Canoes rack up for final entry protocols

Canoe paddlers hold the sides of each others' canoes, as they wait for permission to land at Chemainus First nation, in the final rack up of the 2004 Paddle to Chemainus. The red canoe seen at center was Delbert Miller and Misty Kalama's, pulled by the Skokomish Tribe's Canoe Family a...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Frazier, Allen
Format: Still Image
Language:unknown
Published: Washington State Library
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.washingtonruralheritage.org:2012/u?/nisqually,171
Description
Summary:Canoe paddlers hold the sides of each others' canoes, as they wait for permission to land at Chemainus First nation, in the final rack up of the 2004 Paddle to Chemainus. The red canoe seen at center was Delbert Miller and Misty Kalama's, pulled by the Skokomish Tribe's Canoe Family and carrying two Nisquallys, Iwalani and Brianne McCloud. To the right The Nisqually Tribe's Canoe, the "Squally Absch" can be seen, with it's signature cedar circle gracing the prow. Images in this collection document the Nisqually Indian Tribe's participation in the Tribal Canoe Journeys, an annual celebration of canoe culture by Coast Salish peoples from British Columbia, Oregon, and Washington. In 2004, the event was known as the "Paddle to Chemainus," hosted by the Stz'uminus First Nation.