- 110-5-2-1-a035715
- Item
- July 1981
People handle butchered salmon as more sit in a bucket before cooking
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People handle butchered salmon as more sit in a bucket before cooking
Salmon bonfire with museum in background
People gather around a fire over which salmon are cooking outside the Museum of Anthropology
Salmon bonfire with museum in the background
People gather around a fire over which salmon are cooking outside the Museum of Anthropology
Salmon cook over a fire
Salmon bonfire with museum in the background
People gather around a fire over which salmon are cooking outside the Museum of Anthropology
People watch salmon cook over a fire
Three people stand by and watch as salmon cook over a fire
Salmon cook over a fire
Salmon cook over a fire
Many salmon at different points in the process of preparation lie on a long wooden table with a pile of wood to the left and a green garbage can to the right. One person tends to a fire in the background, while another prepares the salmon.
Salmon skewered on wooden sticks cook over a fire
People watch salmon cook over a fire
Three people stand by and watch as salmon cook over a fire
A man wearing a hat stands at a long wooden table and cuts open salmon with a knife to prepare them for cooking
A man wearing a hat stands at a long wooden table and cuts open salmon with a knife to prepare them for cooking
CMA Convention Salmon Barbecue
Preparing salmon, Kingcome Inlet
Parte deAnthony Carter fonds
Image of Kingcome Inlet resident Mrs. Sam Weber preparing salmon for the smokehouse. A similar image is printed on page 45 of Carter's book From History's Locker.
Sin título
Minn Sjoleth with barbecued salmon
Parte deAnthony Carter fonds
Image of Minn Sjolseth, Carter's wife, sitting next to a fire over which salmon is being barbecued. The same image is printed on page 132 of Carter's book "From History's Locker," with the caption: "Native style barbecued salmon, Minn waits with some impatience as the cooking slowly progresses."
Sin título
Parte deAnthony Carter fonds
mage of three individuals standing on the platform of a fishing weir on the Cowichan River, holding spears. A similar image is printed on page 15 of Carter's book "From History's Locker," with the caption: "Salmon weir on the Cowichan river, the native people continue a very ancient form of spear fishing for migrating salmon. The weir is not a trap but merely a means to slow the fish on the way up the river."
Sin título
Parte deAnthony Carter fonds
mage of three individuals standing on the platform of a fishing weir on the Cowichan River, holding spears. A similar image is printed on page 15 of Carter's book "From History's Locker," with the caption: "Salmon weir on the Cowichan river, the native people continue a very ancient form of spear fishing for migrating salmon. The weir is not a trap but merely a means to slow the fish on the way up the river."
Sin título
Parte deAnthony Carter fonds
Image of a wooden building with a sign hanging from the front of it that says "Salmon for Survival." The building appears to be a place where salmon is processed, dried, and/or sold. It is located next to a creek or low lying river.
Sin título
Parte deAnthony Carter fonds
mage of three individuals standing on the platform of a fishing weir on the Cowichan River, holding spears. A similar image is printed on page 15 of Carter's book "From History's Locker," with the caption: "Salmon weir on the Cowichan river, the native people continue a very ancient form of spear fishing for migrating salmon. The weir is not a trap but merely a means to slow the fish on the way up the river."
Sin título