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WRIST KEY HOLDER / Bear Tracks trim (6 color options)

$14.95
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$14.95


Our Wrist Key Holders make it easy & quick to locate keys inside your bag, and can be worn around wrist so keys are readily accessible while keeping your hands free.  The 1.25" width nylon webbing (cut at 14" in length before folding), forms a loop wide enough to slide easily over your hand, and rest comfortably around your wrist. Customizing options include your choice of trim and key ring hardware-finish!  Perfect for gifts, or stocking stuffers, our new Wrist Key Holders have quickly become a staff favorite!

BEAR TRACKS -- choose from 6 color options: 

Tan
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Red
beartracksredkeytrim.jpg

Purple
beartrackspurplekeytrim.jpg

Blue
beartracksbluekeytrim.jpg

Green
beartracksgreenkeytrim.jpg

Lime
beartrackslimekeytrim.jpg

Bear Tracks are a frequent, yet always awe-inspiring sight on the Copper River Delta and beaches of Prince William Sound. There is a magnificence and symmetry to their footprints in the sand that rings deep for all cultures, for all times. For the Tlingit, Eyak, and Sugpiaq (Alutiiq) of Alaska’s “Lost Coast”, the bear has figured prominently into the spiritual, oral, and artistic traditions. As hunters and outdoorsmen, these tribes are aware of the close similarities in the anatomy and behavior of the bear and human. The union of human and bear is a common thread throughout indigenous Alaska, as signified on the trim by the hand inside of the paw. The shaman sought the bear’s help and women ran away to marry the bear in oral stories. You will see a woman’s face, distinguished by a labret, in one of the bear paws and a profile of a human in another paw. In another paw, the crescent eye represents the “sleeping eye” or hibernation cycle of the bear.

Artist: Michael Webber
Embodying the rich Native history of this land and it’s people, renowned Alaskan artist Michael Webber designed this trim exclusively for Copper River Fleece. Born of a rich Alutiiq and Tlingit ancestry, Michael lives in Cordova, Alaska where his family heritage reaches back to the first footsteps in this region.