IMAGES

  1. Canoe Journeys

    canoe journey washington

  2. Canoe Journey

    canoe journey washington

  3. The 2018 Columbia River Canoe Journey Landing and First Salmon Ceremony

    canoe journey washington

  4. Canoe Journeys

    canoe journey washington

  5. Canoe Journeys

    canoe journey washington

  6. Tribal Canoe Journey: Tribes depart Washington on epic voyage

    canoe journey washington

VIDEO

  1. Canoe Journey 2023

  2. Canoe Journey 2023

  3. Canoe Journey 2023 Landing Day Live Stream

  4. canoe journey song

  5. Ahouset @ 2006 Canoe Journey

  6. Canoe Island- Tranquil

COMMENTS

  1. Muckleshoot Canoe Journey

    2023 Canoe Journey Theme: Honoring our Warriors . Past and Present. Our community is preparing to welcome you to Muckleshoot. Landing: July 30, 2023. ... Culture Program Director. [email protected] (253) 876-2994. Autumn MaGee. Canoe Family Program Manager. [email protected] (253) 876-8107. Canoe Family ...

  2. Carrying Traditions by Canoe: The Tribal Journeys Movement in Washington

    Image above: Canoe Journey 2019 landing at Swinomish, photo by Swinomish Police Department, courtesy of Swinomish Tribal Archive. What we now know as Tribal Journeys started back in the 1980s and culminated in what would eventually be called "The Paddle to Seattle" in 1989 for the Washington State Centennial.

  3. Canoe Journey

    Inter-Tribal Canoe Journey. Canoe Journey is a revival of the traditional method of transportation and it can be a profound cultural experience for a participant. Canoe Journey began in 1989, when the "Paddle to Seattle" took place as part of the 100th anniversary of Washington Statehood. In 1989 fifteen Tribes participated in the Paddle to ...

  4. Tribal Canoe Journeys

    The annual Canoe Journey is a gathering of canoe cultures from Indigenous Nations from the coasts of Alaska, British Columbia, Oregon and Washington. It first took place in 1989 as part of Washington's Centennial celebration, and has since attracted participants from other Pacific Rim Indigenous canoe cultures, such as Ainu, Hawai'ian and Maori.

  5. 30 years after the Paddle to Seattle, Tribal Canoe Journeys represent

    Paddle to Lummi 2019: Over the past 30 years, Tribal Canoe Journey has grown from its origins as an experiment to revive indigenous maritime traditions, to become part of a renaissance among ...

  6. Building a Family through Tribal Canoe Journey

    Creating a canoe family was one thing. Preparing for Tribal Canoe Journey was quite another. For starters, the UW had a canoe but no appropriate paddles. To address that, Red Eagle offered paddle carving workshops at the Burke Museum, using traditional carving methods. Each paddle took more than 80 hours to complete.

  7. 2023 tribal canoe journey underway in Pacific Northwest

    Updated:7:04 PM PDT July 28, 2023. SEATTLE — The annual Canoe Journeyis making its return to Washington this year after a hiatus of four years. About 100 canoes landed in Suquamish in front of ...

  8. 'It's good medicine': Intertribal celebration marks completion of canoe

    Forsman was involved in the original Paddle to Seattle canoe journey in 1989, launched to coincide with the Washington state centennial. He noted that before colonization by Europeans, when the culture had no written language, protocol was a key time to get stories and information from other places. Today, the annual tradition has helped revive ...

  9. Tribal Canoe Journeys: Strength in Tradition

    According to the Squaxin Island Tribe, today an estimated 12,000 people and more than 100 canoes from up to 90 U.S. Tribes, Canadian First Nations, and New Zealand participate in the annual journeys. Many who have participated as skippers, pullers, support crew, or hosts have noted the journey's capacity to foster healing and personal growth.

  10. Canoe Journey 2023 brings thousands to Muckleshoot

    A Quileute drummer performs during the Canoe Journey 2023 Protocol at the Muckleshoot Pow Wow Grounds events center in Auburn, Washington, on Thursday, Aug. 3, 2023.

  11. A Journey of Culture: The Tribal Canoe Journey in Olympia, Washington

    The annual Tribal Canoe Journey has grown to become the largest gathering of Native Americans in the western Washington State region. In 2011, the NEA awarded an Our Town grant to Evergreen State College in Olympia, Washington, to support numerous artmaking workshops where community members crafted traditional art in preparation for the annual Canoe Journey.

  12. Traditional canoes return to the waters of the Pacific Northwest

    May 11, 2023. A Stillaguamish Tribe canoe departs Washington Park in Anacortes, Washington, for San Juan Island on May 22, 2022, in the Gathering of the Eagles Canoe Encampment. The event is separate from the much-larger Intertribal Canoe Journey, which returns this year after a three-year hiatus caused by the pandemic.

  13. After four years, Washington tribal canoes journey Salish Sea once more

    After four years, Washington tribal canoes journey Salish Sea once more. The sweeping bow of the Sila canoe reflects the ripples of the water just off of Alki Beach as the canoes wait to ask ...

  14. Intertribal canoe trip from Oregon to Seattle will set out for first

    Members of the mid-Columbia River tribes set off on an annual intertribal canoe journey after a three-year hiatus due to COVID. (This story first aired on All Things Considered on July 28, 2023.)

  15. Preparing for Canoe Journey

    The 2023 Canoe Journey is the first since 2019. Tribal canoe families from around the northwest including Canada will paddle Salish Sea waterways. 120-130 canoes are expected to land at...

  16. Journey of the Spirit: UW Shell House Canoe Family joins annual Tribal

    Building a family through tribal canoe journey. On a hillside in Suquamish, Washington, Nicole Kuhn and her two teenage sons watched brightly colored canoes make their way toward the beach below on a sunny July afternoon. Kuhn was searching for a canoe with a colorful red and green salmon painted on its exterior. When she spotted the canoe, she ...

  17. Washington's coastal tribes link, paddle east as canoe journey

    Penn-Charles said many people were anxious to get back on the water after the COVID pandemic canceled canoe journeys in 2020, 2021 and 2022. The canoe journeys began in 1989 as part of Washington ...

  18. Canoe Journey 2023, Paddle to Muckleshoot, Honoring our Warriors Past

    Canoe Journey 2023 was Paddle to Muckleshoot, Honoring our Warriors Past and Present. č̓away̓altxʷ ʔiišəd travelled up to Tulalip Tribes to start the Journey from Tulalip Bay. Pulling to Suquamish was the first official pull where the landing was met with tears of joy and celebration for safely reaching the destination.

  19. Home

    All Nations Paddles Up is a resource site for canoe culture and those interested in learning about Tribal Journeys, canoe culture, water safety and ocean-going canoe events. ... As always, we thank our organizers, cooks, funders, and the crew of the Pearl who towed the canoe hundreds of miles from Washington State to Fort Rupert.

  20. Tribal Canoe Journeys

    The Canoe Journey began in 1989, part of the 100th anniversary of Washington Statehood in which the state and indigenous governments signed the Centennial Accord, recognizing indigenous sovereignty. Canoe Journeys have organized up and down the whole Pacific Northwest Coast and being hosted by many different Northwest Native communities.

  21. Canoe Journey 2023 Reconnects Regional Tribes to Each Other and Local

    Back on the water after a pandemic hiatus, Canoe Journey 2023 is returning with more area Tribes than ever. Hosting the week's dancing, feasting, and potlatch is the Muckleshoot Tribe this year. The elegant craftsmanship, human-powered functionality, and history imbued in these canoes is a thing of beauty and legend. To the Indigenous of the.

  22. Canoe Journeys

    Photographed by Joel Rogers, Northwest Photographer Canoe pullers from Tribes and First Nations in Washington and British Columbia arrived at Port Townsend on Saturday, July 23, as part of the Canoe Journey 2016-- Paddle to Nisqually . The journey ends at Swantown Marina in Olympia Saturday, July

  23. Home

    The Cowlitz Indian Tribe Canoe Family Journey. After a long absence due to the COVID-19 pandemic, we are thrilled that Canoe Journey returned this year. ... The legacy of an ancient people in southwest Washington is rich with descendants who manage a growing portfolio of health, education, scientific research, housing, transportation ...

  24. Washington sprint canoe duo pushing to qualify for Olympics, make

    In 2013 the Bellingham Canoe Kayak Sprint team first formed, and Ecker was hooked. "I joined that first summer camp and I guess since then and now, 11-12 years later, I'm still paddling," Ecker said.

  25. Author Rick Van Noy took a canoe trip down the Delaware River ...

    The Delaware flows undammed for 330 miles from New York's Catskills to the Atlantic Ocean. The river's East Branch begins in an unremarkable pool, just up the road from a tire shop; the West ...

  26. New Complex Manager at Leavenworth Fisheries Complex

    Gale says his journey as a biologist sprang from an innate curiosity about the natural world. ... In those rare moments to himself, Gale enjoys heading outdoors to ski, backpack and canoe, or heading to the shop for some woodworking time. ... meeting mitigation obligations and advancing the conservation of aquatic species and their habitats in ...