Conference
Highlights:
Monday,
August 6th was devoted to the all -day meeting of the NMEA
Board of Directors.
Tuesday,
August 7th, Conference registration began, Rosanne Fortner
(OH) led Sea Grant education specialists in their meeting, and a National
Film Board of Canada Film Festival was ongoing.
At dinner, Scottish
pipes entertained us as we consumed tasty Scottish food. (There is strong
Scottish heritage in Victoria). Dinner was followed by Rod MacVicar
(BC), President of the Northwest Association of Marine Educators, who
officially welcomed everyone to Victoria. Neal Maine (OR) presented
a multi-image show titled “We Share the Sea,” about marine
programs in the U.S. and Canada.
Left:
Conference Brochure
(Photograph
by Susan Leach Snyder)
Next
was the Music and the Sea School Program... a concert presentation enriched
by slides and presented by the Cedar Park Intermediate School Concert
Choir from Beaverton, OR. A Scuttlebutt Session followed the concert.
(Scuttlebutt is an informal chance to exchange stories and renew friendships.)
Libations and snacks were provided, sponsored by local wine merchants.
Wednesday,
August 8th began with breakfast, an opening general session
with welcoming remarks from NMEA President Lundie Spence, and Dr. Derek
Ellis (Department of Biology, University of Victoria.) The Stegner Memorial
Lecture followed. This year, the presenter was Dr. Stephen Dow Beckham
(Lewis and Clark College, Portland, Oregon). His presentation was titled,
“How Vast the Sea, How Great the Opportunity.”
Following the Stegner
Memorial Lecture, there were two General Sessions: “Submersibles
of the Pacific Northwest: The Marine Scientist’s Perspective”
by W. C. Austin (Marine Biologist at Khoyatan Marine Laboratory) and
R.L. Chase (Geologist at the University of British Columbia) and “Whalers
of the Northwest Coast, The History of a Maritime People” by James
C. Hagarty and Richard I. Inglis (Archaeology Division, British Columbia
Provincial Museum, Victoria, B.C.) Next, were 39 concurrent sessions,
some before lunch and others after. In the late afternoon, Sea Fair
took place. Sea Fair was a marketplace of ideas, activities, gimmicks
and demonstrations, done in a “Street Fair” atmosphere.
Dinner followed, and then.... an evening with Canadian folksingers Jon
Bartlett and Rika Rebsaat...the “Green Fields of Canada.”
Thursday,
August 9th started with breakfast, followed by field trips.
Full day trips included a Gulf Islands Cruise and a trip to the Juan
de Fuca Shores. Half day morning trips included Island Intertidal, Intertidal
Walk, Sea Kayaking Lecture, Sailing, Tour of the B.C. Provincial Museum,
and a Walking Tour of the Waterfront. Afternoon trips were Marine Birds
and Mammals, Underwater Research Operations, Sea Kayaking, Sailing,
Tour of the B.C. Provincial Museum, and a Walking Tour of the Waterfront.
Everyone
spent the evening in the city of Victoria, sampling cuisine, hitting
nightspots, and strolling along the waterfront.
Friday,
August 10th began with breakfast in the Commons Dining room,
followed by 13 concurrent sessions that preceded the 11:00 NMEA General
Business Meeting. Lunch followed the meeting.
On Friday afternoon,
29 concurrent sessions took place. At 6:00 we feasted on the octopus
appetizer and later on the Northwest Salmon Barbecue Dinner. Following
that, we assembled for songs and dances of the Kwakwakawakw. This narrated
presentation of songs and dances of the people of the central coast
was performed by students of all ages who were learning the dances in
both the elementary and secondary school at Alert Bay, B.C., where Kwakwaka
Indian Language and Dancing are included in the school curriculum. Audience
participation was encouraged during the Sudi Dance, or Friendship Dance,
which ends all ceremonies. The following description of this final event
of the conference will bring back goose-bump memories to those who attended.
In
2004, Susan Leach (OH) recalled that the performance by the Kwakwaka
tribe was one of the most memorial in her life. “As the Native
Americans prepared for their final dance, they asked NMEA members to
join hands in a circle around the dancers. The new chief explained that
his father, the former chief, had recently passed on into the spiritual
world. He also stated that the Kwakwakawakws believe that when a person
dies, he or she is reincarnated into an animal. The former chief is
believed to have become a raven. One of the dances the tribe chose to
perform involved the new chief’s son dancing with the mask of
a raven on his head. As we listened to the song and watched the dancing,
we could sense the climax of the performance. At that precise instant,
crows flew in from all directions and roosted in the trees above our
heads. The NMEA participants, covered in goose bumps, left the performance
believing they had experienced a really special event, and one that
would be difficult to ‘top’ at future NMEA Conferences”
Photograph
by Susan Leach Snyder