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The Exeter Times-Advocate, 1975-02-06, Page 11Tirmo-Advocate,febrmury 0,1971. Page 11 Sights, sounds and people of ..the north, new experience. Valentines Day , Felt, 14 • NORTHERN CRAFTS — Brenda displays some of the Eskimo crafts and art objects that were given to her as gifts while staying in Inuvik. The mukluks she is holding she made herself following instructions and guidance from natives who have made these boots for years. T-A photo The land of the Midnight sun in the Canadian Northland can be a fascinating place to visit, to work and even to live, according to a local girl who has recently returned from a six week stay in Inuvik, 1300 miles northwest of Winnipeg on the mouth of the MacKenzie River, Brenda Dinney, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Dinney, Senior St., Exeter spent six weeks working as a Registered Nurse in the little 100 bed hospital in this far northern town of 3,500, With another girl, also a nurse, Brenda hitch-hiked to Whitehorse from Vancouver and then flew to Inuvik in October, For six weeks she lived and worked among the native (Indian and Eskimo) population and the many oil company and government em- ployees who inhabit this small northern settlement, The hospital, in which she worked, served a large area of the northwest territories and the outlying islands of the Arctic ocean. She said she "really enjoyed the relaxed atmosphere, the people and, of course, the children, Most of our patients are native people and you just can't help loving them all. They are so simple, so happy and they care so much." She said that when she first arrived in Inuvik they had only three hours of sunlight during the day, "December the 5th was the last day she saw the sun, as it never rose above the horizon . It's light from about 12:30 until 3:30 each day and there continues to be about three hours of dusk each day until January 7 when the sun makes its first ap- pearance of the New Year." She said that sunrise and sunsets in the far north were beautiful because they lasted about 2 hours. The population of Inuvik is 3,500, she said, about the size of Exeter, but "it doesn't seem the same." Brenda said that there are no roads leading out of the town, because there is really nowhere to go, One road does go to the airport, however, about nine miles •outside of town, "Pacific Western flies to most of the settlements," she said, "but many people also have charter planes." The three oil companies, Shell, Chevron and Imperial all have their 'own planes and pilots. "Nurses and doctors are always flying to and from settlements with patients and it is when•you are flying that you see the real north." The population of Inuvik is 30 percent Eskimo, 12 percent Indian and the rest white, Brenda said. The white people work for the Department of Northern Affairs and for the oil companies primarily, as well as the missions, schools and hospital, "We have a theatre, two ice rinks, three hotels, a fire hall, a community hall, a post office, hardware store, craft shop, bakery and drug store, an A&W, three churches, two missions, ski shops and chalet, 18 man RCMP detachment, C.F.B. and others, Unlike the towns in the south, she said, the houses aren't large and many of the native people live in construction shacks. The town is basically divided in half, with the white men living on the west side of town and, the native people living in the east in the unserviced area, without water or electricity, for the most part, All homes are built above the ground on stilts because of the permafrost, no foundations can be dug. All the services also run above the ground in a "utilador." This is "a huge steel pipe carrying three separate pipes for water, heat (steam) and waste. All the roads are built over the utiladors and every so often there are stairs to climb over it." Inuvik is about 20 miles south of the tree line so, as Brenda says, "they're tall, spindly and sparse, but they are trees." North of the tree line there is nothing to see except snow and ice. Very few homes in the town have any grass at all because it won't grow in the permafrost, One Catholic priest has had some topsoil brought in and has managed to produce some giant vegetables in the midnight sun, Most of the native people live on caribou and some small game. "They all hunt and trap their own food which saves them a great deal of money," Brenda said, Food in the north is VERY ex- pensive with milk selling at $1.25 a quart; a loaf of bread is 65 cents; beef is almost $3.00 a pound, cigarettes are $1.00 a package. "Nothing is cheap." The people in Sachs Harbour on Banks Island have to have all their food sent by barge up the MacKenzie Riverand Brenda said they order their dry goods and canned foods for a whole year. She said that this year the barge was late. It usually arrives in July but this year it didn't come until September and the village was without any sugar at all for a long period of time. Brenda has tried many of the native dishes and finds some of them not bad at all. The main fish that is caught and eaten is Arctic Char, which Brenda describes as being like salmon only with a stronger flavour. Caribou steaks, roasts and ribs she says are quite good and taste as tender and nice as beef without a wild flavour, Brenda has also tried muktuk, a dried fish with a strong flavour which, she says is "good exer- cising for your jaws." "Bread is one of the staples of the native people," she said, and many of them make Bannocks bread which can be made in a frying pan while on a hunting or fishing expedition." During the winter months the temperatures drop so low that it gets too cold to snow. "Instead,' Brenda says, "everything is covered with a thick, white frost. This can be so heavy on very cold days that you are unable to see six feet in front of you." She said that although it may sound horrible to those of us who complain about our southern winters it can really be a beautiful sight. She said that there is three feet of snow but you can't make snowmen or snowballs because the snow is so dry it won't pack. "It's a kind of cold that you easily become accustomed to," she said,"Thecoldest it's been since I arrived was 44 degrees below zero without accounting for the wind factor. Inuvik has been known to reach -55 to -60 degrees. When this happens you can watch the water freeze as you pour it from a glass." Brenda said that although there is alot of discrimination in the town between the whites and the natives and between the Indians and Eskimos, she was fascinated by the stories that some of the older natives could tell and disturbed by the forces of the white men in destroying the true spirit of the north. Brenda said that there was a problem with alcohol in the town among the segments of the population and was sorry to think that the white men had brought this problem north with them. She says that it is sad to watch the old people, who often com- plain that they can no longer talk to their grandchildren. The children of the settlements are sent to Inuvik and other centers in the North for their education and are away from their families from September until May. One woman from Sachs Har- bour, on Banks Island, north of Inuvik told Brenda that she was glad to see her children could get an education but, lamented that she did miss them. .Many of the children no longer speak their native dialects and many don't want to learn the native crafts and skills. "Development is killing the north," Brenda said. Brenda said she flew with a doctor to Banks Island, on time to pick up two children who had pneumonia. Before they got there one of the children had already died and Brenda said that the mother (who came from a family ,of 16) told her that before the white man came to their land they never had such a thing as the common cold. Brenda said that some of the illnesses they en- counter in their hospital, which caters mainly to the native population of Inuvik and the many settlements in the north are infections of all sorts in both children and adults, TB (even in the very young) croup, pneumonia, bronchitis and meningitis. "For these and many other illnesses, they have the white man to thank," Brenda said. But, she said, she would love to return to the north because there is so much that you can teach these people, especially the children. She said that many of the natives find it very hard to adjust to eating habits at the hospital. "They are accustomed to diets of raw and smoked meats and are suddenly subjected to things like hamburgers, fish and chips, vegetables, pies, cakes and jellos, etc." Brenda said that in some ways the cold has its advantages. "People don't need (or have) deep freezers. Most of the native Elimville 4-H girls hold first meeting The first meeting of the Elim- ville III 4-H club girls was held on February 3, The meeting was held at the home of Mrs, Kathy Simpson with nine girls answer- ing the roll call, The assistant leader, Mrs. Colleen Clayburn was also pre- sent ,to help With the measuring of some of the girls. The election of officers was held and are: president: Denise Fletcher, rotating secretary: Carol Allen, and press reporter: Pam Coward. The girls discussed a name for their club "What shall I Wear," The next meeting will be on February 10 at the home of Mrs. Colleen Clayburn, people keep their food on the top Of their houses or their sheds, I've seen asma.nyas$ix cariboutied to a roof where they are kept frozen (heads, antlers and everything attached) until needed. "Most white people have cages with locks on them that they place on stilts so the dogs can't get at it.". The ways of the North are changing, There are only two dog teams in lnuvik now and they charge •$41or a ride. Most of the natives have snowmobiles that they use now, although Brenda was heartened to hear that in some of the settlements they are going back to the dog teams. "Snowmobiles can break down or runout of gas and then they have, to be left until spring. They can always eat their dogs if they get stranded," she said. Igloos are also becoming a thing of the past, They are used for emergency shelters on a The message lasts a hunting trip but the native long time when you choose from our selection of: them for their regular shelter. Eskimo people no longer use While Brenda feels she would like to return someday because there is so much to teach the young children who are eager to learn she has also learned some valuable things from the Eskimos. The northern crafts are time consuming and painstaking but Brenda has learned a little bit about the art of making a good warm and decorative Parka, in- cluding the beading and has made herself a pair of Mukluks, beaded in the design of polar bears and trimmed with rabbit fur. "It's an exciting experience," Brenda said "It's hard to describe the beauty and the way of life." She urges everyone to go snhoerthdiadnd see for their selves, as WANNWASMESSMEMSMSAMMT r'1:317Mft, E--. Flipped! 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