Polluted Puddles: Arlo’s quest to clean up our mess

What’s not to like about a young boy examining puddles and channeling his inner-scientist?

What’s not to like about a young boy examining puddles and channeling his inner-scientist?

We’re ending 2016 by including a new emphasis in the SEA-Media family: interconnectedness. This article exemplifies this theme with 3 very different, but related movies.

Tag along to see some of the logistics, some of the science, and assorted highlights of doing fieldwork in an environment that most people never get to see, the Bering Sea.

Tracy & Felt: a new web series that uses fun and humor to explore “the magical and not-to-distant world of science and nature.”

A movie about a fish that really sucks was a 1st Place winner in the 2016 Ocean 180 Video Challenge.

David Eisenhower will be participating in a compelling conversation with Dr. Nina Bednarsek Sunday Sept. 13, 2015 at the Bainbridge Island Museum of Art from 3 to 5 PM, where coincidentally he has a breathtaking exhibition of his marine sculptures.

Gallery show of a group of talented artists whose work honors the natural world and responds to environmental predicaments

Astonishing sculptures of ocean creatures that are literal, sardonic, and ceremonial, arranged to create the feel of an underwater world.
His new show, “Dialogue with Nature” starts March 22, 2014 at the Bainbridge Museum of Art.

In this keystone tome, zoologist Eugene Kozloff describes the common plants and animals that inhabit rocky shores, sandy beaches, and quiet bays and estuaries from Monterey to northern British Columbia.

There’s plenty to see under the surface of Puget Sound, as can be seen in the photographs of Master Diver Rich Zade