From classroom to coast: Alaskans trained to teach kelp farming

Last month, the first Kelp Farm Operations: Training of the Trainers workshop was held at the Kodiak Seafood and Marine Sciences Center. This comprehensive training builds on kelp mariculture workshops held by Alaska Sea Grant over several years and provides participants with the knowledge and tools to help new and prospective farmers in their communities.

Instructor speaking to a class about kelp farming. ropes are laid out on concrete floor of a shop.
Arron Jones explaining the kelp teaching arrays with the workshop participants. Photo by Rachel French/Alaska Sea Grant.

Each participant was provided with the materials needed to conduct training, including a powerpoint slide-deck, reference material, tools to test potential farming sites and a model farm array. 

“We put a lot of effort into creating a teaching kit that will help speed up the process of getting hands-on training to communities looking to start mariculture businesses,” said Melissa Good, Alaska Sea Grant mariculture specialist. “This is a big state, and it’s an efficient way to help grow the industry.”

Mariculture professionals came from Kodiak, Cordova, Sitka, Anchorage and Ouzinkie to learn teaching methods to use in their communities, as well as to learn from each other.

“For this workshop in particular, we hoped for strong group discussion and engagement, and this group exceeded my wishes,” said Arron Jones, Alaska Sea Grant mariculture technician and workshop organizer. “Each person brought their unique background and knowledge, which provided an opportunity to share knowledge and put teaching skills into practice.”

The workshop also provided an opportunity to strengthen the support network for a relatively new industry in the state, according to Jones. “As these statewide partnerships, collaborations and connections continue to grow, so will the Alaskan mariculture industry.”

Funding for the training was provided by the Alaska Mariculture Cluster, the model farm arrays were built by Joe Hok of Nautical Marine, and Nick Mangini, of Southwest Alaska Municipal Conference and Kodiak Island Sustainable Seaweed, provided expertise and his kelp farm for sessions on water quality monitoring and farm maintenance.

To find out about upcoming mariculture training, please visit the Alaska Sea Grant events page, the Alaska Mariculture Research and Training Center website, or contact Melissa Good at melissa.good@alaska.edu.

Group of people in a large skiff on the water wearing a life jackets and hard hats. Snowy and vegetation covered hills in background.