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  1. Mar 5, 2024 · People who push the limits of survival in the remote community of Port Protection in Alaska.

  2. Jan 25, 2023 · Their lives have been well-documented in National Geographic’s ‘Port Protection,’ which first aired in 2015. Some residents have gained considerable love from the rest of the world, leaving their fans wondering about their current whereabouts. Well, we are here to explore the same and tell you what the show’s cast is up to these days.

  3. Port Protection: With Sam Carlson, Timothy 'Curly' Leach, Matt Carlson, Gary Muehlberger. Port Protection Alaska shows a real way to define expectations when Nature commands attention for essentials in a subsistence group of men and women numbering under 100.

  4. Mar 6, 2024 · Browse the list of Port Protection Alaska episodes and watch full episodes streaming online.

  5. Port Protection (Lingít: Kél) is a census-designated place (CDP) in Prince of Wales-Hyder Census Area, Alaska, United States. The population was 36 at the 2020 census, down from 48 in 2010 census.

  6. Surrounded by the North Pacific, Port Protection is a remote community tucked into the northwest corner of Prince of Wales Island, Alaska. The approximately 100 residents who call the rugged,...

  7. www.nationalgeographic.com › tv › showsNational Geographic

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  8. Things to do in Port Protection: Chat with locals about living such a small, remote place in Alaska, with all its challenges and joys. You’ll likely meet some of the folks featured on National Geographic’s popular show. Walk along the quaint boardwalk. Ask about upcoming activities at the community building.

  9. With risk comes a reward more profound than mere survival: a world of beauty and freedom with the security of community and without the constraints of bureaucracy. In Port Protection there are no clear roads to survival, inhabitants must carve one themselves.

  10. Port Protection is nestled in a quiet cove three miles south of the northern tip of the west side of Prince of Wales Island. Access is by boat or floatplane. A gravel boat launch at Labouchere Bay, a little more than a mile from the community, provides access to the road system.

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