Sunday, December 21, 2008

scum on the snow

Bush sneaks through host of laws to undermine Obama.

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Bush Insider Who Planned To Tell All Killed In Plane Crash: Non-Profit Demands Full Federal Investigation
"... the Bush IT expert who has been directly implicated in the rigging of George Bush's 2000 and 2004 elections, was killed last night when his single engine plane crashed three miles short of the Akron airport..."

RoveCyberGate.com

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New post at sentient Developments about the almost-next Prime Minister of Canada; Ignatieff and Obama: Intellectuals on the rise.
"... it's reassuring to see both Canada and the U.S. poised to bring in leaders with roots in academia -- incoming leaders who are engaged in public discourse and who have the requisite qualifications to lead their countries. In the case of the U.S. it's a done deal; as for Canadians it's still within the realm of wishful thinking..."

Pre-Columbian Tribes Had BBQs, Parties on Grave Sites.
"... This is part of a growing body of research that shows that groups of people in lowlands in Brazil had large, socially complex groupings, sociopolitical organization and social patterns including feasting..."

Evidence from dirty teeth: Ancient Peruvians ate well.
"Starch grains preserved on human teeth reveal that ancient Peruvians ate a variety of cultivated crops including squash, beans, peanuts and the fruit of cultivated pacay trees..."

Jennifer Ashawasegai receives Debwewin Citation for journalism excellence
"... presented the award... by Anishinabek Nation Grand Council Chief John Beaucage at the Canadian Aboriginal Festival..."

New impact crater discovered in western Canada, using technology to strip vegetation from imaging.

Climate change wiped out cave bears, 13 millenia earlier than previously thought.

Terra Preta, Native "Superdirt" made Amazonian civilisations possible.
"... The special soil has been touted as a way to restore more sustainable farming to the Amazon, feed the world's hungry, and combat global warming..."

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Group Works to Identify Remains in Guatemala
"... For 12 years, the Forensic Anthropology Foundation of Guatemala (FAFG) has been exhuming clandestine graves that hold victims killed in political massacres.
Most of the people killed in Guatemala's 36-year civil war were indigenous. The army's scorched-earth policy sometimes leveled entire villages..."

Wikipedia entry; Rio Negro Massacre.

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Patagonia Indian tribe faces extinction.

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My budy Mark has posted new piece at his Boxers and Writers blog.

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Translated page for Peruvian activist, Hugo Blanco. His Wikipedia page and a translated page of his online paper, Lucha Indigena, which seems to translate to Indian Fight.

Senor Blanco was arrested in October, and quickly released, for supporting struggle for farmer's rights.

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Cirque Du Soleil is seeking artists to represent Canada at Expo 2010, in China. Deadline extended to January 21, 2009.

Carwash owner recruits graffiti artists to decorate business.


Newspaper Wrapped Canadian Art Attic Discoveries Make Over CAD$250,000 At Bonhams' Toronto Sale
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8th Annual Festival of Native Film & Culture to Present Diverse International Films March 4 - 8, 2009.

Pop legend Felipe Rose, helping the Rez's for blizzard relief efforts.
"... Felipe has often used his long standing fame to help make a difference for the Lakota people living on reservations in South Dakota. He has also donated his time for many years for various programs and projects benefiting all Native people. His involvement includes helping with organizations such as the American Indian College Fund, Unity, United Nation Tribal Youth Council, and One Nation Walking Together..."

The Indian Cinderella.

Writing forensics used to confirm Norval Morrisseau's signature.

New large petroglyphs portraying giraffes found in the Sahara.

German crew films Native American scene in Salem

Crook County removes book from schools after parent complains
"The Crook County School District has temporarily removed a book from classrooms after one parent complained to the school board that the National Book Award winner was "trashy" and "inappropriate."... "The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian," which is based on (Sherman) Alexie's own experiences, follows a boy who leaves the Spokane Indian Reservation to attend an all-white school "where the only other Indian is the school mascot"..."

Why Copyright; Canadian Voices on Copyright Law.

A people, at last. Overdue recognition for Japan's ethnic minority, before it disappears.
"... the Ainu called their place Ainu Mosir, "the land of human beings", Hokkaido means "the road to the northern sea", and the Japanese settling of their new frontier was every bit as brutal as America's..."

FBI Art Theft Program.

New native art gallery opens
"Gordon Dick fulfilled a decade-strong dream this month with the opening of Ahtsik Native Art Gallery on Pacific Rim Highway, north of Port Alberni..."

VANOC draws on indigenous symbols but fails to support indigenous athletes.

Peary Centennial Expedition.
"... On February 17, 2009, polar explorer Lonnie Dupre, a team of Arctic explorers and Inuit companions will begin an epic 1,600-mile dog sled journey through the polar reaches of the high Arctic in the footsteps of Robert E. Peary... homage to the Inuit people, unsung heroes of countless Arctic expeditions, whose culture now hangs on the edge of existence due to the ravages of global warming and pollution."

New Tim Giago article; The Slow Death of American Newspapers

Another Native blog; Sweetgrass Coaching

NishTV
"NishTV is Northern Ontario’s hottest website that captures the heartbeat of the Anishinabek Community. We use video-media in a youthful, trendy and positive way to give the Native experience more zest and coolness. Our aim is to represent and give exposure to those cool people who never get recognized for the things they are doing or who need a little exposure because they are stepping out in the community with arts, leadership, business or other creative projects..."

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Asteroids made by Neave Games


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Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Deer Camp 2008; mixed results, still good times.

All pics (except the Muski pic) click to enlarge.

Before deer season, one of our hunters sent me this pic and description of the work being done by the MNR, with Sturgeon research near Nipigon, Ontario.

Brian and sturgeon, MNR. Bingorage, Broken Vulture Art deer camp 2008.

"The fish was caught just into Black Sturgeon Lake at the mouth of the Spruce River. 49º 17' 14.66" - 88º 50' 49.32"
The Black Sturgeon system empties out of Black Sturgeon Lake and travels through 3 lakes to the south before eventually draining into Lake Superior at Black Bay.
We have tagged 3 fish at a set of rapids about 5km upstream in the river itself. Last fall we tagged 2 fish at the above location and 5 more this fall.

Sturgeon have recently been designated a Species at Risk in Ontario - see http://www.mnr.gov.on.ca/en/Business/Species/index.html
for more details. Tagging these fish with transmitters allows us to learn their seasonal movements and habitat requirements. We have also been able to locate spawning areas from these fish. We track these fish by boat once a week and have set up a base station at the mouth of the river to record their movements from the Lake up the River."

:Bryan Livingston

Brian later sent me this pic of a St. Lawrence River Muskie; click the pic to check out "Musky Hunter" entry for this fish.

St. Lawrence River Muskie muskellunge musky. Bingorage, Broken Vulture Art deer camp 2008.

Here's a couple of monster Walleye that I pulled outta da lake, just before we started deer-hunting.

northwestern ontario walleye. Bingorage, Broken Vulture Art deer camp 2008.

The modified slip-bobber rig that I was using as the weather turned colder. The small oval bobber on top of the large black/white bobber is fixed-position, so that I can tell when the slip-bobber ices up and prevents the line from fully deploying. Bobber stops are too small to see at a distance. Under the bobbers are several split shot and a snelled #4 octopus hook.

Modified slip-bobber rig. Bingorage, Broken Vulture Art deer camp 2008.

Tosh, in his cold weather walleye gear. Plenty of snow on the dock and the first skim of ice forming on the water. Frozen beer foaming out of the bottle neck.

Cold weather fishing outfit. Bingorage, Broken Vulture Art deer camp 2008.

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Johnny Cat guarding the rifle cases.

Johnny Cat guarding the rifle cases. Bingorage, Broken Vulture Art deer camp 2008.

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Mark and I took an afternoon to put together the new two-seater treestand. It was seriously heavy (ladder not shown). There had been a plan to put it up on the side of a ridge overlooking a poplar meadow, bog and cedar hollow; a perfect spot that would take us a whole day to install, no doubt. The property's landowner had leased the area to another group of hunters, however, and we never got around to putting it up anywhere else.

New two seater treestand. Bingorage, Broken Vulture Art deer camp 2008.

New two seater treestand. Bingorage, Broken Vulture Art deer camp 2008.

Tosh bagged the first deer of the trip, second day at sunset. Young buck, small four point rack, good size body. We used the "rickshaw" to get it off the field; this device has really cut dragging times over open ground.

young whitetail deer buck, four-pointer. Bingorage, Broken Vulture Art deer camp 2008.

young whitetail deer buck, four-pointer. Bingorage, Broken Vulture Art deer camp 2008.

young whitetail deer buck, four-pointer. Bingorage, Broken Vulture Art deer camp 2008.

Dad bagged the second deer; the big buck of the expedition. Although the rack wasn't that large, a thin-beamed seven-pointer; but, the body mass was about two hundred pounds before dressing. Good deer. Yay, Dad!!

Dad's large-bodied, seven-pointer buck. Bingorage, Broken Vulture Art deer camp 2008.

Dad's large-bodied, seven-pointer buck. Bingorage, Broken Vulture Art deer camp 2008.

Dad's large-bodied, seven-pointer buck. Bingorage, Broken Vulture Art deer camp 2008.

Dad's large-bodied, seven-pointer buck. Bingorage, Broken Vulture Art deer camp 2008.

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The rest of the first week went slowly. The weather was constantly windy, whether dry or drenching, and the rut hadn't started, yet.
This property belonged to a friend of one of our group. The centre of which was taken up by an old gravel quarry which has overgrown beautifully, resembling some of the mule deer country out west, surrounded by boreal forest. The day was noisy and unproductive, with several grouse crashing about at all times. I was fortunate to see a weasel, fur gone to ermine, bouncing around the foot of my stand. I was far too entranced to take a picture, however. The rest of the first week was a bust. It became insanely wet and windy, keeping the deer deep and bedded. Most of our guys had to leave and get back to the real world and their jobs; the die-hards, the real deer-hunters, the vaguely-employed... we stayed to get the job done.

blackhawk township. Bingorage, Broken Vulture Art deer camp 2008.

blackhawk township. Bingorage, Broken Vulture Art deer camp 2008.

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Mark finally broke us out, a week after the second deer was on the pole. Nice doe. He also got a second deer, a small buck, of which we seem not to have taken any pictures. At least we finally had snow by this point, and a possibility of the rut taking off.

small doe. Bingorage, Broken Vulture Art deer camp 2008.

small doe. Bingorage, Broken Vulture Art deer camp 2008.

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Note snow; the Off Lake property.

Bingorage, Broken Vulture Art deer camp 2008.

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On the last day of non-resident deer season, at the last hour of legal hunt, I finally got my deer.
Let me tell you about the hunt, first:

I had gone to sit at the head of a bog which was crossed by a skidder trail. From where I was sitting, I could see across the bog, down a major deer highway (upwind) and down the trail behind me. A great spot. A great spot with nothing happening on it. After freezing my tuckus off for a couple hours and choking loudly on some inhaled cola, I decided to walk back to the truck and sit on the intersection f trails, there, because we have taken deer there at last light, previously.

Hanging out at the truck seemed a little defeatist, but I decided to rattle and call again, since the wind was favourable. Ten minutes after rattling, I moved from the back of the truck to the front and then looked up; there was a deer standing broadside down the trail, about 80 yards away. It hadn't been there before I moved.
The deer gave me plenty of time, I needed it because the cold left me shaking. I leaned against the truck and took the shot. The deer wheeled and ran back into the bush, the way that it came from. I figured that it was a miss.

I called the guys on the radio to let them know that I had taken the shot and waited for them to get there. We waited nearly half an hour before walking up to check out the shot site.

No blood.

But; there was hair, dark hair. Okay.

We walked in and found the deer bedded, about fifty yards in. It tried to get up and couldn't, we finished the deer off and dragged it back to the truck before dressing it. A good-sized spiker buck, to finish off Deer Camp 2008.

spike buck. Bingorage, Broken Vulture Art deer camp 2008.

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Bryan sent this pic a week later, having got his buck in the Great Nipigon Deer Hunt 2008.

Nipigon buck. Bingorage, Broken Vulture Art deer camp 2008.

When Dad and I went to pick up the wrapped deer steaks, chops, roasts and sausage, this great buck was waiting to be serviced by Kent at Cloverleaf foods, in Emo.

Bingorage, Broken Vulture Art deer camp 2008.

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Dad and I went out to the cabin a couple more times and spent a few more days trying to add another deer to the five taken, but we saw no more deer in the woods. There was a foot of snow in the bush and temperatures had plummeted; in addition, a brisk north wind has been blowing fairly steady. The deers did not come out to play.

After the last trip, we arrived back at the house to find deer tracks all around our cedar trees, browsed; clearly we were being dissed in our own yard. Oh well...
next year.

Bingorage, Broken Vulture Art deer camp 2008.

Bingorage, Broken Vulture Art deer camp 2008.

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Tuesday, December 09, 2008

Great opening for NOCAA-10 show.

I would like to thank Dave and Rene, at Definitely Superior Art Gallery, for the opportunity to show my work and be part of this great show. The performances were fine, the visual art was stimulating and the conversations with viewers, satisfying.
The Ontario Arts Council and Canada Council for the Arts also supported the opening and exhibition. I'll update this posting with any new articles/reviews about the exhibit.

Websites that mentioned the NOCAA-10 opening and show.

My buddy and West Bank Art School alum, Will Lahti's blog.

Article in Thunder Bay Source, The Group of 10.

Event listing, at TBShows.com.

Definitely Superior art gallery website, current exhibitions page.

Event listing at the city of Thunder Bay webpage.

Event listing at The Argus, Lakehead U. student newspaper.

Route list page, at ArtZoom.ca

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The sleeping Giant (from Prince Arthur Hotel) under ravenous cloudbank.

sleeping giant, bingorage, broken vulture art. NOCAA-10, native art, definitely superior art gallery.

The Giant, engulfed by winter fog

sleeping giant, fogbank, bingorage, broken vulture art. NOCAA-10, native art, definitely superior art gallery.

Christian Chapman and one of his entries at NOCAA-10;

NOCAA-10, Christian Chapman, bingorage, Definitely Superior Art Gallery

Danny CutFeet and one of my fave pieces in the show, "Chief".

NOCAA-10, Danny Cutfeet, bingorage, Definitely Superior Art Gallery

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The opening at Definitely Superior Art Gallery was accompanied by several performance artists. Performances included spoken word, pop music, jazzz and hip-hop "flow".

Chris Waite, spoken word.

Bingorage, NOCAA-10, spoken word artist.

Shy-Anne Hovorka. Her webpage and myspace page.

Shy-Anne Hovorka, NOCAA-10, bingorage. NOCAA-10, native art, definitely superior art gallery.

Robin Ranger and the Department of Rhythmic Affairs, the Myspace page.

Robin Ranger and Department of Rhythmic Affairs, NOCAA-10, bingorage.NOCAA-10, native art, definitely superior art gallery.

Solomon, his myspace page.

NOCAA-10 artist. Solomon, hip-hop artist. Bingorage.NOCAA-10, native art, definitely superior art gallery.

Tenka provided ambient electronica for the opening, but was not present that evening.

Michelle Derosier had the third gallery space for her video installation, featuring clips of her work. Her company website, Thunder Stone Pictures.

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Broken Vulture Art / Bingorage / Eric C. Keast contributions to NOCAA-10 art show:

Strange Bait.
Strange Bait, bingorage, broken vulture art.NOCAA-10, native art, definitely superior art gallery.

Pungi Whisi Niaas.
Pungi Whisi Niaas, Bingorage, broken vulture art.NOCAA-10, native art, definitely superior art gallery.

Miss LoonTrout...
Miss LoonTrout got a crappy boobjob; Mr. and Mrs. Crack-Penguin pulled their tired old William Tell routine... Bingorage. broken vulture art.NOCAA-10, native art, definitely superior art gallery.

Juggler Wants To Switch To Bass.
Juggler Wnts To Switch To Bass, Bingorage, Broken Vulture Art.NOCAA-10, native art, definitely superior art gallery.

Myself and "Krustayn Versus Mecha Sasquatch"
NOCAA-10, native art, definitely superior art gallery, krustayn versus mecha sasquatch.

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Some pics of the gallery walls.

NOCAA-10, native art, definitely superior art gallery.

NOCAA-10, native art, definitely superior art gallery.

NOCAA-10, native art, definitely superior art gallery.

NOCAA-10, native art, definitely superior art gallery.

Rene has a "Vanna moment" with my Juggler painting.

NOCAA-10, native art, definitely superior art gallery.

The river above Kakabeka Falls, as we put TBay behind us.

NOCAA-10, native art, definitely superior art gallery.

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Friday, December 05, 2008

Help find Maisy and Shannon

Last seen in Kitigan Zibi / Ottawa area September 6, 2008.

Maisy
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Shannon
Shannon

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FindMaisyandShannon, homepage.
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Wednesday, December 03, 2008

Petition in favour of a coalition government

The conservative party is trying to deny the coalition of NDP, Liberal and BQ from booting their arrogant butts out of the Prime Minter's office and creating the next government.

The last straw that made this incredible circumstances necessary was the Conservatives hamhanded pledge to stop public financing of electoral campaigns (basking in the oily glow of their tarsands backers).

The Tories have been able to hang on as a minority government, as long as they have because the opposition did not wish to put itself in the position of forcing an election. Then Stephen Harper broke his own "fixed date" election law to call the most recent election, feeling that the timing favoured his party.

And now, that the combined opposition has decided to form a coalition government, Stephen Harper is threatening the country with something called "prorogation". Essentially closing the government and taking his ball home until he sees fit.

So; the point of this blog post is to encourage you alls, Canadians, to sign the petition asking the Governor General to give the Conservative extortionists the constitutional smackdown and shepherd the coalition government into reality. Especially after they started gutting arts and culture funding in Canada.

:Eric

PS My American friends...
Ignore the big words and look at the shiny thing.

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Bingorage / broken vulture art design: moose pictograph button

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Tuesday, December 02, 2008

NOCAA-10 brings the Bingorage.

Hey Bingoragers!!

I've been so wrapped up in hunting, fishing, carousing, bingo-calling and paint-tweaking the last few weeks that I forgot to mention that I will be showing several pieces at the Definitely Superior Art Gallery in Thunder Bay. I am particularly honoured to have my piece "Miss LoonTrout got a crappy boobjob..." as the main image in the promotional flyer.

There will be performance artists, as well as visual artists.

10 Northwestern Ontario Contemporary Aboriginal Artists;
December 6, 2008 - January 10, 2009.

"NOCAA-10" - Opening: Saturday, December 6 @ 7pm

So. If you're in the neighbourhood, drop by. Let me know if you came to it by the blog post. Thanks.

Click the poster for Def. Sup. "Current Exhibitions" page.

NOCAA art show poster, Definitely Superior Art Gallery.

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Thursday, November 27, 2008

And now, for something... completely different, eh?

Monty Python channel, on YouTube.

I think that everyone I grew up with could recite this entire scene (all parts) from memory back in grade 6. Some of us still can.



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Wednesday, November 26, 2008

Ground hardens

Aboriginal Mapping Network
"(AMN) is a cooperative website that supports aboriginal and indigenous peoples facing similar issues such as land claims, treaty negotiations and resource development. Common tools, such as traditional use studies, GIS mapping and other information systems are used in a collaborative manner, benefiting users of the AMN."

The Yes Men have brought us the news that we need.

The New Trough
"The Wall Street bailout looks a lot like Iraq — a "free-fraud zone" where private contractors cash in on the mess they helped create."

Tony Hillerman; author, passed away October 26. NYT Obituary:
"For all the recognition he received, Mr. Hillerman once said, he was most gladdened by the status of Special Friend of the Dineh (the Navajo people) conferred on him in 1987 by the Navajo Nation. He was also proud that his books were taught at reservation schools and colleges.
"Good reviews delight me when I get them," he said. "But I am far more delighted by being voted the most popular author by the students of St. Catherine Indian school, and even more by middle-aged Navajos who tell me that reading my mysteries revived their children’s interest in the Navajo Way."

Former Chief wins Saskatchewan's highest honour.

First Nation groups attempt to crash Tory convention.
"About 50 Aboriginal protesters attempted to gain access to the Conservative Party policy convention held in Winnipeg to present a letter to Prime Minister Stephen Harper, Nov. 13... Defenders of the Land Gathering to strategize for recognition of land rights they say are not recognized by both provincial and federal jurisdictions..."

New report from congress: CIA lied about missionaries shot down over Peru.

Indian Affairs must heed indigenous voices on reform

Inuuit woman sworn in as Canada's Minister of Health

Indigenous activists address repatriation struggle.

Discovery Channel show, "First Nation" an affront to Haudenosaunee
"After much of the project was completed, the CEO who had approved the film was fired and a replacement brought in who hired a new editing team from Half Yard Productions and a non-Native script writer whose changes fundamentally altered the project's original vision..."

Skeleton of 12,000-year-old shaman discovered buried with leopard, 50 tortoises and human foot.

Drugs Found in Hair of Ancient Andean Mummies
"These individuals probably ingested harmine in therapeutic or medicinal practices, some maybe related to pregnancy and childbirth," said study co-author Juan Pablo Ogalde, a chemical archaeologist at the University of Tarapacá in Arica, Chile..."

New study finds first inhabitants of Caribbean brought drug heirlooms with them.
"Heirlooms are portable objects that are inherited by family members and kept in circulation for generations, Fitzpatrick says, and are frequently part of important rituals. The objects tested for this study are ceramic inhaling bowls that were likely used for the ingestion of hallucinogenic substances. Fitzpatrick says the luminescence dates of the bowls, as well as analysis of the material from which the bowls were made, indicate that the artifacts "appear to have been transported to Carriacou when it was colonized - possibly hundreds of years after they were made..."

Small islands given short shrift in assembling archaeological record.
"In the short term, small islands often are superior to larger islands, and for a variety of reasons, they were actually people's first choice," Keegan said. "They had better wind flow, fewer mosquitoes and more plentiful marine resources. With sufficient water and a relatively small amount of land to grow certain kinds of crops, they had everything one would need..."

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New Tim Giago articles:

Lies, Damned Lies and Statistics

Native American Ghost Stories

Mascots, Ignorance and Racism

Standing Tall for Native American Day

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Wikipedia entry, for the "Indian Group of Seven".
"The Professional Native Indian Artists Incorporation, better known as the Indian Group of Seven, was a group of professional Indian artist from Canada, founded in November 1973.
The group combined forces to promote their art work and Indian art in general, into the world of western art and to a change the way the world looked at this art. A shift from an emphasis on "Indigenous (Native)" to "artistic" value.
The group consisted of Daphne Odjig, Alex Janvier, Jackson Beardy, Eddy Cobiness, Norval Morrisseau, Carl Ray and Joseph Sanchez..."

TVO's Big Ideas lecture series. Leanne Simpson of Athabasca University's Centre for World Indigenous Knowledge and Research delivers a lecture entitled, "Can Aboriginal Traditional Knowledge Survive in the Modern World? In downloadable audio and video formats.

A video "how-to" website with many beadworking instructional videos; WonderHowTo, jewelery subcategory.

An article about the 6th Annual Traditional Powwow, held at the Grand Rapids Public Museum.

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Barriere Lake's List of Demands

Flickr page for Barriere Lake blockade.

November 20; Riot squad arrest 5 Algonquins, including Chief.
"Community youth spokesperson Marylynn Poucachiche, mother of five and organizer of the community school, was [also] arrested at one of the morning blockades after being reassured by police that no arrests would be made since protesters had agreed to leave peacefully.
Another community member was shoved to the ground and then kicked by several officers before he was arrested. "The police dragged him with his head on the ground all the way to the police car", said one observer..."

Video from October barricade.

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Technology developed to train military personnel in foreign languages is being reworked to keep Native Languages alive. RezWorld currently supports Cherokee and needs input for other languages. If your Native tongue is a concern, consider checking it out.

Sorry; I missed listing the Winnipeg Aboriginal Film Festival, before it ran. November 19-23, 2008.

50-500 Art Show, Urban Shaman, Winnipeg, Manitoba. December 5-20, 2008.

Recent blog post from Richard Wagamese.

Drew Hayden Taylor gives Jay SilverHeels a nod. He's Canadian, dontcha know.

A review of Tomson Highway play, The Rez Sisters, now closed, at Magnuson Theatre, Thunder Bay.

Tlingit glass artist, Preston Singletary, showing at Traver Gallery in Tacoma until December 7.

Modern "ledger artist", Donald Montileaux, showing in Rapid City this December.
"By the 1860s, Montileaux said, the buffalo were gone and the tribes began trading with the settlers for used ledger books, the pages of which replaced hides as a canvas. From about 1860 to 1910, the tribal history was recorded and preserved through the use of ledger drawings..."

Choctaw ballerina Rosella Hightower passes away in France.

Three artists picked for the University of Victoria's First Peoples House.

Canada to host international meeting on the future of polar bears.

Interesting article (and pics) about Native artists pushing the boundaries. James Luna and Guillermo Gomez-Pena.

Native Earth Theatre in Toronto presents A Very Polite Genocide December 6-21, 2008.

National Museum of the Amarican Indian art grants, upcoming.

The Indian Arts Research Center in Santa Fe has fellowship application deadlines approaching.

Buffy St. Marie honoured with lifetime achievement award.

Another Native blog, Radical Indian!

New Writers Guild caucus finds a dozen Native writers working in Hollyweird. Expected more.

French exhibition looking at Native American influence on the work of Jackson Pollock.

Quick look at Mayan art, classical period.

Native American Council of Columbia University, school blog.

Native Performance artist, Skeena Reece shakes up audience at NMAI.

Review of Makah cultural education and B&B.

First Nation uses ground penetratin radar (GPR) to relocate lost graves.

Restaurant focussing on Native American food receives high honours.

"Stolen" petroglyph returned by museum.

Priceless Native American artifact collection saved by squatter, from demolition.

Interesting article, response to Dick Pound racist remark.

Tracking unmarked graves at residential schools. Hunt begins for long-missing students.

Vandalism damages Yakima Valley's rock art.

Metis choreographer/dancer, Yvonne Chartrand.

Tale of economic survival paints grim picture of Navajo weavers.
"several artisans who share their stories of cultural continuity and pride in a new documentary... Weaving Worlds also reveals the often controversial relationship with Anglo traders and the challenges of maintaining aspects of a traditional lifestyle..."

St. Paul Museum of American Art is closing.

Yes. I will post deer hunting pics and story, shortly. Still have a few tags left.

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Sunday, October 26, 2008

New Bingorage / Broken Vulture Art video.

"Random Outdoorsy Clips From Northwestern Ontario"



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Some of these pics are included in the video, or have corresponding clips. [Click to enlarge.]

Muskie-bit walleye, at Helliars Rseort.

Muskie-bit walleye.

Lunker perch. We've been catching a bunch of these off the dock at Sportsman's Landing, Clearwater Lake. All the big ones were full of roe, surprising us. This site indicates that perch are early spring spawners, but the roe take 180-some days of "chill" to mature. So, we are looking at next year's spawn.

Lunker perch

Dad gets his hands on a biggun.

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Dad bags first grouse with new 20-Gauge.
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Decadent feast of grouse, jumbo perch and steak.

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Helliars Resort client with crappie fishing bycatch.

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