(1) “Sweat”: A sweat lodge ceremony cannot be documented. This is a re-enactment of the director’s journey to the sweat lodge ceremony through sound, image, and narration. (2) “Two Way Seeing”: In 1849, the Kalapuya Chief Camafeema and his tribe welcomed new neighbors, Charles and Melinda Applegate, into the Yoncalla Valley, beginning a long-lasting relationship that would continue into the modern day. Their direct descendants, Kalapuya elder Esther Stutzman and historian and author Shannon Applegate, now share their family histories while archaeologists explore the homestead, providing a different way of understanding the complex relationship between Native Americans and settlers.