"I got one," said Nathan Coleman, a video journalist at The Weather Network. "I finally found my first clam and it's just big enough." Clam digging is a beloved pastime in Prince Edward Island and for ...
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 ...
The festival was a community collaboration between the municipality’s tourism division, Clare Recreation and the CDENE’s ...
OLYMPIA, Wash. — Calling all razor clam diggers: more digging on Washington coastal beaches is set to begin on Feb. 6. TheWashington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) coastal shellfish managers ...
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 ...
Clammers are reminded that each person must dig their own clams and keep them in a separate container. November will offer diggers several evening opportunities starting this weekend. (Terry Otto for ...
They fan out in groups, mostly women, plodding in rain boots across the soggy wet sands of the inlet, making the most of the low tide. Hustling along with rakes and buckets, they chat and laugh gaily.