advertisement
[Icon: Light Rain] Today's Weather
Light Rain
Current: 52°F / Feels like: 52°F
High: 54°F / Low: 47°F
[Icon: Chance of Rain] Tomorrow's Weather
Chance of Rain
High: 52°F / Low: 43°F
  • Help  • Paid archives
Saves you time. Saves you money. Makes you smarter.The News Tribune, Tacoma, WA -
Tacoma, WA -

Lui Kit Wong   TNT
Nancy Shippentower-Games, Puyallup Tribal Council member, welcomes canoes participating in Tribal Journey 2008 at Owen Beach in Tacoma on Wednesday.

Lui Kit Wong   TNT
Chehalis Confederated Tribes canoeists head to shore Wednesday at Owen Beach in Tacoma. The Puyallup Tribe on Indians welcomed seven canoes on Day 2 of a trip to Vancouver Island.

  Share This Story
Del.icio.us
Digg
Google
Newsvine
     E-mail     Print     Text    
Tribal Journey 2008: Canoes come calling
Published: July 17th, 2008 01:00 AM | Updated: July 17th, 2008 05:51 AM
For centuries, Indians across the Pacific Northwest navigated the area’s waterways on canoes. And while much has changed for the dozens of tribes in the region, a two-week event hopes to keep the tradition alive.

Seven traditional-style canoes landed Wednesday at Owen Beach in Tacoma’s Point Defiance Park on the second day of Tribal Journey 2008. As each vessel approached the rocky shore, its skipper would stand, greet a member of the Puyallup Tribe of Indians and ask permission to enter the tribe’s ceremonial waters.

“This really brings our elders and our youth together, paddling the pathways of our ancestors,” said Mark Anderson, the skipper of the Cowlitz Indian Tribe’s canoe. “There’s a great sense of unity, among ourselves and between tribes.

“Canoe families participate together, pull together, live together.”

The Puyallups later hosted the crews for a dinner of salmon, geoduck fritters and other traditional specialties, and the participants camped together at Chief Leschi School in Puyallup.

More than 80 canoes representing tribes from Alaska to Western Washington are expected to arrive near Duncan, B.C., on the east coast of Vancouver Island when the journey concludes next week.

Wednesday’s participants launched from Solo Point near Fort Lewis shortly after 8 a.m. They leave today for Alki Beach in Seattle.

The paddlers pass the time on the water by singing and telling stories, which helps the youths connect with their ancestors, said Gail Miller, the skipper of the Chehalis Confederated Tribes team. Each team has a support crew that follows it along, often carrying tents, food and drinks.

“It gives them something to hang onto, something to look forward to and to continue to work on,” Miller said. “Our canoe family worked year-round to get where we are today, from learning songs to training to fundraising.”

Organizers praised the event for providing other benefits. Several skippers stressed the drug- and alcohol-free nature of the journey – and the Puyallups are drug-testing the teenage participants, the tribe’s canoe team captain said.

The trip fosters intertribal communication, Anderson said, especially between groups geographically divided. And the Squaxin Island Tribe is using the trip as an opportunity to test the water for salinity, temperature, oxygen levels and other indicators of the ecosystem’s health.

The journey also presents an opportunity to get away from the hustle-bustle of day-to-day life. Squaxin tribal members left their cell phones at home and won’t be watching television or reading newspapers during their trip. That helps foster a greater sense of community and self-reliance, said the tribe’s Joe Seymour Jr.

“In a couple of weeks, the journey will be over with, but we’ll already be looking forward to the next journey,” Anderson said. “We all get a great benefit out of this. We treat each other with respect, and life’s a good thing on the water.”

Scott Fontaine: 253-320-4758

blogs.thenewstribune.com/street


Find a Job
Privacy Policy | User Agreement | Advertising Partners | Contact Us | About Us | Site Map | Jobs@The TNT | RSS
1950 South State Street, Tacoma, Washington 98405 253-597-8742
© Copyright 2008 Tacoma News, Inc. A subsidiary of The McClatchy Company