday celebration


ANCHORAGE, Alaska (KTUU) – Phyllis Sullivan has certainly led a life worth celebrating.

Born in 1926, Sullivan moved to Alaska with her husband and three children in 1959 to teach, first in the village of Kwethluk in Western Alaska and later at Wendler and Mears Middle Schools in Anchorage.

All the while, she left strong impressions with countless students and acquaintances, some of whom gathered in the basement of Anchor Park United Methodist Church in Anchorage Saturday to celebrate Sullivan’s century of life.

“Education has been the primary thing in her entire life,” her son Dennis Sullivan said. “She’s always been a school teacher and she’s been one of the sweetest people in the entire world.”

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As a slideshow featuring vintage photos from her life and time in Alaska played, Phyllis, wheelchair-bound but high in spirit, stopped to chat with every new person who entered the room, some of whom she hadn’t seen in years.

“It’s impressive that this many people are here,” she said. “That’s very encouraging. Makes me think maybe I did something right along the way.”

Aside from family members, most visitors were there because of the impression Phyllis Sullivan left on them during her many years in the classroom.

“She gave us this one assignment: to memorize a poem,” former Mears student Tina Arend recalled. She said Phyllis Sullivan was her 8th grade English teacher.

“And when she gave us the assignment, she said, ‘I’ve had students come back many, many, many years later and recite the poem to me.’ And we actually still remember the poem,” Arend said of her and her husband, who was also in attendance. They both went on to become teachers at Mears as well.

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Matthew Nicolai, whom Phyllis Sullivan taught in Kwethluk, has similarly fond memories.

“The Bureau had ordered that teachers do corporal punishment for speaking Yup’ik,” Nicolai remembered. “Even though we spoke Yup’ik, she never did that, never cracked our hands. Other teachers did, but not her. That’s why we never forgot her.”

In addition to teaching, Phyllis Sullivan also found time to open her home to those in need. She and her husband once took in a family with seven kids who had been displaced by flooding in Fairbanks in 1967.

“It touched our heart because they bought us a lot of stuff that we needed because we lost a lot of stuff during the flood,” David Solomon, one of those seven kids, said. “We stayed there for over three years.”

Phyllis Sullivan said she is enjoying life and is doing fine.

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“My mother made it to 103,” she said. “So, I’ve got a while yet.”

See a spelling or grammar error? Report it to web@ktuu.com

Copyright 2026 KTUU. All rights reserved.



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