Primitive Skills & Outdoor Survival

Archive for February, 2010

We’re on the Cover of the SPT!

Thursday, February 4th, 2010

091026.bulletincover Were on the Cover of the SPT!Several years ago Brian Schulz of Cape Falcon Kayak and I began animating a wooden kayak skeleton with bones of driftwood. That kayak eventually came to life at the Rabbitstick Rendezvous, and became a landmark for primitive skills, one of a very small handful of kayaks built traditionally with animal hides and driftwood since the mid-1900s.

So that this hard-won experience would not vanish, I submitted an article to the Bulletin of Primitive Technology, and it now graces the cover of the Fall 2008 Transportation issue. If you haven’t read the Bulletin, you may want to become a member of the Society of Primitive Technology!

The full article is available on our website here as well.

Read the Full Article »

Dancing Hawk evolves into Seawolf

Thursday, February 4th, 2010

Six winters ago Dancing Hawk began its journey to learn and teach the essential skills and wisdom of hunter-gatherer peoples. We have traveled far in that time, incorporating long-term community through our Residential Programs and our Native Ways workshops. We have also re-discovered the empowerment of the skin-on-frame boats as our vehicles in the Pacific Northwest Coast bioregion.

With our new focus centered around the coastal region and kayaks, we’ve changed our name. As Seawolf Kayak & Native Lifeways Center, we hope to bring together the elements of community healing, native lifeways (including primitive skills), and the kayak. In 2010, we have returned to Portland, OR. We will also be searching for a permanent home near Puget Sound or the Willamette Valley. It is my hope that Seawolf Kayak will carry us from an island of hope to a re-imagined landscape of small communities and peaceful lives.