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Salish canoe racing 1960's - YouTube

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ll9iqw1Etfo
    Reserves from Vancouver Island, Washington Peninsula and the Lower mainland of Vancouver building and racing canoes some time in the sixties. [ I am guessin...

Coast Salish Canoe Races.

    http://www.joejack.com/coastsalishcanoeracing.html
    Coast Salish competitive canoe racing first emerged in the mid to late 1800s, and b y the 1940s the Coast Salish Racing Canoes had evolved into a very sophisticated, exceptionally well engineered, and extremely sleek craft bearing …

Salish Canoes - Maritime Commencement Bay Puyallup …

    https://www.jobcarrmuseum.org/blog/salish-canoes
    Canoes of various sizes and design were used by Salish tribes. This medium-sized craft, ca. 1898, was intended to hold up to 5-6 people and used on large streams or protected arms of the sea. It was capable of rapid travel or for fishing with nets, spears or hooks. The canoe was constructed from a half log, with the center burned out.

Salish Racing Canoes on North Shore | Canoe Crossings

    https://sanfordosler.ca/blog/salish-racing-canoes-on-north-shore/
    The Salish “war canoes” have come to the North Shore again as part of their weekend series of races throughout the summer in the Salish Sea area. This weekend they are at Ambleside Beach in West Vancouver; next weekend they will be at Cates Park in North Vancouver.

Salish Coast Canoe Racing | Making a Salish Coast Canoe

    http://www.virtualmuseum.ca/edu/ViewLoitLo.do?method=preview&lang=EN&id=11956&lang=en
    Salish Coast Canoe Racing. Add this Collection to My Content; Many of this site's behavioral enhancements will only function in a modern browser that supports the Document Object Model and JavaScript. However the site will still be usable with most user agents that do not support the DOM/JavaScript (or have support turned off).

Salish Coast Canoe Racing: Past and Present

    http://www.virtualmuseum.ca/edu/ViewLoitLo.do?method=preview&lang=EN&id=11857
    Salish Coast Canoe Racing. Add this Collection to My Content; Many of this site's behavioral enhancements will only function in a modern browser that supports the Document Object Model and JavaScript. However the site will still be usable with most user agents that do not support the DOM/JavaScript (or have support turned off).

Launching the Coast Salish s.dəxʷìł canoe | Burke Museum

    https://www.burkemuseum.org/news/launching-coast-salish-sdxwil-canoe
    Launching the Coast Salish s.dəxʷìł canoe. On a hot day in early July, a replica Coast Salish s.dəxʷìł dugout hunting canoe launched in the Green River in Auburn, Washington, exactly 56 years after the original 25-foot-long canoe was found eroding out of a muddy bank of the river. Nooksack Tribal Member Elizabeth Swanaset King George ...

Canoes Coast Salish Canoes Lesson Plan 1

    https://www.wcls.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/Canoes-All-lesson-plans-and-corresponding-documents.pdf
    Racing or war canoe One of the innovations in canoeing was the development of the racing canoe. With a bow patterned after the ocean-going canoe and built long and narrow for racing, the Coast Salish creative culture produced this more modern canoe tradition. Racing canoes are approximately 50’ for a regular 11-man crew.

Jamestown S'Klallam Tribe - History - Coastal Salish …

    https://www.jamestowntribe.org/history/hist_canoe.htm
    The most common canoes in the Coast Salish area are, Northern (Haida), Nootkan/West Coast, Coast Salish, Salish shovel-nosed river and Coast Salish racing. The size range from large war type (Northern/Haida) canoe to smaller canoes handled by one person or for river use.

Carving tools & technologies of Coast Salish art - Burke …

    https://www.burkemuseum.org/collections-and-research/culture/contemporary-culture/coast-salish-art/carving-tools-technologies
    Motor vessels largely replaced cedar canoes on the coast in the early 20th century, but canoe racing remained a popular social event for Coast Salish tribes.

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