[BCMA] Ojibwe canoe on offer
Moderated BCMA subscriber listserv.
bcma at lists.vifa.ca
Thu Jun 18 19:05:50 PDT 2020
May I suggest contacting the Canadian Canoe Museum in Peterborough, Ontario, if you haven’t already done so? https://canoemuseum.ca/contact/
Kind regards,
Cindie Chaise
Sent from my iPad
> On Jun 18, 2020, at 6:27 PM, Moderated BCMA subscriber listserv. <bcma at lists.vifa.ca> wrote:
>
>
> Hello, everyone out there in Museum-land!
>
> An elderly gentleman here in Creston is offering a traditional birch-bark canoe. It doesn’t fit within our collections, nor within our space, so I am trying on his behalf to find a good home for it. Here’s what he told me about how he got it:
>
> Bill Menduk (known as “Bilkie”) grew up in Natal, BC and became a cameraman for the CBC, hosting a program for children that involved “a song that never ends.” He went all over the world with the CBC, and at some pointed landed in an Ojibwe area and the people gave him a traditional birch-bark canoe. Because of his unsettled lifestyle, Bilkie had no way of taking care of the canoe. One day, in the mid-1950s, Bilkie happened to be in Natal at the same time as our donor, Bill, and his wife, Nan (who had also grown up in Natal), were visiting Nan’s sister. The three of them were chatting when Bilkie mentioned that he had asked his brother to look after it, but, he said, “I found out his idea of looking after it was to dump it out in a field somewhere.” So Bilkie asked Bill and Nan if they would take the canoe, to which Nan promptly replied, “Of course we would!” So they loaded the canoe on top of their station wagon and brought it home to Creston – where it has sat upside down in their carport ever since. At one point, Bill was gathering up all the pitch he could find, intending to re-pitch the canoe and use it – “I saw myself out on French’s slough, paddling with Nan,” he said – but somehow in the sixty-plus years he’s had it, that has never happened.
>
> I haven’t seen the canoe myself, but Bill tells me it’s about 14 feet long and in fair condition. Because the canoe has been dry for decades, there is some cracking, and at one point a porcupine got into the carport and chewed one of the ribs, though the pieces are all there.
>
> Bill really wants it to go somewhere where it can be viewed and appreciated – but as I say, it’s not something we can provide a home for. I am more than happy to help you connect with him, though, if you’re interested in it!
>
> Tammy
>
> --------------------------------------------------
> Tammy Bradford, Manager
> Creston Museum
> 219 Devon Street, Creston BC V0B 1G3
> 250-428-9262
>
> _______________________________________________
> BCMA mailing list
> BCMA at lists.vifa.ca
> http://lists.vifa.ca/mailman/listinfo/bcma
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://lists.vifa.ca/pipermail/bcma/attachments/20200618/e9d97161/attachment.htm
More information about the BCMA
mailing list