Honoring the Water

This gripping student-made film blends personal storytelling with critical safety advice, focusing on boating in Alaska’s unpredictable waters. Centered around a near-tragic boating accident in Chenega Bay, the film highlights how fast-changing weather, gear limitations, and the absence of life jackets can turn a routine outing into a life-threatening emergency. Through interviews with local residents and firsthand stories, it underscores the vital importance of preparedness—checking the weather, carrying flotation devices, and letting someone know your plans. More than a safety manual, this film is a heartfelt reminder that being ready can save lives, protect communities, and ensure families continue harvesting from the sea for generations to come.

Classroom Guide

Workshop Info

See Stories led film workshops with youth in six Prince William sound communities in 2016 (Cordova, Whittier, Nanwalek, Tatitlek, Valdez, and Chenega Bay) with generous funding and support from the Prince William Sound Science Center (PWSSC). The PWSSC wanted to support youth to create films on their communities' profound and changing relationship to the ocean 25 years after the Exxon Valdez Oil Spill (EVOS). The films created during these workshops focus primarily on vibrant cultural and personal connections to water, and some of them explore the tragedy of EVOS and the long-standing impacts that ripple through to the present moment.

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Land Acknowledgement

This video was filmed on Dena'ina Land. Learn more about land acknowledgements at native-land.ca.