Archive for the 'Celebration' Category

A kayak slalom race

Animas River Days slalom races were held on Saturday.  This is a paddling town, and these kids are fast. World class fast.

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This path goes beside the rapids and the race course is set right on this stretch of river.   People leave their boats and gear on the grass until it’s time for their class to race. 

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A kayak slalom course has 18 - 22 gates and takes a few minutes to run.  You go through the red gates against the flow of the river, and the green gates with the flow.  Each gate is hanging from a cable stretched across the river, so the race course can be changed from race to race.  When there isn’t a race, the gates are pulled over to the side of the river.   

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In an eddy near the head of the course, the paddlers wait their turn to run the gates.

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Here’s a kid approaching the first gate.  He makes the drop before the gate, and then starts turning his boat upstream

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rotating around that firmly set paddle blade.

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He clears the gate, quickly turns his boat for Gate 2

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and squeaks through.

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And then he’s gone around the bend. 

A Raft Parade

The Animas River Days, a weekend celebration of the Animas River, kicked off Friday evening with a raft parade.  I think there were about sixty boats and lots more kayaks.

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Dory men led the parade.  These dories are used to go down the Grand Canyon, and they’re the same type of wooden boats as the ones used by Major John Wesley Powell when he led the first geographic expedition through the canyon in 1869.  Dory men are the most radical whitewater enthusiasts.  They are extreme pilots.  

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Water people and their dogs all wear PFDs (personal flotation devices, or life preservers). 

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College kids don’t.  (Q and A in newspaper - Q: What is the most unusual sight you’ve ever seen on the river?  A: A raft without beer.)

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The people on the bridge with me thought this cupcake had zero chance of making it through Smelter rapids. 

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And there they go floating down the river from their mass start, everyone paying attention to the first stretch of rapids ahead.   

Hozhoni Days Pow Wow

The 44th annual Hozhoni Days Pow Wow was held at Fort Lewis College, and Indians came from all over the region to help dance Spring into creation.  The drums beat all day, and the young men were heartbreakingly beautiful.  When I saw this pair racing to the auditorium, I had to do a mental readjustment because this is the Dad with the child, not the Mom.  The mothers and grandmothers are the ones who made the costumes. 

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That’s so cute I need another shot.

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These guys are dressed up like I’ve never seen, and my my my the flower of young manhood is something to behold when it’s decked with fuschia plumage. 

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There were people from many tribes, and there were many types of costumes.   The variety in headdresses was awesome, and there was a special prayer of thanks to all the birds who contributed to this pow wow.   

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This is a man’s headdress. 

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The women’s costumes were also beautiful.  I think the green dress is entirely beadwork.

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One by one the costumes were magnificent.  All together, it was  almost too much to take in. 

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Here’s a woman with a lot of elk ivories on her dress, and another woman with military connections.  Can you see the little girls with the bells sewn onto their dresses?  A lot of the little boys had bells on their ankles, and they stamped around making a Spring racket. 

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Here’s a scene from the bleachers, with young teenaged boys in plumes; the Moms who stitched and drove are having a ball.  How many thousand hours of handwork does this photo encompass?  

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These men, and the boys who want to be men, danced as a prayer.  It was as though this is what real men look like and this is what true men do, and the rest of the time they’re disguising themselves as Anglos.  It was as though daily small town life has been muted to black and white, while pow wow days are in Technicolor.  It was like the one true thing. It was dreamtime made real. 

Happy Valentine’s Day

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