Going home: Adopted Inuvialuit man reconnects with culture through kayaking - Action News
Home WebMail Wednesday, November 27, 2024, 03:40 AM | Calgary | -9.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
North

Going home: Adopted Inuvialuit man reconnects with culture through kayaking

Kevin Floyd always knew he was Inuvialuit, but he never knew what it meant culturally. But things changed when he discovered an Inuvialuit tradition that aligned with his passion kayaking.

Kevin Floyd moved to Inuvik, N.W.T., 8 years ago now he's 'The Kayak Guy'

Kevin 'The Kayak Guy' Floyd moved to Inuvik, N.W.T., eight years ago after his car broke down on a trip up North. Floyd is Inuvialuit, but was adopted at birth and grew up in B.C. (submitted by Kevin Floyd)

Kevin Floyd always knew he was Inuvialuit, but he never knew what thatmeant culturally.

Adopted at birth, Floyd grew up in B.C. and didn't always know exactlywhere he was from in the North.

But things changed for Floyd in his early 30s when he discovered an Inuvialuit tradition that aligned with his passionkayaking.

He was amongmany artisans at the Great Northern Arts Festival, which wrappedup inInuvik, N.W.T., on Sunday. All week he showcasedhis handmade traditional- and modern-style kayaks and paddles.

Already a kayak maker, Floyd taught himself how to handcraft decades-old kayak and paddle styles that were used by Inuvialuit hunters.

"I made one and then I kept on tweaking it out until it performed at its best," Floyd said.

He says locals call him "The Kayak Guy" of the region.

Findinghis birth family

Floyd began learning more about the Inuvialuitculturewhen he switched to traditional kayak making.

He read about communal hunts along the Arctic coast where many hunters would gather for a beluga or seal harvest.

And one day he came across a documentary about the Firth sisters, two siblings who were part of the Gwich'in First Nation and among the first Aboriginal peopleto represent Canada at the Olympics. It was then that Floyd knew he had to go to Inuvik.

"My hope was to meet elders or anyone who used to kayak; to do some research, track down my family," Floyd said.

Sharing skills is 'soul-feeding'

Through an Access to Information and Privacy Request, Floyd found out who his birth grandmother was. When he got to Inuvik, he says there wasn'tmuch chance for hesitation.

"The cab driver that picked me up from theairport took me right to her doorstep," he said.

That was eight years ago.Floyd and his family are still in Inuvik today.

During the visit, they decided to move to the community. Since then, Floyd has become well-known around the region as the guy who knows everything about kayaks.

Floyd says sharing those skills "is soul-feeding."

"Keeping this oral tradition going and keeping this history and this culture going by sharing this information," Floyd said.

"It is one of the large, iconic symbols of the North It allows me to get other Inuvialuit into kayaks."

With files from Juanita Taylor, Kate Kyle