Oregon has reopened razor clam digging on the north Oregon coast from Yachats to the Washington border, including Clatsop County beaches. However, bay clam and mussel harvests remain closed coastwide ...
PORTLAND, Ore. (KOIN) — The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife reopened recreational razor clamming for Northwest Oregon on Oct. 4. Clam digging was closed from Clatsop Beach to the ...
A 2017 file photo of razor clams. Oregon has reopened razor clam harvesting from the Yachats River up to the Washington state border, but other shellfish harvesting remains restricted. Courtesy of ...
Razor clam diggers have one more low tide series to dig on Oregon’s best beaches before they close for the summer. Clatsop County beaches (Tillamook Head north to the Columbia River jetty and Cannon ...
Razor clamming has reopened on the central and northern Oregon Coast after two tests showed biotoxin levels below the closure limit. Razor clamming is open from Yachats to the Washington state line ...
Clatsop Beach on the north Oregon coast is open for razor clam digging on a daily basis after testing showed the clams are safe to eat. Shellfish biologist Matt Hunter of the Oregon Department of Fish ...
Razor clamming is now open from Seal Rock on the Oregon Coast to the California border. The opening comes after recent shellfish samples showed levels of the marine biotoxin domoic acid below the ...
TACOMA — The state Department of Fish and Wildlife said razor clam digging on Washington’s beaches began Wednesday. The digging starts on evening tides and switches to morning tides Sunday for five ...
OLYMPIA, Wash. (AP) – State officials have approved four days of razor clam digging on the several ocean beaches. The Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife gave its approval for the dig after ...
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. (AP) - Washington state shellfish managers say they've canceled three days of a planned four-day razor clam dig on ocean beaches because of health concerns about rising toxin levels.
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