2008 Internships "People and the Land"

2008 Spaces are filled except for one space for a woman. Thanks!


2008 Dancing Hawk Internship Application

Please email your applications to: kiliii (at) dancinghawk (dot) com.

"Since the end of last summer, when I started this internship, I've gained a lot. Useful skills, great friendships, and local connections, a better sense of self-reliance; but I think the most important part, to me, was learning to live seasonally. There are times and places for everything, and it's easier to work with that rhythm instead of going against it.

You can't eat wild blackberries in February! Seriously, I think trying to live more in accordance with the seasons has definitely improved my life. This was my first not-depressed winter!" -Claire Robison, April 2008


The Basics
What: Dancing Hawk Year-Long Internship, "This is the Sea"
When: September 6th, 2008 to July 15th, 2009
Where: A house and land in the coastal town of Manzanita, OR
Who: 5-6 interns, women and men, ages 17-23
Tuition: $500 (covers our group vehicle) + $400/month (covers tuition, rent, utilities, tool replacement, materials for classes, etc...)

Interns Crabbing
The 2007 Interns here, happy after a day of crabbing, or perhaps a little loony.

Hello everyone,

As springs rolls in here and all the flowers bloom, I have been really appreciating all the wonderful gifts that this year's interns have brought and continue to bring to my life. I am also happy to announce the 2008-2009 internships are open now!

As a practictioner of the old ways, often in my life I have found that the movement of the modern world is away from nature. To spend time with people is to spend time away from the natural world, the urban are divided from the rural. This internship is about closing that gap, about bridging the border between living in pristine wilderness areas and living downtown.

The vision of this internship is also a community-oriented approach to re-indigenizing, or developing an indigenous relationship to the land in the greater Portland area, as well as cultivating an attitude of community before self.

Some of the skills we spent time on during the 2007-2008 internship:

Awareness: Birds and Bird language, Plant identification, Waterway navigation, Understanding weather and currents and tides, Regional ecology, Understanding Privelege, Learning Chinook Jargon.
Physical: Basketry, Fiber Arts, Edible Plants, Edible Seafoods, Kayak-Building, Fishing, Hunting, Doubleball, Bowmaking, Food Preservation, Hidetanning, Garment Making, Firemaking, Shelter-building.
Community: Community organizing, Ambassadorship, Connecting with Native communities, Mentoring, Outreach, Keeping the peace.
Spiritual: Giving thanks, Creating Ceremonial space, Slowing down, the Eight Directions, Looking ahead and behind seven generations
Other Opportunities: Attending primitive skills gatherings, meeting and living with various native peoples, such as the Warani of Ecuador.

Interns Clamming
Ankle deep in mud and softshell clams, in rather cold water at night, but having the time of our lives filling up buckets with delicious vittles.

"I have learned to build a bow and tan a hide but the most important things are those things that I've learned about myself and the things I can't explain. When I first signed up with Dancing Hawk I had the idea in my head that i was going to start living this hardcore life... living in a debris shelter but I soon found out that these skills mean nothing if you don't know how to live as a person, how to build community and be a part of the natural world. It's been so wonderful learning these skills... it sets an amazing foundation for learning any primitive or naturalist skill.

It's impossible to explain everything I've learned through the internship with Dancing Hawk, and it brings me great joy to be able to say that. I hope that when i go to college it will be half the learning experience that the internship has been." -Jack Hoiland, March 2008


Available to those between 17 and 23 years of age. I believe this is extremely important for developing a sustainable mentorship model. I am also open to recent college graduates.
Low tuition that includes rent and utilities. The 2008-2009 internship costs $500 initially, then $400/month. It covers your rent and utilities, as well as tools and materials for basketry, arrow-making, etc...
Teaching. Interns will learn a great deal and given opportunities to teach and pass forward their important knowledge to others through Dancing Hawk's workshops and courses.
Based in Manzanita, Oregon. Because of the community focus, the interns live in and are based in the small coastal town of Manzanita, a 2 hour drive east of Portland and fice minutes from the beach.
Year-long commitment. I am asking for a 4 season commitment to a seasonal program, although the format will be very open to traveling and breaks. I am also asking for a commitment to learning the entire indigenous road, not just the easy and attractive parts.
You get out of it what you put in. The intership is of a guided format, but I will not ask anybody to put energy into an area they are not passionate about. You must be ready to motivate yourself.
Cultural awareness. Interns may be active in areas that are part of the greater community as well, such as permaculture, natural building, community newsletters, maintaining online journals.
Flexibility. Interns will have a long-term schedule, with a number of breaks, but the schedule is both subject to change based on what they need, and interns can take time away if needed.
Gender and cultural balance. Interns will be chosen to facilitate a balanced community situation, both in gender, minority status, and background. I anticipate between four and five interns.

Intership living situation. There will be a communal living situation for all the interns together. The interns will be responsible for sharing the space, being on the house lease, and other needs (spiritual, emotional) involved.
Officially starts in September 6th. This is to coincide with the Rabbitstick Rendezvous, a primitive skills gathering.
Anticipate inexpensive but not money-free living. You may spend little money on food and other items, but there will be occasional things that you will need money for, not the least of which might be materials to build a skin kayak, and travel to gatherings and to visit native communities.
Work is somewhat available through sister organizations. Interns are free to work part-time (and likely will) to support themselves for rent and food, and to support that there are opportunities here through TrackersNW and other programs to make some money. Even so, the financial responsibility is yours.
You must be self-sustainable. The internship program is not a babysitting group, although we will always be there to support each other.
Honesty with yourself. I ask that when you make this commitment, you first honestly ask yourself what your motivations are, and whether you are committed to taking a sometimes joyful and sometimes painful road towards a new culture that strives to have an indigenous relationship with the land and each other.

Decisions are made on a rolling basis, and are determined by the previous year's interns as well as myself.

If you interested in this program and have read and understand the guidelines above (knowing that they are mutable), then feel free to send me an Application for the 2008 Dancing Hawk Internship. If I have not met you, and it is not unpractical, I will probably ask to get together so that we can meet and you can familiarize yourself with the house and the program (and probably the current interns).

My email address is kiliii (at) dancinghawk (dot) com.

Sincerely, Kiliii Yu, Dancing Hawk Native Lifeways.


Tori's mushroom freestylin'.


Taylor's short attempt at riding sheep.


 

 

 

 

 

 


Jack working on a new kayak.





The interns wandering about on the Barview Jetty, thinking about seals and surf

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Noah and Taylor split cedar logs into kayak parts as Jack gives a talk at the Oregon Musesum of Science and Industry.

 


Claire loves to bake, and we love her to bake too.

 

 

 

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