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Featuring...
July 2007
Paddle Days & Fur Trade Encampment
Lake Roosevelt National Recreation Area invites everyone to a couple of fun events this month. First is the ever-popular Paddle Days, now in its ninth year, on Saturday, July 21 from 11:00 a.m. to 3 p.m. located at the Colville Flats, 4 miles south of Hwy 395 on Hwy 25.
Join Park Rangers and volunteers for day of wet family funãit's your chance to try a new water sport for free. This year's activities include canoeing, rowing, snorkeling, kayaking with Mountain Gear, tubing behind the National Park's DARE boat, sailing with the Rickey Point Sail Club, and learn water safety from the US Power Squadron, and a kiddie pool for toddlers accompanied by an adult.
The National Park Service has life vests, but bring your own if you have one, as supplies are limited. Bring sunscreen, lunch, and water to drink.
For further information about Paddle Days, please call 509.738.6366 ext.115 or visit the park web site http://www.nps.gov/laro.
The second big event is the British Fur Trade Encampment, sponsored by the Lake Roosevelt National Recreation Area, The Friends of Spokane House, and The Kettle Falls Historical Center, on Saturday and Sunday, July 28 and 29, 2007 at Mission Point.
Programs will be given throughout the day including "Meet the People of the Fur Trade," "Fur Trade Fire Starting Methods," firearms demonstrations at the Kettle Falls Historical Center, a walking tour of Mission Point, an evening PowerPoint program on David Thompson at the Kettle Falls Campground, and special exhibits at the Historical Center.
With competition, and territories becoming ever more crowded east of the Rocky Mountains, there was a strong push by American and British fur companies to establish themselves in the yet 'unclaimed' area of the Pacific Northwest.
In 1807 the British--owned North West Company became the first to conduct regular trade in the inland Pacific Northwest. By the time David Thompson, an explorer for the North West Company, traveled through the area in 1811 several trading houses had been established along the Columbia River.
Thompson charted the Columbia and many of its tributaries becoming the first non-native to record his travels from the source of the Columbia to the ocean. He described the large salmon fishery at Kettle Falls that attracted hundreds of Indians from as far away as Montana each year. Though Thompson recommended the North West Company build a trading post near the falls to take advantage of the large trade base, they never did. Instead they concentrated their efforts at Spokane House, 70 miles to the southeast of Kettle Falls. David Thompson's dream of a trading post at Kettle Falls was realized when the North West Company and its bitter rival, the Hudson's Bay Company, merged in 1821. The newly formed Hudson's Bay Company decided to rebuild the profitability of their Columbia Department. They closed several trading posts, including Spokane House, and established Fort Vancouver and Fort Colvile in 1825.
The living history group Friends of Spokane House will portray some of those British fur traders and will be encamped next to St. Paul's Mission. The public is invited to step back in time to talk with traders, voyageurs, trappers, MÈtis and Indian "Daughters of the Country." Visit their camps and lodges; see their flintlock guns, tools, equipment, leather goods and hand-stitched clothing. See open-fire cooking, flint and steel fire-starting, flintlock demonstrations, period music and games.
Mission Point is located north of the town of Kettle Falls on Hwy 395, just before the bridge over Lake Roosevelt to Barney's Junction. Parking is less than a _ mile from the encampment site, but there will be handicap access. The encampment runs July 28, 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. and Sunday 10:00 to 4:00 p.m. The Kettle Falls Historical Center is open 11:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Bring sunscreen, lunch, and water to drink. For further information about the Fur Trade Encampment, please call 509.738.6366 ext.115 or visit the park web site http://www.nps.gov/laro.
Care to comment? Please direct your comments to editor@ncmonthly.com.
The North Columbia Monthly provides news, views, humor and a calendar of events
for an area that stretches from Nelson in British Columbia south
to Spokane in Washington State and covers all points in between.
A free (and free-thinking, progressive) magazine, The Monthly
is available at several hundred spots throughout the region and
now is also available on-line at www.ncmonthly.com. Published once a month since 1994, The
Monthly is an independent magazine that often challenges
contemporary wisdom by encouraging critical thinking about issues
and attitudes in the region and beyond.
Featuring our one-of-a-kind "What's
Happening" department, The Monthly provides the
region's only all-inclusive, free listing of community events
and is the first place many people check to find out about area
arts, crafts, music, fairs, services and events of all kinds. Our free listing policy
for the "What's Happening" department promotes diversity,
cultural interaction, and the exchange of ideas and free expression.
Also featured in the magazine are people, food, health, humor, and feature articles that
keep readers coming back for more each month.
We can be reached by mail at The North Columbia
Monthly, PO Box 541, Colville, WA 99114; by phone or
fax at 509-684-3109; by email at editor@ncmonthly.com;
and on the Web at www.ncmonthly.com.
Thanks for stopping by!
©2006. All rights reserved.
Reproduction of the contents or use in whole or part without
written permission from the publishers is strictly prohibited.
Views and opinions expressed herein are not necessarily those
of the publishers.
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