At mid-night on this auspicious day the National Geographic Sea Lion entered Glacier Bay and began her journey 65 miles north to the face of Margerie Glacier.  Our officer’s staff piloted our ship through-out the night and into the dawn light as we approached the end of Tarr Inlet and the face of several glaciers. The sunrise light decorated the mountain tops behind Margerie Glacier and slowly crept down the mountains bringing a soft filtered sunrise to the upper region of Glacier Bay National Park...our destination for this Thursday in August.

Our morning was spent exploring Tarr Inlet.  We moved south through Russel Cut finding a lone wolf walking, exploring and hunting in an alluvial fan.  On approach to Gloomy Knob we found bald eagles and mountain goats relaxing in their mutual homes. Rounding the corner of Gloomy Knob a mother brown bear and three cubs were spotted near a salmon stream.  They were busy eating greens on the slopes near the stream.  Across the way another mother and three cubs were spotted along with more than ten mountain goats high along the ridge line.  All indicators of the healthy environment Glacier Bay has created for all feathered and furred inhabitants.

The story is quite different for the Human beings who have called this place a home land for thousands and thousands of years into the mythic age.  The Tlingit people, who were first chased from this land by advancing ice coming down Tarr Inlet at the pace of a running dog! They retreated into Icy Straits and settling in several different locations. The community of Huna represented one of these new Tlingit homes.  When the ice retreated north during a two hundred year period of time, relieving the land of its massive weight, and enabling the ground to rebound between 19 and 22 feet the Huna Tlingit watched and waited.  In the early 1900’s when they thought of returning to their ancestral land, it had been declared a National Park.  During the last 100 years the thought of returning of reclaiming of honoring the ancestors has remained constant.

Today, a long awaited dream represented by the completion of Xunnaa Shuka Hit, roughly translated as “Huna Ancestor’s House stands.”  Originally the building was constructed to honor the Huna Clans’ tie to Glacier Bay as a homeland.  It has developed into much more and represents an ongoing theme for Indigenous peoples of reconciliation, represented by communication between the clans of the Huna Tlingit and the National Park Service.

As guests we were witnessing the dedication of a Big House to four clans: Wooshkeetaan (shark clan), Kaagwaataan(wolf clan), Chookaneidi (Porpoise Clan) and T’akdeintaan (Kittiwake Clan). This event happening inside the boundaries of Glacier Bay National Park, a once in a life time experience for each of us...witnessing a beginning; collaboration between Native Americans and our National Parks.  Collaboration is about communicating synergistically...for Native peoples this is about the next seven generations and the future of those generations holding fast to the culture and life ways of the Tlingit people.