Thursday, April 23, 2015

Blog 6: Journey to the North

Time seems to be slipping by faster than I can catch hold of it. Somehow we made it out of the winter, broke through the snow and ice to make it back here to Sky Meadow. With the changing of the seasons came changes in Big Jobs as well. The new responsibilities are as follows:

Navigation:                                         Izzy and Nathanael
Food:                                                   Emma and Noa
Canoe Manager/Captain One*:       Jamie
Paddling Gear/Captain Two:           Cat
Bathroom/Hygiene/Water:               Hazel
Tent/Tarps/Camp:                             Chase
Kitchen:                                              Andrew
Energy/Fire/Tools:                            Ezra
Bikes/Vehicles/Trailers/Repairs:     Sam
Sewing/Medic:                                   Mayah
Logistics/Scribe:                                Rachel

*Captain refers to that human being who shall be in control of one of the three big rowboats on Lake Champlain. Captains get to clean the boats and sometimes tell people what to do, as far as I’ve gathered.
           
That’s right, I, Rachel, am now in control of this wonderful blog and will be keeping you updated on all that goes on for the rest of our Semester.
And so Big Jobs change and time goes ever winding on, bringing joys and travels that we can only dream of, affixed as we are in the present.
           
In Oujé Bougoumou, however, we made the choice to leave time behind us, along with any preconceived notions of what life in a Cree community would be like. Even the mode of travel, endless hours in the van, seemed timeless and oddly disconnected. Perhaps the sense of dislocation is due to the fact that this is the first time on our semester when we have not traveled by our own power, when the trip has been more about the destination than the journey to it. But oh, what a destination it was!
Noa working on a beaver hide while Cat stokes the fire
In Cree, Oujé Bougoumou means ‘the place where people gather’ and, appearing suddenly out of the vast tracts of spruce and Jack pine, is a community that truly embodies its name. Though we spent little time in the town proper, we were lucky enough to be shown around by Mark, who spoke to us of the town’s history, of his own life, and the upcoming Goose Break. The Goose Break is the week when most of Oujé is deserted as people return to their family hunting grounds to take advantage of the migration of the geese. It felt then like we too were a migrating species.
            
After a few days, we headed out into the bush with our guides Anna and David, staying once more in wall tents with thick bough floors. The only way out to the camp was a long walk along snow covered roads which turned into narrow snowmobile trails, clearly used only by Anna and David as they went from camp to town and back.
            
A moment’s thought:
We have snowshoes now!
I kind of miss skiing
Foot stuck in a hole
-Hazel
           
We lived in a state of constant awareness. Though we didn’t change camp at all, something could always be learned by watching Anna and David as they moved about the camp; how to best scrape a moose hide or the proper manner of gutting the fish we caught. We were incredibly connected to the wild meat we ate, even from the very first day. A few of us plucked and prepared six ptarmigan, a type of small white bird native to the area. We ate moose and goose and fish - though, in the interest of honesty, we did not get to go moose or goose hunting. Fishing, on the other hand, was a central part of our life. We set nets under the ice, catching pike, whitefish, and sucker fish. Not only did we eat beaver, including the tail, we also helped to stretch and dry their pelts.
           
A moment’s thought:
            Anna, still scraping, told me to get out the pelt beside me and scrape with the knife lying next to it. I scraped for a long time, ever so often stopping to watch her mechanism of movement carefully. I felt blind to all the things she must be doing that made her do three in the time I did one. But I found I knew something. There is idealism in me I had not met before. I had been craving the gift of skill from a bush woman; I had been noticing the pangs of interest and respect I felt when I saw her hold a child with the breeze about her, a song posing within her – a stable intention unplugged from goal, as she effortlessly tolled a calm ringing for the uncomfortable grappling toddler lamenting in her arms. She mutters, “It’s okay, it’s okay”, her face quiet, her body tolling back and forth. I look away and catch this feeling. It is painful, it is malleable, most of all it is the feeling of ground underfoot, soft, after a storm when the last raindrops float to earth.
            I walk out of the tent. My time will come.
            I’ve found – sooner than I thought – for it begins with the beaver hide. When she gave me this skill, I saw the beaver from gray baby in the underwater oasis of dark air, to the pond, growing suddenly in spring, through storms and waterways adjourning till a time of meeting - full grown through David’s hands then to Anna’s hands.  –Cat

Cat and Anna
The lake from which we got our water and fish also provided us with the wonderful opportunity of dunking into the water- but only after we chiseled through three feet of ice. Let me paint a picture for you:
            
We stand around a snowshoe-sized hole in the ice, staring into the inky water below. We wait for our guide, David, so that we can pull up the net we sent down three days ago. The winds gusts across the open ice and we huddle together, grateful for the millions of layers we are wearing. Then Sam smiles a mischievous smile and looks around with a glint in his eyes we know all to well. “I’m going in.” He declares and, to our surprise, Emily and Oliver allow it; we’re close enough to camp that it’s perfectly safe. Of course, taking off those millions of layers takes a while and requires a few of us to become clothing racks to keep everything off the ice but soon enough, Sam is in the (quite literally) icy water.
            
A moment’s thought:
There is an 18-inch wall of ice surrounding this hole.
This is cold.
I hope pike don’t bite my toes.
I should get out.
-Sam
 
Ice fishing

Emily Turner, semester teacher

Izzy and Chase scraping a moose hide
Of course, then nothing would do but for Mayah and I to jump in as well. My thoughts on the matter? Well, I can safely say that there is no greater motivator than a nice, stiff, Canadian wind to make you get dressed as quickly as possible.

Ice fishing
            
And so we passed our time in the bush, tanning moose hides, roasting geese, carving and crafting outside in the Canadian sun. When at last it was time to go, we left behind several jars of maple syrup that we’d made at Sky Meadow and took with us a newfound knowledge and a vast respect for the Cree people. Thank you to Anna and David, their families, and the Oujé Bougoumou community for taking such wonderful care of us!

We then traveled from the bush down to Quebec City- about as different as you can get in terms of culture, but the two are far more intertwined than many seem to realize. The French-Canadian way of life and that of the native people are at once separate and wholly influenced and directed by each other; how fitting, then, that we experienced both in so short a time. We stayed in a youth hostel in the old city, and spent a morning on a scavenger hunt through the city, getting vaguely lost on the French sounding streets and learning the city’s history. The adventure ended at La Musée de la Civilization (the Museum of Civilization), where we saw both the Quebec and Native history areas.

A moment’s thought:
            At the Museum of Civilization, we explored the exhibits. First we went to an exhibit detailing the settlement of the Saint Lawrence Bay and the building of Quebec City. We learned about Cartier’s landing at Gaspe in 1534 and Samuel de Champlain’s discovery of the city location and the beginning of the fur trade. Next we moved on to the Native exhibit where we saw a lot of old artifacts. We also learned more about the Native’s interaction with the government in Canada and the differences in land stewardship of the Natives and of the French-Canadians.
            It was interesting seeing the exhibit after so recently being in a community that lived in the way we saw within the walls of the museum. Some of the stories we had even already heard from Anna and David, both of whom had lived the history.” –Noa

Games in Quebec City

The next day we had the chance to walk around the city a bit more, going down to the waterfront for a while to see the ice beginning to break up. Then, as a treat, we got to go out to lunch at L’Omlette. Though we completely butchered the French language as we attempted to order our meal, the folks at the restaurant were patient with us and soon we were all happily consuming poutine, the soup de jour, cannolini parce au veau, and a few other dishes that we shared. Then, joy of joys: dessert courtesy of Mrs. Row- thank you for making our day a good deal sweeter!

Maple syrup pie
Chocolate mousse for everyone
Let’s get in the van!!
-Hazel
Rachel and Andrew enjoying lunch
We had crepes, maple pie, and chocolate mousse, all of which were delicious. Buzzing with sugar and ready to head home to Sky Meadow at last, we piled into the van for the long drive back.

It’s April 18th
Driving south to Sky Meadow
Why is it snowing??!!??
-Hazel

So yes, time has been running away with us, but we are sprinting alongside it, ready to leap fully into spring and all the adventures it will hold!

 A moment’s thought:

Lately, I’ve been searching the sky for something to wonder on. A falling star or a rising sun, a flying car or a wish undone. Anything with which I might scheme my next step. I’ve asked the Earth for inspiration, should she have a piece to spare. While I wait, I sift sand through my fingers and find wind whispering across my face. Crocuses take refuge in my hollow spaces and we all sit quietly together, dust and breeze and blood, all awaiting a message brought around in an arc with the dawn of the sun. What the coming light holds, we couldn’t possibly yet behold, but I feel the dance moving on in our direction and I couldn’t possibly be more filled up with the beat of the days of the rest of this life.
-Mayah

I’ve decided to add a new section to this week's blog! Often, trying to convince my dearly beloved Semestermates to give me pieces of their writing is almost impossible, but clearly I want everyone to be represented in the blog. The following section is my solution.

Excuses I Have Been Given by Those Who Don’t Give Me Writing to Put into this Beautiful and Very Important Piece Of Electronic Literature

“Cuz my writing is to deep for… for… for… myself to understand.” - Chase

“Jamie is feeling strangely disconnected from himself and he’s in the strangest mood he’s ever been in, contemplating how to live a productive life. Jamie is also feeling that his writing is too special for the blog.” -Jamie

“Cuz my handwriting is illiterate. I’m a busy man, I don’t got time for that!” – Nathanael

“I don’t know, I don’t have an excuse, I could put something in the blog if you like…” – Emma

“I can give you a piece of writing – oh, uh, my dog ate my homework. Um, Mayah, what’s my excuse? [Mayah: You’re busy fighting dragons and saving princesses.] Yeah, say that!” – Izzy

“My handwriting resembles an ancient language from Sumer. Actually say that isn’t a legit excuse, everyone can read my handwriting except Stefan.” - Andrew

Ezra fell asleep