Conference Highlights:

Above:
This flier was used to advertise the conference. (Click
on the image to open the flier.) (Photograph
by Susan Leach Snyder)
Conference
Co-Chairs Rosanne Fortner and Vic Mayer, along with the Consortium of
Aquatic and Marine Educators of Ohio (CAMEO), and the Ohio Sea Grant
Education Program were able to fill our days with sessions on the importance,
value, and fragility of the Great Lakes.
Conference
Program
(Photograph by Susan Leach Snyder)
Throughout
the conference, curriculum materials from Sea Grant and other programs
were on display, there was a Software Fair where marine and aquatic
software could be reviewed, and Gam Sessions took place. (For an explanation
of “Gam,” the Conference Program stated, “Ships at
sea in the days of sail would come together periodically for exchange
of information and for social interaction. This was called gamming.)
The National Board met Monday,
August 4th.
August 5th began with Registration,
NMEA Committee Meetings, and the Sea Grant Educators Meeting. After
lunch, exhibits opened. The day ended with The Perch and Pickerel Party.
This smorgasbord of great food, Lake Erie wines, and fellowship were
followed by a live music program of "Songs of the Seas and the
Lakes" by Mad Dog Mike Adams and Fiddler Hal.
The
next day, following breakfast, the Conference Co-Chairs officially welcomed
NMEA to Cleveland and the first Keynote Address was presented by Lee
Botts, Director of the Great Lakes Basin Commission. Botts (IL) gave
us a detailed sketch of the lakes, and the forces which threaten their
future in her presentation titled "These are the Sweetwater Seas."
Next came the beginning of the Great Lakes Symposium and Concurrent
Sessions.
Left:
Lee Botts; Below: James Bradley (Photographers
are unknown). The source of these photographs
is the 1986 Conference Program.
Lunch
came next, and then the NMEA 10th Anniversary Opening Remarks were presented.
These were followed by a second Keynote speaker, the Honorable James
Bradley, Ontario’s Minister of the Environment. The rest of the
afternoon was filled with the Great Lakes Symposium, Concurrent Sessions
and Sea Swap. The evening special event was a cruise aboard the Goodtime
II down the Cuyahoga River, then back out along the Lake Erie shore
for a superb view of Cleveland. Participants enjoyed the music of a
dance band.
August 7th was a
day of many activity choices: a 4-hour workshop about Voyage of
the Mimi, 4-H Sessions, Concurrent Sessions, and all-day and afternoon-only
field trips. Field Trips included: A Walking Tour of Downtown Cleveland;
Mentor Marsh, Mentor Highlands and Fairport Harbor; Learn to Sail on
Lake Erie; An Afternoon at University Circle Museums; Canoeing a Scenic
and Historic River; Natural and Developed Estuaries; Old Woman Creek
National Estuarine Sanctuary; Scuba Diving to Lake Erie Shipwrecks;
and Charter Fishing in Lake Erie. Following this full day, dinner was
followed by a cash bar and the annual auction.
Below:
The Pike
(Photograph by James A. Lanier)
The
second annual auction netted $3,000. A new auction item was introduced
to the NMEA crowd....THE PIKE. The Pike was a weather-beaten, stuffed
and mounted-on-a-board, pike...from the attic of a friend of Kathy Seall
(OH). Little did Kathy know that this fish would become such a popular
auction item. Since 1986, THE PIKE has traveled to every national convention
to be auctioned to the highest bidding chapter, and it has raised thousands
of dollars for the organization.
(Click on the picture of the PIKE to see its NMEA history.)
Friday,
August 8th began with breakfast and then the Annual NMEA Membership
Meeting. Next were the 10th Anniversary Session, Concurrent Sessions,
and lunch.
After lunch, Jack
Vallentyne of the Canada Centre for Inland Waters came with his lighted
world globe on his back to give us a Stegner Lecture on the need for
a more holistic, ethical approach to the management of the Great Lakes.
Right:
Jack Vallentyne (Photographer is unknown). The
source of this photograph is the 1986 Conference Program.
Vallentyne’s presentation
was followed by the last series of Concurrent Sessions.
The last evening of the Conference was titled, “A Little ‘Night
Magic’ at Sea World.” A Texas Barbecue Buffet was the prelude
to “Shamu’s Night Magic” show, a festival of fireworks
and spectacular performances by Sea World’s killer whales.

Past
and present NMEA presidents gathered at a reception at the 1986 conference.
From left to right: Lundie Spence, Prentice Stout, Jim Lanier, Millie
Graham, Jeff Sandler, Art West, John McMahon, and Rick Tinnin.
Photograph by James. A. Lanier
On Saturday,
NMEA conference participants were encouraged to spend the day site-seeing
along Cleveland’s waterfront.