RSSUncategorized

Prettying Peiren Park

| June 27, 2013 | 0 Comments

by Liane Crosta

Screen Shot 2013-06-27 at 11.54.19 AMIf you are working in your garden and have little perennial plants you would like to donate, please give me a call!  Liane – 715-2990  We are spring cleaning in the park and are hoping to build up the natural beauty of this great spot for visitors and locals alike!

Thank you!

Master Gardener Debbie Hinchey Speaking in Seldovia Thursday

| June 27, 2013 | 1 Comment

by Suzie Stranik

Hi all, are you ready for some inspiring garden tips?  Debbie Hinchey is speaking at my home Thursday, June 27th at 7:30pm.  Put it on your calendar and bring all your garden questions.  Remember last summer when Dr. Bob Bors from Saskatchewan came and spoke about fruit varieties that are hardy for Alaska?  He showed us photos of his amazing “under the sea” breeding program with coleus.  I have just received a small order of these unusual coleus plants that are perfect for the garden or also make great house plants.  Come by and check them out.  I also have a nice selection of mineral specimens at Thyme, including citrine, amythist, jasper.  If you are having any aphid problems in your greenhouse I have one bag of lady bugs left.  The weather is turning fine again this week, it will be a pleasure to jump back in the garden after some busy music festival days.

Please RSVP to me at 234-2060 or 440-2213 if coming to the garden club meeting today.

Thanks,   Suzie

Canadian Dinosaur Museum to Visit Seldovia

| June 26, 2013 | 0 Comments

by Rosanna McInnes

TyrrellMuseum1Friday, June 28th at 9:45 a.m.

Join us at the Seldovia Public Library for a family friendly live video teleconference from the famed Dinosaur Museum in Canada.

TyrrellMuseum2A science educator from the museum will introduce the science of paleontology, and then allow the kids to take the lead.

Watch as your children are inspired by each other’s curiosity.

Click here to learn more about the Royal Tyrrell Museum!

Saturday’s Summer Solstice Music Festival Calendar

| June 22, 2013 | 0 Comments

by The Seldovia Arts Council
SolsticeSaturday2013

 

New Exhibit Opens at Seldovia Museum

| June 21, 2013 | 1 Comment

by Jan Year

Logo Traditonal round white copyThere are some new faces in the Seldovia Museum! Twenty-three of them, actually. Although they have been in town since last summer, they are just now starting to be seen. They remained unnoticed because they spent most of their time sealed in boxes in the Museum office. But now they have taken up residence in the Seldovia Museum and Visitor Center lobby, as the Seldovia Museum’s newest exhibit.

St. Lawrence Island doll by Caroline Penayah of Savoonga

St. Lawrence Island doll by Caroline Penayah of Savoonga

The faces belong to a collection of Yup’ik, Cup’ik and Inupiaq dolls. Collected over many years by Homer’s Gert Seekins, the dolls offer a window into life in some of Alaska’s most remote communities. The dolls are made largely from natural materials such as fur, bone, ivory, leather and even fish skin, and the skill of the artists is evident in the fine details of faces and clothing. Most styles of Alaska Native dolls are represented in the collection. Often a doll can be traced to a specific village in Alaska simply through the style in which it is made. The variations in traditional clothing and activities in different parts of Alaska are evident in the different clothing styles, materials and appearances of the dolls that come from those areas.

The exhibit title, “When I Remember, I Make a Doll”, comes from a statement by Eva Heffle, a well-known dollmaker who is generally credited with developing ‘activity dolls’. These dolls are shown carrying out the tasks and celebrations of traditional village life. The Eva Heffle doll in the Seldovia Museum is depicted using her teeth to crimp the leather around a mukluk seam. Ms. Heffle used her doll-making to keep alive the memory of the traditions she learned as a young girl growing up in Kotzebue – traditions she found herself starting to forget when she moved to the more urban lifestyle of Fairbanks.

Close-up of an unusual doll made of fish skin, by Anita Paniyak of Chevak

Close-up of an unusual doll made of fish skin, by Anita Paniyak of Chevak

Although we use the term “dolls” to refer to these figures, they were never intended to be toys. They are works of art and representations of traditional ways of life. Several of the artists whose work is included in this exhibit have had similar pieces included in collections ranging from the Alaska Native Art collection at the Anchorage International Airport to the Smithsonian Institution.

The Seldovia Museum is located on the first floor of the SVT building on Main Street, and is open 10:00 am – 5:00 pm, seven days a week. The doll exhibit will be on display throughout the summer. Come by the Museum and see this lovely and educational collection!

What’s That On the Side of Jakolof Bay Road?

| June 15, 2013 | 0 Comments
by Ian McGaughey
Air Quality Seldovia 1Is it a bird house, UFO, a Little Chief Smoker? No, it’s just air monitoring equipment being used by Seldovia Village Tribe’s Environmental Office to continue its road dust monitoring this summer.
The unusual looking devices are high-volume air samplers, which stand next to gray cases on tripods housing DustTrak II aerosol monitors. Both units collect information about levels of road dust in the air, otherwise known as PM10, which is particulate matter with a diameter of 10 micrometers or less. SVT has installed two of these systems along Jakolof bay Road.
Air Quality Seldovia 2“Exposure to PM10 can cause breathing and respiratory conditions, damage to lung tissue and even cancer,” Environmental Assistant Tracie Merrill said. “The elderly, children and people with chronic lung disease, influenza or asthma are especially sensitive to the effects of particulate matter.” In addition, road dust can substantially reduce visibility, putting motorists and pedestrians at risk.
SVT’s environmental staff will be monitoring the road dust levels from June through the end of September. The high volume samplers are on loan to SVT from the Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation and the aerosol monitors are from the Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium. For more information, please contact Environmental Coordinator Michael Opheim at (907) 435-3247 or mopheim@svt.org or Tracie Merrill (907) 435-3261 or tmerrill@svt.org.
(photos are of Tracie Merrill working at the air quality monitoring sites along Jakolof Bay Road)