E Coosh EEWA: The way it is Page 3 Spilyay Tymoo June 8, 2016 Letters to the editor Culture Camp at HeHe Culture and Heritage will host the youth Camp Naimuma on Sunday through Thursday, June 12- 16. The deadline to register is this Friday, June 10. This year the camp will be at the HeHe camp grounds. Camp Naimuma 2016 is open to boys and girls in grades six through eight (dur- ing 2015-16 school year). The camp will be open to the first 50 boys and 50 girls to register. For more infor- mation, call Deanie Smith at Culture and Heritage, 541- 553-3290. Or email: deanie.smith@wstribes.org The goal for each child attending Camp Naimuma is to have a positive experience, in which the camper grows spiritually and socially, learn- ing the Warm Springs, Wasco and Paiute cultures. Good behavior is expected throughout the camp. The registration form explains the conduct code in more detail. Fruit Loop tour June 29 The Oregon State Uni- versity Extension Service in Warm Springs will host the Fruit Loop Tour on Wednes- day, June 29. The Fruit Loop Tour will include a trip to the Hood River fruit loop. Tribal vans will leave from the Extension office, 1110 Wasco St., at 7:45 a.m., and will return by 5 p.m. There is space for ten people, first-come first- serve. The tour will stop at several fruit stands, and at least one u-pick. The plan is to get cherries, apricots and blueberries. Food is each participant’s responsibility, so pack snacks and a lunch or bring money for a lunch in Parkdale. Also bring containers for your produce. Extension will provide bottled water and limited cooler space. If you have questions, please call 541-553-3238. STRIVE in July Summer Training to Re- vive Indigenous Vision and Empower ment— STRIVE—is a residential summer program for Native American high school stu- dents in Central Oregon. It is July 15-17 at the COCC Bend Campus. Stu- dents take culturally appro- priate classes from college professors in a variety of sub- jects and work with success- ful Native college students. It is open to students with at least a 2.0 GPA in high school, incoming freshmen through seniors. It’s free for all students. For information contact Gina Ricketts at COCC 541-318-3782. Carrying the Message of Sobriety The Third Annual Carry- ing the Message Sobriety Con- ference will be June 10-12 at the Warm Springs Commu- nity Center. Registration is on Friday, June 10, starting at 3 p.m. The invocation and welcome is at 4; dinner and open sweat at 5:30; a performance at 7; speaker and open floor at 8 p.m. Breakfast on Saturday is from 7 to 8, followed by the motorcade parade. The invo- cation, welcome and speak- ers on Saturday begin at 10 a.m. The family sobriety pow- wow starts at 6:30 p.m. on Saturday, June 11. The Sunday agenda in- cludes a breakfast at 8 a.m.; invocation and open floor starting at 9:30; and then clos- ing and clean-up starting around noon. Contact infor mation: Aldo Garcia, 541-777-1627. Or email: Mrgarcia8040@outlook.com Facebook: Aldo Garcia; or third Annual Carrying the Message conference at Warm Springs. Any raffle donations are welcome. Also see: Gofundme.com/ 3rdcarryingmessage Gospel Revival The Warm Springs Full Gospel Church will host a Camp Meeting on Monday through Friday, June 13-17. There will be morning ser- vices at 10 a.m., and evening services at 7 p.m. A. Onte Lumpmouth, Pastor, can be reached at 541-553-2553. Everyone is welcome. If you traveling from out of town, bring your tents, camp- ing gear, etc. Showers will be available, and three meals a day. Warm Springs is hosting the CRITFC Salmon Camp this July, and the commission is hiring camp counselors. For a full list of the posi- tion details, job require- ments and to apply visit: critfc.org Spilyay Tymoo (Coyote News, Est. 1976) Publisher Emeritus in Memorium: Sid Miller Editor: Dave McMechan Spilyay Tymoo is published bi-weekly by the Con- federated Tribes of Warm Springs. Our offices are located at 4174 Highway 3 in Warm Springs. Any written materials submitted to Spilyay Tymoo should be addressed to: Spilyay Tymoo, P.O. Box 489, Warm Springs, OR 97761. Phone: 541-553-2210 or 541-771-7521 E-Mail: david.mcmechan@wstribes.org. Annual Subscription rates: Within U.S.: $20.00 Congratulations, 2016 Graduates Memorial There will be a Memorial and Stone Setting for Clay Michael Anderson, “Nation,” on Saturday, June 18. The Stone Setting will be at 8 a.m. in the McCoy Cem- etery on McCoy Road, Toppenish. Then family and friends will meet at the Toppenish Community Center for the Memorial, and dinner to fol- low. Name giving right after. For more information, contact Fidelia “Fudge” Meninick, 509-314-0255; Demetria Isadore, 509-250- 3958; or Darcy Stahi, 509- 527-7381. Memorial tourney An All Indian Youth 12- and-under Co-ed Basketball Tournament is coming up in loving memory of grandpa Clay “Nation” Anderson. The tourney will be June 24- 26 at the Toppenish Commu- nity Center. For more information, contact Fidelia, Darcy or Demetria (phone numbers above). Orrah G. David graduated on May 5, 2016 from Sherman Indian High School in River- side, California. Congratula- tions, and great job, Orrah Language grads Kw’atashamatsh. Nami Tananama. Ku Warm Springs Con- federated Tribes. For another successful year in Autni Nicole Goudy is a recent graduate of the Warm Springs Roots program. Congratula- tions, Nicole! From family and friends, Congratulations and great job, Koedy Florendo! Ichishkin Sapsikw’at Acad- emy to all the 10 students who graduated this year. And to all the Miyanashma that attended AIS in the past and to the future. Honorable mention to all parents, grand- parents and great grandpar- ents. We thank all from the Culture and Heritage Lan- guage Program. And also to S a p s i k w ’ a s h a Miyanashmamn – Early Childhood School. There are many people involve. Dallas Winishut Estate planning service free to tribal members Martha Izenson is in Warm Springs this summer, helping tribal members with drafting wills, powers of at- torney, and other estate plan- ning services. This service is free to members. Martha is a law school student at Lewis & Clark Law School. Her Warm Springs office is at the Community Action Team building on campus, at 1136 Paiute Ave. To schedule an appoint- ment call 541-553-3148. Or email: mizenson@lclark.edu The estate planning ser- vice is a program of the In- stitute for Indian Estate Plan- ning and Probate at Seattle University School of Law. The institute has spon- sored the program for the met with Tribal Council ear- lier this week, explaining the services that are being pro- vided. The director of the Office of the Special Trustee, Charles Jackson, helps facili- tate the program. Importance of planning Martha Izenson past decade in War m Springs. During that time, many tribal members have used the service. Izenson is working with a supervising attorney to pro- vide the estate planning ser- vices to tribal members. She Especially for tribal mem- bers, having a will is recom- mended for anyone over 18. And this is especially rec- ommended for people who have ownership interest in land: If you die without a will, the American Indian Pro- bate Reform Act will deter- mine who will receive your trust land. Services available this sum- mer include writing a new will, or changing an existing one. The new or changed will would be drafted so as to comply with tribal, state and federal law. You need a will if: · You are over 18; · You have, or may ac- quire, trust land, non-trust land, or personal property; · You have children or step-children under 18; · You want to leave prop- erty to someone who is not in your immediate, blood family; · You want to leave income from an interest to a non-In- dian spouse. · You want to stop further fractionation of your land If you die without a will, the American Indian Pro- bate Reform Act will deter- mine who will receive your trust land, but with a will you have many more options. Around Indian Country Yakama publish Climate Adaptation Plan Climate change is real and, unfortunately, the effects appear to be in motion. We are witness- ing changes in the seasons. Our roots and berries must be gath- ered sooner, and salmon returns are less predictable. Our people notice less snow in the mountains now, and there is less cool water during the summer when it was once abundant. The changes we see may not bode well for our future. Over the years to come, we may lose natural resources that are important to our cul- ture and our heritage. Some of these losses may be irreversible. — Introduction to Cli- mate Adaptation Plan for the Territories of the Yakama Nation Published last month, the Yakama Nation Climate Ad- aptation Plan for the Terri- tories of the Yakama Na- tion states: This document is an ac- knowledgment that climate change is real and that it poses a threat to our grand- children, our culture, and our way of living. This document represents the first collective effort by our many governmental de- partments and programs to identify important resources and cultural components most likely to be impacted by climate change. The plan identifies work the tribe is currently under- taking recognizing and help- ing to reduce climate change impacts. The plan includes specific recommendations for deeper analyses of vulner- abilities and risks to the most important interests and adaptation actions that we should implement now. This is a starting point for the conversation about cli- mate change and planning for adaptation throughout all of the territories of the Yakama Nation. It is derived from the ex- perience of the Yakama Nation people, its tribal pro- grams, and findings from regional experts on these important topics. “This docu- ment is one way we can edu- cate ourselves about current vulnerabilities and future risks and share ideas about actions that we may need to take to build climate resil- ience.” Oregon Zoo condor egg is called to the wild Five chicks have hatched since March—with one more still on the way—from eggs laid this winter at the Oregon Zoo’s Jonsson Cen- ter for Wildlife Conserva- tion. In a fitting salute to the recovery program’s goal to facilitate a self-sustaining population of North America’s largest land birds, one of these chicks went straight to the California wild. In late April, Joe Burnett, condor program coordina- tor at the Ventana Wildlife Society, noticed that a pair of wild birds—Condor No. 310 and her mate, No. 219—had an egg that was past its expected hatch date. Burnett decided to check out the nest cave, rappelling halfway down a 180-foot cliff in the steep coastal mountain range near Big Sur. After closer examination of the egg, he candled the egg and determined it had failed inside. While unfortunate, natural egg failures like this do occur, Burnett says, and the California condor recov- ery network is there to pick up the slack. At the Oregon Zoo’s Jonsson Center, timing was spot on. Inside of Egg No. 7, laid at the Center on March 4, a chick was already “pipping”—chiseling a hole in its shell to access more air.