G̱áax'w ḵa Haaw (Herring Eggs and Branches)
Since time immemorial, the people of Southeast Alaska have harvested herring eggs by placing hemlock branches in herring spawn. But today, this vital, traditional food is endangered by commercial fishing pressure. The film serves as both a vignette of the 2019 spring harvest efforts and a portrayal of the tension the Indigenous people of Sitka, Alaska and beyond are feeling as their traditional food faces an uncertain future, said SHI President Rosita Worl. Learn more about Sealaska Heritage here: https://www.sealaskaheritage.org/ / shinstitute / shinstitute / shinstitute

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The Herring Spawn | Our Way of Life

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An Alaska Delicacy! | Tlingit & Haida Harvest “Herring Eggs”S1 E5

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2026 Fry Releases

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King̱eestí ḵa Keiheenákʼw Aas Ḵwáani Daat Yoo Has X̱ʼawli.át (Tlingit Language)

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Amazing big nets catch herring on the boat - Smoked herring processing process in factory

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2023 Spring Performance from Anchorage Kingikmiut Dancers at Alaska Pacific University

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BENTWOOD BOX

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Cooking A Massive Lamb Pilaf For a Mountain Village Feast!

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ASMR Best Triggers For Sleep Collection (No Talking) 3 Hours of Tapping & Scratching

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Grow These 10 Native Vegetables That Come Back Every Year

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40 Years of Celebration I Sealaska Heritage

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The life of the forest. Fungi

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4 Days Alone in Alaska - Bushcraft Camping & Foraging Food

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Ice-fishing in Mongolia I SLICE

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Harvesting Herring Eggs in Sitka, Alaska

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Austin Hammond tells Tlingit History at Lḵoot, Haines

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Making a ROMAN CROSSBOW - completely handmade - MANUBALLISTA

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The Silver in the Sea | A Herring Spawn Story

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Indigenous Language Revitalization Strategies with Tlingit Professor X̱'unei Lance Twitchell

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