Nehalem (Place People Live)

Nehalem (Place People Live)

Nehalem (Place People Live)

Nehalem (Place People Live)


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Overview

Nehalem explores the impact of illegal international fishing on a community where the ocean provides practical and spiritual meaning for local lives and relationships. Surfers and fishermen from a small Oregon harbor town respond to the threat of salmon extinction, when miles of deadly drift nets begin harvesting their coastal waters.
This exciting drama unfolds at a time when national media had not yet reported the devastating effects of factory ships slaughtering the ocean's wildlife. It looks back at a time when protecting the environment meant joining with trusted neighbors and fighting alone against the overwhelming power of multinational interests and corporate greed.
The deeper theme of the story examines how people manage practically and spiritually, when indifferent authority threatens the foundation of their community. Surfing transforms from daring sport to spiritual path, and deep ocean fishing evolves from practical livelihood to environmental survival.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940012406996
Publisher: eBookIt.com
Publication date: 05/07/2011
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 236
File size: 820 KB

About the Author

Hap Tivey grew up in Portland, Oregon and started surfing at the Seaside Cove in the summer of 1963. During the years following graduate school, he managed to live as a Zen monk at Hofuku-ji and Tofuku-ji Monasteries in Japan; out of a kayak in the Queen Charlotte Islands; in a camper truck in the Mohave Desert; in a variety of snowy tents from Alaska to California, a couple of tree houses, and an assortment of lofts and studios. He is now a visual artist living and working in New York City. His art has been acquired for major museum collections including New York's Museum of Modern Art and the Guggenheim. He returns to Portland frequently for exhibitions and trips to the Oregon Coast.
His father was born on a stump farm in the Willamette valley, and his grandfather was a farmer who augmented his income by cooking for crews that built the Swift Creek and Merwin dams on Washington's Lewis river. As a child he witnessed the final years of that impressive migration before those dams destroyed the Lewis' salmon spawning grounds. Fifteen years passed before he encountered the marvel of another wild salmon run in British Columbia, where he once again witnessed huge fish moving up the pristine Atnarko river in the Bella Coola Valley. In 2009, only a tiny fraction of those fish returned -- devastating news for a river so rich and full of life that it once supported an entire Native American culture with its own unique language and spiritual tradition. This book was inspired in part by the implication that even remote wilderness rivers may experience extinction of a species due to global degradation of our environment and natural resource.
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