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Dago Creek




The creek derived its name from the numerous fishermen of Sicilian descent who would anchor in the protected waters during closed fishing periods and collectively celebrate their heritage with plenty of food and wine. At first used in a pejorative way, the Sicilians embraced the terminology and the name stuck, becoming official when the area was first definitively mapped in 1943. The area is still used as a small boat harbor for the nearby village of Pilot Point to this day, especially with the completion of a bulk-head style dock and boat launch in 1990.

Although a few fish swim up - and reportedly spawn in - its waters, the stream is primarily a drainage for the multitude of small lakes, marshland and tundra of the coastal zone north of Ugashik Bay. The creek generally flows from north to south, beginning with the drainage from the large but shallow freshwater lake, appropriately named Dago Lake, located approximately 25 miles north of the creek's mouth. It then begins a tediously slow and meandering path towards the sea, with several oxbow lakes and false channels along the way. Although relatively narrow, the entire length of the stream has been navigated by vessels from the Bristol Bay fishing fleet.

The creek also serves to break the contiguous land mass of the north/east shore of Ugashik Bay, separating the village of Pilot Point from the neighboring community of Smoky Point . It also serves as a point of subsistence salmon fishing, although its waters are officially closed to commercial fishing activity. Local Alaskan natives also catch abundant supplies of small, oily, herring-like fish called Smelt which helps supplement the local diet.