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=9.Covid-19 Remote interviews=
=Coral Harbour First Trip 2020=


"Our territorial government collaborators are currently working from home with no field work permitted for the foreseeable future, and southern labs remain closed. We are working on plans to achieve our community goals remotely, but the full impact of COVID-19 on both lab work and field work remains to be seen." (schedule H report March, 31, 2020).
Alongside funding from Genome Canada, the project PI’s also successfully applied to the Crown-Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada/ World Wildlife Fund to fund ‘traditional knowledge research and a denning survey in Coral Harbour, Nunavut’ (Schedule H, 2020, March 31.  


One year later, by March 2021, the project PI’s reported to have adapted their strategy to the Covid-19 restrictions on travel from the South and to the national public health social distancing practices in force. The polar bear denning surveys that had been planned for the region, had been executed under local leadership, and methods to compile TEK had been adapted together with Co-PI Leonard Netser to allow southern BearWatch team members to “participate remotely.”
This intended study included documenting polar bear TEK in Coral Harbour, surveys of vacated dens by locals to collect a variety of samples and data, and the initiation of a collaborative effort with the high school to train students in land-based surveys.
Despite the fact that much effort, technology and resources were put into the adaptation of these TEK interviews to take place with involvement from the South, the interviews were dis-continued after one pilot interview and the first interview with a Coral Harbour elder. The material circumstances required to record and livestream these interviews proved to be too disruptive for the task at hand.  


<span class="next_choice">You have bumped into an ice-pressure ridge. Follow it to learn more about how the material aspects of our Covid-19 adaptations interfered with the dynamics between interviewer and interviewee. Understand why it was considered unworkable, and why a cup of tea was suggested as a replacement technology. Alternatively, you can take the pilot recording in which Leonard shares his detailed knowledge on Southampton Island, and keep going.</span>
The den survey and TEK collection activities in Coral Harbour were planned for March and April.


<span class="redirective link" data-page-title="Tech,_TEK_and_Tea" data-section-id="0" data-encounter-type="Ice-pressure_ridge">[[Tech, TEK and Tea|Ice pressure ridge: Tech, TEK and Tea]]</span>
I would join this trip as a first introduction to the North.


=10. Fieldtrip BW Team Coral Harbour Summer 2021=
[[File:DSC01008.jpg|thumb|Coral Harbour view from across the boat launch (Photograph by author)]]
 
=Covid-19=
Most of the BearWatch team was set to arrive in the Hamlet in March.
 
I had, however, travelled North a day earlier than the rest, and arrived in the community when the Covid-19 epidemic was declared a global pandemic.
 
Non-resident travel bans came into effect in Nunavut and the Northwest Territories immediately, while physical distancing requirements within communities were put in place a little later.
 
=Spring Coral Harbour 2020=
 
Despite immediately rescheduling my flight back to the South after I had landed in Coral Harbour, the wind took a turn and blizzards delayed my departure from Coral Harbour by multiple days.
 
In addition to the stressfulness of getting stranded during early pandemic unfoldings, this also provided for an unique introduction to the North.
 
<div class="next_choice">Since I was all by myself, I was invited by local PI Leonard Netser and his family to come over and spend some time with them.
 
 
'''"Accept the Invitation"''' and join Leonard on a Caribou hunt.
 
 
Or,
 
 
'''"Keep Going"''' to follow the main track of the BearWatch project, and see what kind of remote solutions were found to deal with the Covid-19 disruptions for the work with Coral Harbour.  </div>
 
 
<span class="redirective invitation link" data-page-title="Caribou_Hunt" data-section-id="0" data-encounter-type="invitation">[[Caribou Hunt|Invitation: Spend time with Leonard Netser and his family]]</span>
 
=Covid-19 Remote Interviews=
 
One year later, in March 2021, the project PI’s reported to have adapted their strategy to the Covid-19 restrictions.
 
The polar bear denning surveys that had been planned for the region, had been executed under local leadership, and methods to compile TEK had been adapted together with Co-PI Leonard Netser to allow Southern BearWatch team members to “participate remotely.”
 
“This new practice evolved from an expressed desire of the community, adapting available technology, revised ethics approval from Queen’s University, and agreement on Covid-19 protocols that exceed local requirements<ref>LSARP report, March 2021</ref>.”
 
<div class="next_choice">'''"You are invited"''' to take a side trail and learn more about why these remote TEK interviews were discontinued after two interviews.
 
 
Alternatively,
 
 
'''"Keep Going"''' and consider the two TEK interviews on Southampton Island, that we managed to conduct, a successful outcome.</div>
 
<small><references /></small>
 
<span class="redirective invitation link" data-page-title="Tech,_TEK_and_Tea" data-section-id="0" data-encounter-type="invitation">[[Tech, TEK and Tea|Invitation: Tech, TEK and Tea]]</span>
 
=Fieldtrip BW Team Coral Harbour Summer 2021=


Although collaborations had already taken place remotely between local PI Leonard Netser and the PI’s from the South, it was only in the Summer of 2021 that the respective team members from the North and the South got to meet each other for the first time within the community.  
Although collaborations had already taken place remotely between local PI Leonard Netser and the PI’s from the South, it was only in the Summer of 2021 that the respective team members from the North and the South got to meet each other for the first time within the community.  
A short 5-day introductory fieldtrip was organized to visit Coral Harbour. During this trip several BearWatch researchers presented the proposed research activities that were upcoming  to the Coral Harbour HTA and other interested community members. The time was also used to set up material equipment for a simple local lab to support further community lead sampling efforts, to be conducted over late 2021 and early 2022. The trip was finally used to visit some of the sampling areas that were pointed out by Leonard and elder [name] during the TEK mapping interviews of 2020.


<span class="next_choice">Tag along, and get a sense of Southampton Island in the Summer. Otherwise, move straight ahead to the second leg of this fieldtrip, towards Gjoa Haven.</span>
A short 5-day introductory fieldtrip was organized to visit Coral Harbour.
 
=Preparations=
 
During this trip several BearWatch researchers presented the proposed research activities that were upcoming to the Coral Harbour HTA and other interested community members.
 
The time was also used to set up material equipment for a simple local lab to support further community lead sampling efforts, to be conducted over late 2021 and early 2022.
 
<div class="next_choice">Finally, the trip was used to visit some of the sampling areas that were pointed out during the TEK mapping interviews of 2020.
 
You're '''"invited"''' to tag along, and get a sense of Southampton Island in the Summer.  
 
Otherwise,  
 
'''"Keep Going"''' to move straight ahead to the second leg of this fieldtrip, towards Gjoa Haven.</div>
 
<span class="redirective invitation link" data-page-title="Drive across  the Island" data-section-id="0" data-encounter-type="invitation">[[Drive across  the Island|Invitation: Drive across  the Island]]</span>
 
=Fieldtrip BW Team Gjoa Haven Summer 2021=
 
[[File:Gjoa Haven from the docks Aug 2021.jpg|thumb|Gjoa Haven from the docks (Photographed by Saskia de Wildt, Aug 2021)]]
 
This visit to Gjoa Haven was used to gain final feedback on a peer-reviewed publication on Gjoa Haven polar bear TEK<ref>Arlidge, S. D. (2022). Using Traditional Ecological Knowledge to Facilitate Non-Invasive Polar Bear Monitoring (Doctoral dissertation, Queen's University (Canada)).</ref>.
 
It was also used to present results of several other graduate students that had been working on various elements of the BearWatch bio-monitoring toolkit.
 
And, finally, this visit provided opportunities for me to collaborate in person on the publication and dissemination of Gjoa Haven's "Voices of Thunder" on polar bear quota restriction impacts.
 
<small><references /></small>
 
=Voices of Thunder Meetings=
 
Being physically present in the community, presented opportunities to co-create an audio-visual productions with multiple community members, in addition to discussing and revising the latest iteration of the Voices of Thunder" paper.
 
<div class="next_choice">'''You find yourself at a cross-road with many tracks.'''
 
'''"Detour"''' to cut 2 to follow the process of co-creating an animated graphic documentary and other video projects. You won't return here.
 
 
Or,
 
 
''''Detour"''' directly to Cut 1 to view the final animated documentary, and return afterwards.
 
 
Alternatively,
 
 
You are '''"invited"''' to help with some logistical chores around town.
 
This is a helpful way to get to know people, and it will be much easier than in Coral Harbour, because of the existing network.
 
 
Otherwise,
 
'''"Keep Going"'''. There are, for example, community-lead sampling efforts underway in Southampton Island that you can visit, before returning to Gjoa Haven in the spring of 2022, to present the some final cuts of the videos that were made.
 
</div>
 
<span class="detour to-cut-2 link" data-page-title="Point of Beginning Animated Graphic Documentary" data-section-id="0" data-encounter-type="detour">[[Point of Beginning Animated Graphic Documentary|Detour to Cut 2: Co-create a Graphic Documentary]]</span>
 
<span class="detour to-cut-1 link" data-page-title="Multiple Voices" data-section-id="3" data-encounter-type="detour">[[Multiple Voices#Voices of Thunder Animated Graphic Documentary|Detour to Cut 1: View the Voices of Thunder Animated Graphic Documentary]]</span>
 
<span class="redirective invitation link" data-page-title="Chores Around Town" data-section-id="0" data-encounter-type="invitation">[[Chores Around Town|Invitation: Help Out With Chores Around Town]]</span>
 
=Community-Lead Sampling Coral Harbour Spring 2022=
 
In March 2022 fieldwork was carried out on Southampton Island which included bear den surveys and sampling of snow from polar bear tracks and filtering of snow melt from polar bear footprints ‘in the field’.


<span class="redirective link" data-page-title="Drive across  the Island" data-section-id="0" data-encounter-type="invitation">[[Drive across  the Island|Invitation: Drive across  the Island]]</span>
[[File:Troy and co.jpg|thumb|Troy Netser leading sampling efforts on Southampton Island (photograph by Scott Arlidge)]]


=11. Fieldtrip BW Team Gjoa Haven Summer 2021=
These efforts were compiled into instructional videos, and currently collected on a youtube channel that can be accessed through this [[link]] only.


This fieldtrip to Gjoa Haven was the first opportunity after Covid-19 restrictions to revisit the community since the polar bear quota restriction impact workshops and TEK collection workshops that were organized in 2019. This visit was used to organize two TEK sharing sessions with participants of the 2019 TEK collection workshops, as to receive the required feedback for finishing the envisioned peer-reviewed publication on Gjoa Haven polar bear TEK (Arlidge, 2022). It was also used to present results of several other graduate students that had been working on the analysis of samples towards developing various elements of the BearWatch bio-monitoring toolkit. The visit, finally, also provided opportunities for me to collaborate in person on how to proceed with the publication and dissemination of the polar bear quota restriction impacts.
=Meetings Spring 2022 Gjoa Haven=


=12. Voices of Thunder Meetings=
In the spring of 2022 I returned to Gjoa Haven by myself. I was welcomed "home" immediately, and many people had remembered seeing me around town the previous year.  


Although other BearWatch researchers had visited Gjoa Haven before, for example in 2019 to organize the TEK workshops and polar bear quota restriction impact workshops, it was my first time to visit the community. I had already been communicating for a couple of months with several community representatives and the HTO-board of Gjoa Haven by remote conference-call about the co-creation and dissemination of publications on the polar bear quota restriction impacts on Gjoa Haven residents. Being physically present in the community, however, presented opportunities to also co-create an audio-visual production with multiple community members, in addition to the academic paper that was already in progress.
This visit allowed me to screen an intermediate version of the Voices of Thunder documentary for the Gjoa Haven HTA and co-create some missing material for the final edit with Danny Aaluk, a Gjoa Haven based artist who I had collaborated closely with during my previous visit.


<span class="next_choice">You find yourself here at a cross-road with many tracks. Choose carefully, as some of these tracks might lead you down different cuts, with a low chance of returning to this particular unfolding cut of the BearWatch project itself. For example, if you turn left, you can follow a track that cuts along the processes of co-creating the animated graphic documentary and other video projects which I ended up making with several community-members of Gjoa Haven in the Summer of 2021. If you take the bridge that crosses over that track, you can take a shortcut towards the final animated documentary and other audio-visual outputs that we created to generate recognition for the experiences of Gjoa Haven’s residents around their severely reduced polar bear quota. Neither track seem to return to this cut anytime soon. Alternatively, you could stick around in the community and help with logistical chores around town. This is a helpful way to get to know people. Otherwise, you could just move onward with the BearWatch project, by either moving forward to the next fieldtrip to Gjoa Haven, in which I come back by myself to present on some of the work I have done. Or by taking a small detour that passes by the community-lead sampling efforts done in Southampton Island in March 2022.</span>
=Film screenings=


[[File:Screening.jpg|thumb|Improvised projection on living room wall with silhouette of a viewer (photograph by de Wildt, 2022)]]


<span class="detour link" data-page-title="Point of Beginning Animated Graphic Documentary" data-section-id="0" data-encounter-type="detour">[[Point of Beginning Animated Graphic Documentary|Detour to Cut 2: Aesthetic Action, co-creating a graphic documentary]]</span>
I was also able to screen two other videos for the community-members that had worked on them with me.


<span class="detour link" data-page-title="Voices of Thunder" data-section-id="8" data-encounter-type="detour">[[Voices of Thunder#4.1 Voices of Thunder Animated Graphic Documentary|Detour to Cut 1: Voices of Thunder Animated Graphic Documentary]]</span>
I organized a home screening, after which we shared bannock and soup prepared by Danny Aaluk's mother, and had a collective discussion on the cultural meaning of the songs and dances that the people had performed in the videos.  


<span class="redirective link" data-page-title="Stranding the Car" data-section-id="0" data-encounter-type="invitation">[[Stranding the Car|Invitation: Help out with chores around town]]</span>
Both Holly and Mary commented on how listening to the Pihhiq just makes them "see" the land. The others, people who did not take part in singing the pihhiq, or even that particular video, all agreed. Pihhiqs are life stories of famous hunters they explained to me. This particular Pihhiq came from the grandfather of Jacob Keanik - an interpreter we had worked with a lot in the previous year.


<span class="detour link" data-page-title=" Community-lead Sampling CH 2021" data-section-id="0" data-encounter-type="detour">[[Community-lead Sampling CH 2021|Detour: Community-lead Sampling CH 2022]]</span>
<div class="next_choice">I started to notice how multiple people connect the use of certain words and song to mental pictures of the land during conversations with me


=13. Meetings Spring 2022 Gjoa Haven=
Check out the '''"Landmark"''' to learn more about this connection.


Test text test


<span class="redirective link" data-page-title="Checking Seal Dens" data-section-id="0" data-encounter-type="invitation">[[Checking Seal Dens|Invitation: Checking Seal Dens]]</span>
Or,


=14. Meetings Spring 2022 Coral Harbour=


Test text test
'''"Keep Going."''' This will take you back to Coral Harbour where you are hoping to talk more about a model of land-based knowledge conciliation that is based on wayfinding and wayfaring with local Co-PI Leonard Netser.


<span class="redirective link" data-page-title="Seasonal Activities" data-section-id="0" data-encounter-type="Ice-pressure_ridge">[[Seasonal Activities|Ice pressure ridge: Seasonal Activities]]</span>
You also want to further discuss his priorities for the project and its final workshop.


<span class="redirective link" data-page-title="Spending Time in a Cabin" data-section-id="0" data-encounter-type="invitation">[[Spending Time in a Cabin|Invitation: Spending Time in a Cabin]]</span>


<span class="detour link" data-page-title="Zine-making" data-section-id="0" data-encounter-type="detour">[[Zine-making|Detour: Zine-making]]</span>
Before you go,


=15. Fall 2022 Coral Harbour=


test text
You have an opportunity to go check on seal dens with George.


=16. Wayfaring Calendar Pilot=
Accept the '''"invitation"''', to learn more about his methods of moving through the land and ice. </div>


<span class="detour link" data-page-title="Another point of beginning Wayfaring method" data-section-id="0" data-encounter-type="detour">[[Another point of beginning Wayfaring method|Detour: Another point of beginning Wayfaring method]]</span>
<span class="pop-up landmark link" data-page-title="Song, Dance and Oral Storytelling" data-section-id="0" data-encounter-type="landmark">[[Song, Dance and Oral Storytelling|Landmark: Song, Dance and Oral Storytelling"]]</span>


=Arctic Travel=
<span class="redirective invitation link" data-page-title="Checking Seal Dens" data-section-id="0" data-encounter-type="invitation">[[Checking Seal Dens|Invitation: Checking Seal Dens]]</span>


=17. Fall 2022 Gjoa Haven=
=Meetings Spring 2022 Coral Harbour=


<span class="detour link" data-page-title="Point of Beginning (Pre-)workshops" data-section-id="2" data-encounter-type="detour">[[Point of Beginning (Pre-)workshops#2 day Preworkshop GH|Detour: Cut 2 "2 day Preworkshop GH"]]</span>
I returned to Coral Harbour with high hopes of working with co-PI Leonard Netser on the development of a knowledge conciliation approach that would be based on western philosophies of knowing through wayfaring, and Inuit Qaujimajatuqangit on land-based wayfinding.


=18. Winter 2022 Final Workshops=
We had started talking about such an approach after my last visit in the late summer of 2021 in our personal correspondences, and Leonard was very supportive and interested in the idea.  


<span class="Pop-up link" data-page-title="Politics of In-action and Refusal" data-section-id="0" data-encounter-type="Stay_with_the_trouble">[[Politics of In-action and Refusal|Stay with the trouble: Politics of In-action and Refusal]]</span>
He had told me that coming back in the spring would allow be good timing for him. I had furthermore anticipated that travelling to Coral Harbour alone, would provide for a slower pace and less pressure from other project related activities like sampling.


=19. BW Final Reporting=
<div class="next_choice"> An unexpected '''"ice-pressure ridge"''' has, however, emerged on this path. We can't keep going.  


=20. Another Point of Beginning=
Leonard is engaged elsewhere and needs to move a cabin before the spring ice becomes too unsafe to travel across.</div>


<span class="detour link" data-page-title="Aesthetic_Action" data-section-id="0" data-encounter-type="detour">[[Aesthetic Action|Detour:Cut 2 Aesthetic Action Point of Beginning]]</span>
<span class="redirective ice-pressure_ridge link" data-page-title="Seasonal Activities" data-section-id="0" data-encounter-type="Ice-pressure_ridge">[[Seasonal Activities|Ice-pressure ridge: Seasonal Activities]]</span>

Latest revision as of 08:58, 19 July 2025

Coral Harbour First Trip 2020[edit]

Alongside funding from Genome Canada, the project PI’s also successfully applied to the Crown-Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada/ World Wildlife Fund to fund ‘traditional knowledge research and a denning survey in Coral Harbour, Nunavut’ (Schedule H, 2020, March 31.

This intended study included documenting polar bear TEK in Coral Harbour, surveys of vacated dens by locals to collect a variety of samples and data, and the initiation of a collaborative effort with the high school to train students in land-based surveys.

The den survey and TEK collection activities in Coral Harbour were planned for March and April.

I would join this trip as a first introduction to the North.

Coral Harbour view from across the boat launch (Photograph by author)

Covid-19[edit]

Most of the BearWatch team was set to arrive in the Hamlet in March.

I had, however, travelled North a day earlier than the rest, and arrived in the community when the Covid-19 epidemic was declared a global pandemic.

Non-resident travel bans came into effect in Nunavut and the Northwest Territories immediately, while physical distancing requirements within communities were put in place a little later.

Spring Coral Harbour 2020[edit]

Despite immediately rescheduling my flight back to the South after I had landed in Coral Harbour, the wind took a turn and blizzards delayed my departure from Coral Harbour by multiple days.

In addition to the stressfulness of getting stranded during early pandemic unfoldings, this also provided for an unique introduction to the North.

Since I was all by myself, I was invited by local PI Leonard Netser and his family to come over and spend some time with them.


"Accept the Invitation" and join Leonard on a Caribou hunt.


Or,


"Keep Going" to follow the main track of the BearWatch project, and see what kind of remote solutions were found to deal with the Covid-19 disruptions for the work with Coral Harbour.


Invitation: Spend time with Leonard Netser and his family

Covid-19 Remote Interviews[edit]

One year later, in March 2021, the project PI’s reported to have adapted their strategy to the Covid-19 restrictions.

The polar bear denning surveys that had been planned for the region, had been executed under local leadership, and methods to compile TEK had been adapted together with Co-PI Leonard Netser to allow Southern BearWatch team members to “participate remotely.”

“This new practice evolved from an expressed desire of the community, adapting available technology, revised ethics approval from Queen’s University, and agreement on Covid-19 protocols that exceed local requirements[1].”

"You are invited" to take a side trail and learn more about why these remote TEK interviews were discontinued after two interviews.


Alternatively,


"Keep Going" and consider the two TEK interviews on Southampton Island, that we managed to conduct, a successful outcome.
  1. LSARP report, March 2021

Invitation: Tech, TEK and Tea

Fieldtrip BW Team Coral Harbour Summer 2021[edit]

Although collaborations had already taken place remotely between local PI Leonard Netser and the PI’s from the South, it was only in the Summer of 2021 that the respective team members from the North and the South got to meet each other for the first time within the community.

A short 5-day introductory fieldtrip was organized to visit Coral Harbour.

Preparations[edit]

During this trip several BearWatch researchers presented the proposed research activities that were upcoming to the Coral Harbour HTA and other interested community members.

The time was also used to set up material equipment for a simple local lab to support further community lead sampling efforts, to be conducted over late 2021 and early 2022.

Finally, the trip was used to visit some of the sampling areas that were pointed out during the TEK mapping interviews of 2020.

You're "invited" to tag along, and get a sense of Southampton Island in the Summer.

Otherwise,

"Keep Going" to move straight ahead to the second leg of this fieldtrip, towards Gjoa Haven.

Invitation: Drive across  the Island

Fieldtrip BW Team Gjoa Haven Summer 2021[edit]

Gjoa Haven from the docks (Photographed by Saskia de Wildt, Aug 2021)

This visit to Gjoa Haven was used to gain final feedback on a peer-reviewed publication on Gjoa Haven polar bear TEK[1].

It was also used to present results of several other graduate students that had been working on various elements of the BearWatch bio-monitoring toolkit.

And, finally, this visit provided opportunities for me to collaborate in person on the publication and dissemination of Gjoa Haven's "Voices of Thunder" on polar bear quota restriction impacts.

  1. Arlidge, S. D. (2022). Using Traditional Ecological Knowledge to Facilitate Non-Invasive Polar Bear Monitoring (Doctoral dissertation, Queen's University (Canada)).

Voices of Thunder Meetings[edit]

Being physically present in the community, presented opportunities to co-create an audio-visual productions with multiple community members, in addition to discussing and revising the latest iteration of the Voices of Thunder" paper.

You find yourself at a cross-road with many tracks.

"Detour" to cut 2 to follow the process of co-creating an animated graphic documentary and other video projects. You won't return here.


Or,


'Detour" directly to Cut 1 to view the final animated documentary, and return afterwards.


Alternatively,


You are "invited" to help with some logistical chores around town.

This is a helpful way to get to know people, and it will be much easier than in Coral Harbour, because of the existing network.


Otherwise,

"Keep Going". There are, for example, community-lead sampling efforts underway in Southampton Island that you can visit, before returning to Gjoa Haven in the spring of 2022, to present the some final cuts of the videos that were made.

Detour to Cut 2: Co-create a Graphic Documentary

Detour to Cut 1: View the Voices of Thunder Animated Graphic Documentary

Invitation: Help Out With Chores Around Town

Community-Lead Sampling Coral Harbour Spring 2022[edit]

In March 2022 fieldwork was carried out on Southampton Island which included bear den surveys and sampling of snow from polar bear tracks and filtering of snow melt from polar bear footprints ‘in the field’.

Troy Netser leading sampling efforts on Southampton Island (photograph by Scott Arlidge)

These efforts were compiled into instructional videos, and currently collected on a youtube channel that can be accessed through this link only.

Meetings Spring 2022 Gjoa Haven[edit]

In the spring of 2022 I returned to Gjoa Haven by myself. I was welcomed "home" immediately, and many people had remembered seeing me around town the previous year.

This visit allowed me to screen an intermediate version of the Voices of Thunder documentary for the Gjoa Haven HTA and co-create some missing material for the final edit with Danny Aaluk, a Gjoa Haven based artist who I had collaborated closely with during my previous visit.

Film screenings[edit]

Improvised projection on living room wall with silhouette of a viewer (photograph by de Wildt, 2022)

I was also able to screen two other videos for the community-members that had worked on them with me.

I organized a home screening, after which we shared bannock and soup prepared by Danny Aaluk's mother, and had a collective discussion on the cultural meaning of the songs and dances that the people had performed in the videos.

Both Holly and Mary commented on how listening to the Pihhiq just makes them "see" the land. The others, people who did not take part in singing the pihhiq, or even that particular video, all agreed. Pihhiqs are life stories of famous hunters they explained to me. This particular Pihhiq came from the grandfather of Jacob Keanik - an interpreter we had worked with a lot in the previous year.

I started to notice how multiple people connect the use of certain words and song to mental pictures of the land during conversations with me

Check out the "Landmark" to learn more about this connection.


Or,


"Keep Going." This will take you back to Coral Harbour where you are hoping to talk more about a model of land-based knowledge conciliation that is based on wayfinding and wayfaring with local Co-PI Leonard Netser.

You also want to further discuss his priorities for the project and its final workshop.


Before you go,


You have an opportunity to go check on seal dens with George.

Accept the "invitation", to learn more about his methods of moving through the land and ice.

Landmark: Song, Dance and Oral Storytelling"

Invitation: Checking Seal Dens

Meetings Spring 2022 Coral Harbour[edit]

I returned to Coral Harbour with high hopes of working with co-PI Leonard Netser on the development of a knowledge conciliation approach that would be based on western philosophies of knowing through wayfaring, and Inuit Qaujimajatuqangit on land-based wayfinding.

We had started talking about such an approach after my last visit in the late summer of 2021 in our personal correspondences, and Leonard was very supportive and interested in the idea.

He had told me that coming back in the spring would allow be good timing for him. I had furthermore anticipated that travelling to Coral Harbour alone, would provide for a slower pace and less pressure from other project related activities like sampling.

An unexpected "ice-pressure ridge" has, however, emerged on this path. We can't keep going. Leonard is engaged elsewhere and needs to move a cabin before the spring ice becomes too unsafe to travel across.

Ice-pressure ridge: Seasonal Activities