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 ...
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 ...
November kicks off the third razor clam tide series of the season, after the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife announced that digging can resume starting on the first day of the month. The ...
From Thursday to March 11, people can go clamming from noon to midnight, during the afternoon and evening low tides. From March 12 to 17, people can go for the morning and early afternoon tides, from ...
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 ...
I consider myself a highly capable outdoorsman, when compared to the population at large. I suppose an argument could be made that since the population at large includes millions of city dwellers who ...
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 ...
PORTLAND, Ore. — After a brief health advisory closed razor clamming earlier this spring, the popular pastime reopened along most Oregon beaches. On Friday, the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife ...
Each year, 100,000 people wake up clamoring to dig in the sand for razor clams along a stretch of Washington states beach. They pull on waders, reach for their clam guns and head to a 58-mile section ...
Grab your clam shovel or clam gun: The Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife announced 11 days of razor clam digs on Washington’s coast, starting Thursday beginning March 7. The agency approved ...