I am an undergraduate student at Heritage University majoring in Elementary Education. I have been privileged to be apart of the 2 week People of the Big River Field Class. I will be blogging about my journey around Oregon and Washington as we travel over 1500 miles between the two states. Throughout this blog you will see my personal views of cultural experiences and environmental impacts along from the facts that I have gathered from each location. I hope you enjoy following my journey.
Saturday, August 24, 2013
Friday, August 23, 2013
July 23rd- What A Day!
Saturday, July 27, 2013
Pictures from the trip!
Hello all of my fellow followers or anyone that looks at my blog!
As you can see , I am a little bit behind of blogging. Today is our last day and I have not told you about everyday:(
When I get home I will be on my computer filling you in in my experiences but for now I will upload pictures from all 13 days!!
Wednesday, July 24, 2013
TuesdayJuly 24- The Best Day So Far
I know I am behind about a week, but there has been so much going on! Finding the time,energy, and service to blog has been very difficult:(
I will catch you up on the rest of my adventure like I have promised but since last night is fresh in my mind I wanted to write about the best day/ night so far.
Well after a long 5 hour trip from Umatilla( yes we were in Umatilla which I need to fill you in on later) to the Spokane Resevation. We arrived around 8:45 and our hosts were generous enough to give us free Arbys! We set up camp and had a chill night! We just ate and went to sleep. At this point you can tell everyone was ready for bed. In the morning we had an early wake uo call , but whats new? We wake up early every day! We got up ate breakfast and headed to the little building on the fair grounds where we were formally introduced to our gracious hosts and other people that work for natural resources : Billy Joe Kieffer (Director for Spokane Tribe Department of Natural Resources), Warren Seyler (BPA Coordinator), John Matt (Heritage Coordinator), Bill Matt (Environmental Officer), Brian Crossley (DNR for Spokane Tribe Program Manager), Casey Flannigan (DNR for Spokane Tribes Project Manager), and Brent Nichols (Program Manager for Lake Roosevelt Fisheries)after they filled us in on who they are and what they do and then we finally headed out to the field.
This is when the day gets good!
We took a small hike up Shimikin creek where we learned about carbon copy foot prints. This tracks what kind of animals have been in the area. We learned how to set up the thing that attracts the animals into the footprint area.(picture 2) You use very nasty smelling meat inside of a camouflaged metal container that will lure the animal in . After getting that set up, we got to head to a BBQ that was prepared our host. We also got soda to accompany our meal . A nice ice cold Pepsi was amazing to us!! After lunch we got to do the best activity so far, Shock Fishing. I was a little bit hesitant to go in the water but Jessica volunteered Heritage students to go first. I got my waiters on and I was the bucket person.The two who had the back packs on shocking the fish looked like ghost busters "Who ya gonna call?" I was running back and forth between the two people shocking the fish trying to keep up. Our group caught about 7 fish I believe. It was amazing!! It even made me think about changing my major at one point. After that we headed back to camp to get ready for swimming and our dinner. We went to Lake Roosevelt and had an amazing day on the water followed by a salmon dinner which was delicious.Besides some drama and safety issues , everyone had a great day. We had stories told to us at sundown by the Spokane Tribal members and by a few of the Heritage clan. I of course shed some tears, I was finally to that point where I realized this trip is so worth it. I have not only learned information about wildlife/fisheries/ restoration ( the scientific aspect of the trip) but I have gained more than any text book or any length of a semester could have taught me. I have learned perseverance, respect, trust, and the ability to adjust to any environment/ situation that is thrown my way which will actually help me in the real world when I am on my own. Over all today, like I said was the best day so far. The Spokane tribe really knows how to take care and welcome us as if we are family. A big thank you to them!
Sunday, July 21, 2013
July 21- My first Pow Wow Day
Saturday, July 20, 2013
Day 6 - On the Road Again July 20th
I apologize for my blogs not being in chronological order. As I mentioned and I am sure everyone has mentioned this in their blog, that blogging is not the most convenient thing we are able to do. With myself, I like going into detail about what I have done for the day, so you as my reader can actually picture yourself in my shoes. With that said, I hope with this blog post you read you can feel my pain of being on the road for 12 hours.
It was the day of traveling. We traveled from Deschutes National Forest to Wallowa. It should have only been an 8-9 hour drive but with the way we travel it ended up being 12 hours on the road. Our first stop was the painted hills where we ate lunch and observed the beautiful hills. After about 5 more hours of snoring , complaining, and sing a longs we ended up having a nutritious meal at a luxury restaurant called Burger King.;) We got back on the road and we finally arrived to Wallowa Pow Wow grounds where we would be spending the next two nights getting to enjoy the atmosphere of the Native American culture.
Please read my next blog to see how my first Pow Wow experience was!
Thursday, July 18, 2013
Thursday July 18,2013-Lava Rock Cave
Of course, the minute we hear lunch everyone's brains turn off and we all start acting like vultures. This time our lunch was not sandwiches, but the forest service provided us with a very fulfilling lunch. We had a very delicious BBQ lunch! After lunch we got to take a stroll down the Deschutes river with G.I Shane and Environmental Barbie (these are the nicknames a few of us girls gave them). Over all , it was a great day filled with information, food, and with our bunch great laughter.
Thursday July 18, 2013-Good Morning
Last night was the first night we slept in our tents up in the woods.(Deschutes Bridge campground) I must say for a girl that doesnt camp much or for more than 3 days at a time..it was definitely roughing it. There is no running water or electricity but there is an outhouse type thing. Even that is scary because you are going to the bathroom in a hole that drops down 6 feet.Three of us are sharing a tent during the trip..Charlie,Briana and myself and we were freezing! Thankgoodness Briana can sent up a tent!! I managed to sleep talk again, according to my roomates. Lol But no sleep walking yet. Haha. Tonight we are going to rearrange to make ourselves warmer. I am not going to lie and say that I wasnt scared last night because I was but I am very thankful for my HU crew (Charlie,Briana,Monet, and Fransisco) we have all been sticking together for moral and physical support. Breakfast was delicious with cereal,eggs with ham, and english muffins. Even though this trip is going to be tough , I think it will end up helping me become a more well rounded person. Make sure to read my next post to see what we do today!
Wednesday, July 17, 2013
Tuesday July 16, 2013- Warm Springs
Today we met with Jason Grant- Fish Biologist and Austin Smith-Wild Life Technician that both work on the reservation with the Warm Springs Natural Resources.(second picture)These two men had wonderful information to share with us that let me have a better understanding of what restoration is and the process of restoration. Our first location was Shittake creek. This was the creek that has been restored in 2009 taking approximately 6 weeks and 545,000 dollars. We were supposed to guess the amount and I said, " oh 4 million" obviously I was a little off. ;) it seems like with all the upkeep plus the initial cost and the project partners it would have been more. (First picture)We then went to the second site which is where Austin informed us about his work and the use of deer trackers. It is a collar that they have on 53 deers to track the location of each. There is a satelite that is also.used to hear the deer and activity going on.(third picture) it was the lunch time so we drove to our third location and ate sandwiches. (I finally got my PP&J!) The third location wae an area thatbthey are planning on restoring with an approximate cost of 1.2 million dollars. It was optional to go down a very steep hill to get to the water area they were showing so I stayed back. I knew that if I went down there I probably wouldnt make it back up. Charlie, Cia and myself decided to stay back. After we were done there we headed back to the longhouse and Cia taught us how to make rope! I am not coordinated and am not creative so I wasnt too sure how it was going to turn out. Charlie and I ended up teaming up ( like we do with everything) and making a pretty cool bracelet(fourth picture). Little did I know that this was my last night of really being comfortable:/Make sure you check out my blog for tomorrow morning!
Wednesday July 17- Kah-Nee-Ta ( Part 1)
Wednesday July 17 Kah-Nee-Ta ( Part 2)
Continuing at Kah-Nee-Ta!
After horse back riding we left and went to the Museum at Warm Springs. I was really excited because I love being informed and educated if others culture. After a walk through the museum we were then fed an amazing lunch by Arelene Stryer consisting of pulled BBQ pork sandwiches, potato salad, carrots, olives, and a delicious dessert. Yum! She then explained to us of the story on how she met Obama , which I personally thought was amazing! She then led us on a garden pathway that was located outside of the museum while telling us a story of a crazy even that happened in her life. I wont go into details because I did not take notes and it is not my story to tell wrong. After having a great day, we then headed to McDonald's to blog. We ended up staying there for awhile and blogging. It seemed like it took forever but at least I could get my mocha frappe;)
Monday, July 15, 2013
Monday July 15,2013- Let the Journey Begin
Monday July 15,2013-Waiting patiently
Monday July 15,2013-Our day
Our first stop today was Celilo Outlook. We learned about the the economical and cultural impact of the damn tha was built there during world war 2
Our second stop today was Horse Thief Lake State Park. This is where we explored petroglyphs and saw what looked like an owl,sun,and lightning bolt. We also learned that there are petroglyphs under water. This also where we stopped for lunch and got to wade in the water.
We then arrived at the Agency Longhouse and unpacked everything and relaxed. We disbursed equipment and got everything ready to go.by this time we were all exauhsted so we made spaghetti for dinner and fell asleep!