The word "treasury" usually describes a collection of
highly valued poems; it is used in the title to describe a collection
of highly valued poetic terms. There is a wide local vocabulary in
Newfoundland and Labrador to distinguish specific phenomena in the
continuous modulations of winter weather. Several of the terms are from
17th century English, brought to Newfoundland with the settlers. Many
of these terms survived here after falling out of use in their original
countries; others arose from particular occupational activities in this
climate. This dialect is important to me because many of these words
would have been in the mouths of my Newfoundland ancestors.
I found over 80 terms for different conditions of ice
and snow in the Newfoundland dialect. These terms are precise,
practical, evocative, sonic, and lyrical. Knowing them helps us
actually see different phenomena, instead of winter being just a cold,
white blur.
These local terms reflect experience and knowledge of
the land and the sea. But this vocabulary is now a fragile intangible
artifact. The loss of local linguistic complexity is a result of major
changes in Newfoundland and Labrador, particularly the decline of the
fishery as an occupation. And these terms are fragile for another
reason—climate change.
From the Ground Tier to a Sparrow
Batch:
A Newfoundland Treasury of Terms for Ice and Snow, Blast Hole Pond
River, Winter 2012-2013
medium: documentary video-poem (includes HD video,
still photographs, poetry, text, definitions of the local terms, and a
two-person voice-over)
duration: 26:07
From the Ground Tier to a Sparrow Batch: A
Newfoundland Treasury of Terms for Ice and Snow, Blast Hole Pond River,
Winter 2012-2013 is based on a 40-part long poem. It proceeds
chronologically through a winter, following the changes along the Blast
Hole Pond River, which flows through the patch of boreal forest where I
live and work in Portugal Cove. A small waterfall, seen from the same
fixed viewpoint throughout the season, serves as a refrain. The
seasonal phenomena are observed and recorded by means of over 50 named
varieties of ice, snow, and winter weather.
Sea Ice, Conception Bay,
Newfoundland, March 2014
medium: video projection (includes HD video and text)
duration: 14:14
It is not uncommon for Arctic ice, or drift-ice,
to be driven by wind and currents into Conception Bay from more
northerly latitudes. But the winter of 2013-2014 was so cold that, by
March, Conception Bay itself—which is, of course, salt water—froze for
the first time in decades. I took this video in one shot from the Bell
Island ferry as it passed through many different formations of local
ice, or bay ice.
A publication on this work
is available:
Brickle, Nish, and Knobbly:
A Newfoundland Treasury of Terms for Ice and Snow