Our Shared Waters
Heex Huu Hoik’oros & Wiigwaasi-Jiimaan
Ho-Chunk Cottonwood Dugout Canoe & Ojibwe Birchbark Canoe
Join us on Tuesday, September 24th, and Thursday, September 26th, 2024 from 12pm to 2pm to experience Lake Mendota through and learn about the canoes that have navigated Wisconsin’s waters for millennia.
On Tuesday, learn from Bill “Nąąwącekǧize” Quackenbush, tribal historic preservation officer of the Ho-Chunk Nation, and Amy Rosebrough, state archaeologist, about Ho-Chunk dugout canoes and knowledge about water, food, language, and ecology at a talk at the outdoor classroom in Alumni Park from 12pm-1pm. From 1pm – 2pm, participants will also have the opportunity to engage the water and paddle alongside a Ho-Chunk dugout canoe as a flotilla on Lake Mendota.
On Thursday, we will repeat Tuesday’s events, but this time center and learn about Ojibwe birchbark canoes from canoe builder Mino-giizhig (Wayne Valliere) and Tom DuBois, Halls-Bascom Professor of Scandinavian Folklore, Folklore, and Religious Studies. Join us at the outdoor classroom in Alumni Park for a public talk from 12pm – 1pm, and then take to Lake Mendota in canoes in a second flotilla alongside an Ojibwe birchbark canoe from 1pm-2pm!
Please contact oursharedfuture@wisc.edu with any questions or accessibility needs.