For trail information, visit: Washington Trails Association
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Monday, May 14, 2018
Monday, May 7, 2018
Wandering Betties, Pipestone Canyon
For trail information, visit: Washington Trails Association
Someone stepped on a rattlesnake
We all took home ticks
Monday, April 30, 2018
Wednesday, March 28, 2018
Methow Artifact Research Project
We have great detail about the history of the Methow Valley
from 1880 onward, as settlers to this area kept journals, wrote newspaper
articles, took photos, and many of their descendants are still living and can
provide detailed living memories. We know from oral history and a few
archaeological finds that there was a vibrant population in the valley for
thousands of years prior to the 1880s, but the story is only in bits and pieces
– like an incomplete jigsaw puzzle. The reasons for this incomplete picture are
many – but there is an opportunity for some people to help piece the puzzle
together through the Methow Artifact Research Project.
Rich Davis, archaeologist with the Methow Valley
Interpretive Center(MVIC), is leading the Methow Artifact Research Project. The
goal is to create a photographic record of found artifacts to enrich the
archaeological record of the Methow Valley and enhance the legacy of the Methow
people.
Since the project began a year ago, sixty new items have
been shared. Tools including atlatls - a large spear used to hunt big game -
date human occupation in the valley to at least 9,000 years ago and earlier.
Tools made of obsidian and petrified wood are rare finds in the valley, or
anywhere. The location of these pieces, along with comparable findings
elsewhere, point to a robust trade route through the valley.
In a letter, Rich postulates a theory based on the available
evidence: “There was a long human presence of several thousand years here in
the mid-Valley area just after the Ice receded. The Valley appears to have been
an extremely early trade route or passage to the Upper Skagit. The lack of
available and suitable projectile point toolstone materials may have made
projectile points not only a more valuable import, but a more precious
commodity, less likely to be wasted.”
The most valuable artifact that will yield the most clues
about a human timeline in the valley is a projectile point. There are many
scientific methods to date an object, but projectile points are the most
telling time capsules, says Rich, “Every period in prehistory had a unique
style of projectile point that originated in different geographical areas.” A
projectile point can identify a myriad of details about a people including a
timeline of use, routes traveled, and available resources.
The artifacts shared to date are in remarkably old and in
pristine condition.
As the snow melts and we begin our spring gardening,
building, and cleaning, please keep the Methow Artifact Research Project in
mind for sharing any found objects. Sharing your stories and family collections
will help us piece together the story of lives lived in this beautiful valley,
before all information is lost forever. Privacy is guaranteed. Rich only asks
for the opportunity to photograph and study the objects. Please contact Rich
Davis at 509-449-3796, or the MVIC.
This article appeared in the Methow Valley News, 28 March 2018
Wednesday, March 14, 2018
Cultural Preservation
On March 25th the Methow Valley Interpretive
Center will host “Drawing with Vision, Harold J. Cundy’s Recordings of Rock
Images on the Columbia Plateau 1927-1936” with historian William Layman and guests
Randy Lewis and Arnold Cleveland. The presentation and discussion will show
documented rock art found throughout the region.
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Hank Adams, Randy Lewis, and Vine DeLoria |
I had recently discovered the book, “Custer Died for Your Sins” by Vine Deloria. Randy sent me a photo of himself with the author, Vine, and activist Hank Adams at the March 1968 Right to be Indian conference at Western Washington University in Bellingham. A chapter of Vine’s book, entitled, “Anthropologists and Other Friends”, had been printed in Playboy magazine the month before, raising awareness of American Indians in contemporary society. The book hit the New York Times best seller list a month later.
Randy sent me two other photos, of recent letters from school children notifying him of plans to replicate his likeness in a downtown Seattle mural. They read, “We learned about activists and change at school and learned about how you helped in the Ft. Lawton takeover in the 1970s. We wanted to honor you by painting your portrait on a mural that will be installed at a bus shelter at Yesler Way and 29th street in the central district. Thank you for helping our community.”
In 1970, Fort Lawton was declared a ‘surplus’ military base and became available for use as public land. The United Indians of All Tribes, UIAT, wished to reclaim the historical grounds for use as a cultural and social service center for American Indians. The state and city rejected the proposal. On March 8, 1970, a hundred people scaled the cliffs of Fort Lawton and staged a sit-in. The demonstration, led by Bernie Whitebear of the Colville Reservation, lasted for three weeks and made national news. The peaceful protest raised awareness of challenges faced by American Indians including poverty, education, and unemployment. The city negotiated with UIAT and set aside twenty-acres for the Daybreak Star Indian Cultural Center, located in the heart of Discovery Park. Fort Lawton military grounds became Discovery Park, Seattle’s largest park along the shores of Puget Sound. The park stretches over 500 acres, with nearly 12 miles of languid trails traversing forest, shoreline, grasslands, and landscaped gardens.
An interview with Randy talking about the protest can be viewed online here: http://q13fox.com/2018/04/05/when-native-americans-invaded-fort-lawton/
Randy, like so many others in his generation, worked
tirelessly to raise awareness about every facet of human rights. Young people
today are tackling issues on the national front yet again and taking to the streets
this month to raise awareness about the simple human right of receiving an
education uninterrupted by domestic terrorism. The future belongs to our youth,
they deserve our support and efforts to find a solution.
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Randy Lewis, circa 1977, at the Methow headwaters in traditional Methow regalia |
This original article appeared in the Methow Valley News, 14 March 2018
Saturday, February 17, 2018
La Mer as La Mere
Water is one of the many things I like to think about.
71% of the Earth's surface is covered by water. 73% of the human heart and brain is water.
Ocean currents move people, weather, animals from one shore to the other, river currents flush out debris and transport goods between ports.
Blood currents deliver oxygen to muscles and flush toxins from the body.
While still in the womb, mere weeks from taking our first breath of air, we take practice breaths under water - inside our mothers. Water forms tears of joy, and of sorrow.
71% of the Earth's surface is covered by water. 73% of the human heart and brain is water.
Ocean currents move people, weather, animals from one shore to the other, river currents flush out debris and transport goods between ports.
Blood currents deliver oxygen to muscles and flush toxins from the body.
While still in the womb, mere weeks from taking our first breath of air, we take practice breaths under water - inside our mothers. Water forms tears of joy, and of sorrow.
While interviewing director Derrick LaMere for the upcoming
screening of his film, United by Water, all of these themes came to mind as he
talked about the importance of 'bringing the people back to the water' - in
acts of conservation of resources, preservation of culture, and reconciliation
of human relationships.
His other films also are about people returning to the water
to reconnect with their environment, their roots, their human-ess.
"Your name is very powerful," I said, thinking of
the French translation of La Mer, The Sea
"It is, the water is, in many ways, our mother,"
he said - referring to the French translation of his actual name, La Mere, The
Mother
And then he told me of his grandmother, and his great
grandmother.
And now I'm thinking of Water in terms of Mother
How, when I was a child, I would dive deep to the bottom of
the pool and try to stay there, marveling at the feeling in my ears of hearing
the blood rush with each heart beat, and the muffled shouts above of splashing
kids in the pool . I'd pop up for air and look at my mother sitting on the
bleachers beneath an umbrella - holding my baby brother. Is this what he heard
while he was inside of her?
Even now, on days when the world is too much with us, I'll
slip into a warm bath and slide under the water, with just my nose above the
surface. Listening to the inner sounds of my body carrying on: the beat of my
heart, the inhalation of breath into my lungs, and the muffled drip, drip of
the faucet, and all is right with the world again.
Sunday, January 21, 2018
All You Need is a Toothbrush and Clean Underpants
Everyone has a holiday travel story
filled with unfortunate events. Here’s another one for the books…
I don’t normally check a bag, but
this year I decided to take advantage of the convenient option of checked bags
– roomier suitcase, space for gifts, and all the liquids a woman desires -
including a bottle of rum. We planned to take a flight from Wenatchee to
Seattle, enjoy a leisurely dinner and a restful night’s sleep before our flight
to Britain the next day. These plans were futile, beginning with the checked
bag.
After landing in Seattle, we
strolled to baggage claim with the other passengers to wait for bags that never
arrived. While my husband walked the length of the airport baggage area
searching for our bag, I stood in a long line at customer service. Apparently,
all the bags where lost. All I wanted was dinner, a cup of tea, my liquids, and
my comfortable pajamas from my checked bag. It was not to be. We gave up and
turned in for the night…sans liquids and comfy pjs.
In the morning we lumbered down to
baggage claim, and there was our bag, sitting all alone in a vast empty line of
silent luggage carousels. I opened the zipper just enough to verify that this
was indeed my bag - and upon seeing my socks and underwear, promptly zipped it
shut without fully examining ALL the contents. We grabbed the bag and rushed
upstairs to check it in before joining the security line before our flight to
Chicago, which was delayed.
The flight from Chicago to
Manchester was also delayed, and there was a scene at customs. The customs
agent simply was having one of those days (or lifetimes) where he gained
immense satisfaction from being an asshole. We watched as numerous families
were loudly belittled for "wasting his time and everyone else's" for
imagined slights and sent to the end of the ridiculously long line of over a
hundred weary passengers and crying children. When our turn arrived, the only
available agent was this power-wielding sack of flesh. We also were immediately
shunned, yelled at, and sent to the end of the line for showing disrespect,
when we had not been able to get in a single word to answer the belligerent
rapid fire questions of "and how would I be treated if I were to travel to
your country?! You are wasting my time. END OF THE LINE!" Making our way
back through the maze of line forming poles and rope we were intercepted by
another agent who took us back to the front of the line and hand delivered us
to a different agent - they passed knowing looks and we sensed that the agent
who was having a no-good-rotten-horrible-day was a regular occurrence.
With all the delayed flights and
customs drama we missed the prime 10 a.m. train to Edinburgh, but managed to
score tickets for the noon train. There was a bit of confusion before boarding
the train, as our tickets did not match the train cars or seats. We stopped a
uniformed man to ask which car we should board and were informed these tickets
were for the metro train across town, not this train right in front of us,
ready to leave the station. Being the calm, rational, people that we are, we
tossed our luggage on the theoretically wrong train and jumped aboard. Long
story short, the uniformed individual happened to be new on the job and gave us
directions that would have most certainly ruined Christmas. The other
passengers were very helpful in explaining the ticket and seating process.
We arrived in Edinburgh, the hilly
capital of Scotland. Cobblestone streets and Harry-Potter-esque architecture
make up the section known as Old Town, lined with baked potato delis and shops
offering highland wool and Celtic jewelry. I opened my bag and rummaged around
for the rum. It was gone. Of course it was gone. When a bag goes missing in an
airport for 12 hours, so does the rum.
On the return trip, I ditched all
the liquids and opted to carry on my bag instead of checking it. That was a
“stable genius” move on my part because everything that could possibly go wrong
in the history of air travel went wrong.
Perhaps that sentiment is overblown.
We did not die, there was no water landing, and the air sickness bag was not
required. However, the pilot came over the intercom and said, "Folks, this
plane is smaller than the one we would normally use for a transatlantic flight
and the fuel tank is not big enough to get us all the way to Chicago. We're
going to stop in Bangor, Maine for a refuel." As we approached Bangor,
Maine, the pilot made yet another announcement, "Folks, Bangor Maine is
too windy for a safe landing, so we are going to try to make it to Boston for a
refuel."
Never fly American. Who uses the
wrong plane??
All this wrong plane business
resulted in an unexpected overnight stay in Chicago, as everyone missed their
connections. Representatives met passengers at the gate and had dinner and
hotel vouchers, and tickets for rebooked flights. American Airlines rebooked us
on an Alaskan Airline flight to Seattle the next morning. This time I had my
comfy pajamas in my unchecked bag, so staying overnight in Chicago was not that
inconvenient. The next morning we arrived at the gate and were on standby for
seat assignments. After all the passengers boarded, and just before the plane
door was shut, we were assigned seats. As they scanned my newly issued ticket,
the ticket agent said, "I'm sorry, American didn't complete the purchase
on this ticket - You'll have to go to gate K7 and have them issue you a
purchased ticket." I ran to K7 and was told, "We aren't ticket
agents." I ran back to N9 (yeah, a different terminal!) and they let me on
the plane anyway, sans ticket.
My advice for sane holiday travel?
Forget the checked bag. Just take a backpack with a toothbrush, clean underpants,
and comfy pajamas. Be prepared to enjoy the ‘scenic’ extra-long way home.
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