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- 30 years after the Paddle to Seattle, Tribal Canoe . . . - The Seattle Times
This year, 30 years after the Paddle to Seattle inspired the Tribal Canoe Journeys, the Paddle to Lummi brought over 90 canoes and thousands of people from all over the world
- Tribal canoes participating in the Paddle to Seattle arrive at Golden . . .
Seventeen tribes from around Puget Sound and the Washington coast have restored or built canoes, and tribal members have learned how to paddle in the open water of the Pacific Ocean and in the Strait of Juan de Fuca and Puget Sound
- Remembering the Paddle to Seattle - Northwest Treaty Tribes
The idea was to have the tribes carve their own canoes, assemble at a rendezvous, paddle across Puget Sound to Seattle on a bright summer day, camp in a park, and spend two days canoe racing on the sound and enjoying time together celebrating cherished features of Northwest Coast culture
- Seattle Now Then: Paddle to Seattle, 1989 | Seattle Now Then
On July 18, 1989, the dream came true The “Paddle to Seattle,” the first of many canoe journeys to come, arrived at Golden Gardens Park, the traditional land of the Duwamish A 96-year-old Emmett Oliver observes the 2009 Paddle to Suquamish on the Canoe Journey’s 20th anniversary
- Carrying Traditions by Canoe: The Tribal Journeys Movement in . . .
In the now-famous “Paddle to Seattle,” multiple tribes carved big traditional canoes and paddled from the Suquamish tribal lands on Agate Pass to Seattle’s Golden Gardens Park An immediate outcome of the Paddle to Seattle was a second canoe journey to Bella Bella in 1993
- Canoe Journey – chinook Indian Nation | Chinook Tribe - Chinook Nation
In 1989 fifteen Tribes participated in the Paddle to Seattle Each year, a different Tribal Nation hosts each and every Canoe Family, which includes pullers (paddlers), support crew and often times Elders and family Indigenous canoe families from as far as way as Aotearoa, Taiwan, Hawai’i, New York, California, and Alaska participate
- A Quinault Tribal elder launched Paddle to Seattle for WA’s 1989 . . .
Quinault Tribal elder Emmett Oliver launched the Paddle to Seattle, which featured dozens of newly carved canoes as part of Washington's centennial in 1989
- Paddle to Seattle: Journey Through the Inside Passage - IMDb
Paddle to Seattle: Journey Through the Inside Passage: Directed by J J Kelley, Josh Thomas With J J Kelley, Josh Thomas Two best friends build their own kayaks and paddle alone for 97 days in the wilderness over 1,300 miles from Alaska to Seattle and survive to talk about most things
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