Jun 23 Tuesday
The National Council of Dementia Minds is hosting a free, three-part webinar series exploring how changes in the brain can affect the senses, including taste, smell, touch, and hearing.
Each session is led by individuals living with dementia, offering insight into what these changes feel like.
These interactive sessions are open to all, including family members, care partners, professionals, and others.
To join: https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_f267xYYVQGCnIQQ412Cg4w
Jun 24 Wednesday
Join us for June’s “The Sanctuary Presents,” featuring Great Lakes Lore Maritime Museum Director Mike Horn as he recaps the beginnings, new location, and continued growth of this Rogers City museum. As a retired Captain on the Great Lakes and ocean, he can also speak to the unique hazards which often manifest on the Lakes during the late season storms.
The Great Lakes Lore Maritime Museum started in Sebawaing, MI in 1990 as a summer project. Ed Brklacich, a retired teacher, was participating in the activities of his local arts council, and the challenge for that year was to present a story. Ed decided to interview some retired sailors in the area about what it was like to sail on the “Lakers,” he’d seen going by on Saginaw Bay. Word of the interviews got out and led to more interviews. Then the artifacts started showing up. Ed and his wife Betty purchased an old, one-room schoolhouse to display the collection. When this was outgrown, the Board of Directors began looking for another location.
Today, the museum features exhibits on historic Great Lakes storms and a well-rounded look at a life working on the water. It also has a Memorial Hall for the many local families impacted by shipwreck tragedies connected to Rogers City.
“The Sanctuary Presents” is a monthly community outreach event hosted by Thunder Bay National Marine Sanctuary. They are free, educational, and a great way to get into your sanctuary.
Jul 10 Friday
Take a deep dive into our underwater worlds during an evening of freshwater and ocean storytelling. Join acclaimed filmmakers Jennifer Idol and Alex Rose for a special screening of four short films from their Protected Waters series. Together, you will explore underwater sanctuaries, vibrant aquatic ecosystems, and the science shaping their future.
The screening features films that have premiered at previous Thunder Bay International Film Festivals, including Acid Trip, which highlights vital conservation work right here in the Thunder Bay National Marine Sanctuary. The evening will wrap up with an interactive Q & A session, giving you the chance to chat directly with the filmmakers about their adventures and the marine life they document.
Film Descriptions:
Protected Waters: Acid Trip explores how rising acidity is reshaping both freshwater and marine ecosystems. Filmed in partnership with scientists in Florida and Michigan, the short film blends underwater imagery with on-site research to reveal how acidification affects coral reefs, mangroves, seagrasses, and Great Lakes habitats. Through personal field experiences and expert insight, the film shows how changes in water chemistry ripple across entire food webs. Protected Waters: Acid Trip invites viewers to understand what is at stake and why protecting our waters has never mattered more.
Protected Waters: Exploring Laguna Madre takes the viewer on an adventure in the world’s largest hypersaline lagoon, the Laguna Madre in south Texas. The film shares glimpses into this diverse ecosystem and the important life it supports such as the critically endangered Kemp’s Ridley sea turtle.
Protected Waters: Exploring La Jolla dives into protected waters along the west coast. The long-term conservation of marine resources and services for ecosystems depends on these designated areas. This film digs into some of the shark science surrounding this geographically unique area outside San Diego and brings in local experts on leopard sharks and critically endangered tope sharks. La Jolla is a known destination for biodiversity that includes the revered California sea lion, bizarre mola mola, critically endangered giant sea bass, and prehistoric shovelnose guitarfish.
Protected Waters: Exploring Yellowstone takes you to the world’s first national park which inspired the creation of 60 more parks in the United States and hundreds of parks in more than 100 countries. From geysers and hot springs to glacial lakes, water has defined the park and filled it with some of the strangest lifeforms. Alex Rose and Jennifer Idol dive beneath the waters of Yellowstone Lake to see unusual and lesser known geothermal features and the strange life they support.
Nov 11 Wednesday
Nick Theisen, from Huron Pines will present "Piping Plover Recovery in 2025". Learn what is happening in your community and how you can help with the recovery efforts.
The Piping Plover is a small shorebird that nests in three separate geographic populations in the United States and Canada: The Northern Great Plains, the shores of the Great Lakes, and along the Atlantic coast. Birds from all three populations winter on the southern Atlantic and Gulf coasts in the United States, as well as in the Caribbean. This website features the Great Lakes population, which is listed as endangered under the federal Endangered Species Act.