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Alaska Airlines Nets Largest King Salmon on Earth

“Salmon-Thirty-Salmon” aircraft underscores carrier’s role in transporting Alaska seafood
Alaska Airlines today landed the world’s largest king salmon—stretching 120 feet and weighing in at 140,000 pounds—at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport.
The “Salmon-Thirty-Salmon,” sporting the glimmering image of a wild Alaska king salmon, is among the world’s most intricately painted commercial airplanes. Complete with shiny scales, a dorsal fin and gills, the livery on the Alaska Airlines 737-400 passenger aircraft is the result of a dedicated team of 30 painters working nearly nonstop for 24 days.
The airplane symbolizes the critical role Alaska Airlines plays in transporting fresh Alaska seafood to the continental United States and beyond. The paint scheme was produced in partnership with the Alaska Fisheries Marketing Board (AFMB), which promotes the export of Alaska seafood.
“This airplane celebrates Alaska Airlines’ unique relationship with the people and communities of Alaska and underscores our air transport commitment to the state’s seafood industry,” said Gregg Saretsky, Alaska Airlines’ executive vice president of marketing and planning. “Alaska seafood is more popular than ever, and Alaska Airlines is proud to play a role in getting much of it from the waters of Alaska to dinner tables across the country in record time.”
This year, Alaska Airlines will fly more than 30 million pounds of seafood from Alaska to markets in the continental United States, Mexico and Canada. Streamlined flight schedules and state-of-the-art storage facilities allow much of that seafood to travel from Alaskan waters to market and restaurant destinations anywhere in the United States in less than 24 hours.
“Alaska Airlines has a long history of serving the Alaska seafood industry, and this special plane celebrates that commitment in dramatic fashion,” said Bill Hines, AFMB’s executive director. Hines noted that about half of the United States’ total seafood catch comes from Alaska fisheries and that Alaska is considered the world’s leader in sustainable management of its seafood resources.
The “Salmon-Thirty-Salmon” aircraft was greeted in Seattle by more than 3,000 Alaska Airlines employees, guests and dignitaries during a salmon homecoming event at the airline’s maintenance hangar. The aircraft will fly its first regularly scheduled passenger flight tomorrow from Seattle to Anchorage, Alaska, where it will receive a similar homecoming welcome. Following its stop in Anchorage, the aircraft will continue its Sunday route with stops in Cordova, Yakutat and Juneau, Alaska.
Beginning on Monday, the aircraft will fly passenger routes along the West Coast, connecting destinations as far north as Alaska and as far south as Mexico. The aircraft also will fly east to Denver, Chicago and Dallas/Forth Worth, becoming an important tool to promote wild Alaska seafood.

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Alaska Airlines takes flying fish to a whole new level
$500,000 grant from federal funding pays for custom paint job on company's passenger jet
By WESLEY LOY
Anchorage Daily News
Published: October 2, 2005
Last Modified: October 3, 2005 at 01:20 AM
So, you landed a big king salmon this summer? It can't compare to the colossal king Alaska Airlines plans to land this morning in Anchorage.
The Seattle-based carrier has painted nearly the full length of a Boeing 737-400 passenger jet as a wild Alaska king, or chinook, salmon. The airline has dubbed its flying fish the "Salmon-Thirty-Salmon."
It's a bold promotional move to celebrate wild Alaska seafood and also the carrier's role in hauling millions of pounds of fresh salmon, halibut, crab, shrimp and other seafood out of the state each year.
The fishy paint job was done on a grand scale, company spokesmen said. A team of 30 painters and airbrush artists used more than 140 gallons of paint and took 24 days to render the lifelike chinook -- triple the time normally needed to coat an airliner.
"There's no question, at least in my mind, that this is the finest airline art ever conceived," said Bill MacKay, the company's Anchorage-based senior vice president. "People will just be amazed at the detail."
A local nonprofit agency, the Alaska Fisheries Marketing Board, gave Alaska Airlines a $500,000 grant to paint the jet. The money came out of about $29 million in federal funding U.S. Sen. Ted Stevens of Alaska and his congressional colleagues have appropriated to the marketing board, created in 2003, to promote and enhance the value of Alaska seafood. The senator's son, state Sen. Ben Stevens, is chairman of the agency's board of directors.
The state's commercial salmon industry has struggled for years due to competition from foreign, farm-raised salmon, but the promotional dollars are helping the industry make a comeback, said Bill Hines, the marketing board's executive director.
Many commercial fishermen and industry boosters have dreamed of seeing an Alaska Airlines jet emblazoned with a fish, Hines said. Alaska Airlines approached the marketing board with the idea, and the board awarded the grant.
"I thought the concept was absolutely right on," Hines said. "You have a flying billboard going all over the West Coast as well as places like Chicago, Denver, Dallas and Mexico."
Alaska Airlines spokesmen say the salmon jet will be part of the carrier's regular passenger fleet, which will take it across more of the country than the combination passenger-cargo jets that serve rural Alaska and carry much of the state's prodigious seafood harvest.
The jet isn't the airline's only plane with a themed paint job. It also has two jets bearing Walt Disney characters such as Mickey Mouse and Tinker Bell.
The salmon jet will fly four or five years before it needs new paint, and it's possible the chinook will get another tour, airline spokeswoman Amanda Tobin said.
Matt Yerbic, managing director of cargo, said Alaska Airlines will carry between 30 and 40 million pounds of seafood this year.
"That should be an all-time record for us," he said.
The salmon jet will call attention to the state's wild fish and the seafood industry's close partnership with Alaska Airlines, which serves many important Alaska fishing ports, airline executives said.
"We're hopeful this is going to create quite a stir," MacKay said. Hines is sure of that.
The jetliner is about 120 feet long, with the speckled blue and silver chinook running from just behind the pilot's window all the way back along the fuselage and, swish, up the tail fin.
"I mean, this thing is going to turn heads," Hines said. "It's a very visible symbol."
Daily News reporter Wesley Loy can be reached at wloy@adn.com or 257-4590.
Alaska Airlines chinook runs to begin today in Anchorage
The Alaska Airlines salmon jet is to make its local debut when it arrives as Flight 95 with a load of regular passengers and dignitaries at 11:48 a.m. today at Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport.
Gov. Frank Murkowski, with several hundred airline workers and invited guests, will fete the plane with a seafood barbecue and Native dancers.
The plane will depart Anchorage as Flight 66 at 4:01 p.m., stopping in Cordova at 4:49 p.m., Yakutat at 6:11 p.m. and Juneau at 7:33 p.m. before landing back in Seattle at 11:25 p.m.
Then come the Photoshoppers.....

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