Wabutt - Double Walled Basket
Karen Reed (Chinook, Skokomish, Puyallup)
red cedar bark, yellow cedar, red cedar, sweetgrass, flax dye from new zealand. 8” x 11” x 11”
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Clootie (foreground) and Cole (background) on the shores of Lake Cushman, just outside Staircase/Olympic National Park.
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Native American Skokomish ...
By : Edward S Curtis 1910s 1913
Lelehalt, Quilcene man, head-and-shoulders portrait, facing front. - Curtis - 1913
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Trail on the south side of the Skokomish River - Olympic National Park
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Wandering alone in the deep.
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Mutton, An Indigenous Woolly Dog, Died In 1859 − New Analysis Confirms Precolonial Lineage Of This Extinct Breed, Once Kept For Their Wool
Story by Audrey T. Lin, Smithsonian Institution.
"But the thing that's most important (is) that (the) wool dog created a gift to produce and to make something, to create something, to bring something alive," Michael Pavel, elder of the Twana/Skokomish Tribe, told us. "Let's do that. Let's bring that back to life. … The wool dog is still very much a part of our life."
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Skokomish Dogs (Mini Basket with Lid)
Karen Reed (Chinook, Skokomish, Puyallup)
raffia, red cedar bark, bone bead. 2” x 2” 1.75”
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One of my favorite trails on the Olympic Peninsula - Staircase, O.N.P.
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The opal-colored waters of the Skokomish River, WA [4000x5000][OC]
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