Thursday, June 19, 2014

old trapper photos, greyowl feeding beavers...tough living: )


grey owl feeding jelly roll to pet beaver
lodge inside grey owl's cabin


This article is about the writer. For the bird, see Great grey owl. For the film, see Grey Owl (film).
Grey Owl
Grey Owl.jpg
Portrait of Grey Owl (1936), by Yousuf Karsh
Born Archibald Belaney
September 18, 1888
Hastings, England
Died April 13, 1938 (aged 49)
Prince Albert, Saskatchewan, Canada
Cause of death Pneumonia and alcoholism
Resting place Prince Albert National Park
54°8′49″N 106°28′4″WCoordinates: 54°8′49″N 106°28′4″W
Nationality British (later Canadian)
Alma mater Hastings Grammar School
Occupation Writer
Environmentalist
Employer Dominion Parks Service
Known for Environmental conservation
Home town Hastings, England
Spouse(s) Angele Egwuna
Constance Holmes
Anahareo (Gertrude Bernard)
Yvonne Perrier
Children Agnes
Shirley Dawn (1932–1984)
Grey Owl's cabin "Beaverlodge", Ajawaan Lake
Graves of Grey Owl, Anahareo and Shirley Dawn at Ajawaan Lake
The beaver lodge inside Grey Owl's cabin
From Wikipedia:Grey Owl (or Wa-sha-quon-asin, from the Ojibwe wenjiganooshiinh, meaning "great horned owl" or "great grey owl") was the name Archibald Belaney (September 18, 1888 – April 13, 1938) chose for himself when he took on a First Nations identity as an adult. Born in England as Archibald Stansfeld Belaney, and migrating to Canada in the first decade of the 20th century, he rose to prominence as a notable author, lecturer, and one of the "most effective apostles of the wilderness".[1] In his studies of the Ojibwe, Belaney learned some native harvesting techniques and trapping skills. The pivotal moment of departure for Grey Owl's early conservation work was when he began his relationship with a young Iroquois girl named Gertrude Bernard, who assisted in his transition from trapper to conservationist.[2]

Old_Trapper,_
The_Old_Trapper,_Roland_W._Reed,_1908

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