Elk Island bison headed home to Montana's Blackfeet Nation - Action News
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Elk Island bison headed home to Montana's Blackfeet Nation

The calves are descendants from the Pablo-Allard herd, which has roots in the very same reservation the bison are headed to.

Descendants from the Pablo-Allard herd, healthy calves are surplus, Elk Island official says

Alberta bison moving to Montana

8 years ago
Duration 0:52
In an effort to increase the population of bison on the Blackfeet Nation Reserve in Montana, 87 bison from Elk Island, Alta. are going to their ancestral home. This is not the first time that Elk Island has transferred bison to the United States, but it is the first time that the bison are being shipped to the Blackfeet Nation Reserve.

It's a homecoming over a centuryin the making for some Albertan bison.

On April 4,87bisonwill make the trip from central Alberta backto theBlackfeet Nation reservation in Montana.

The calves are descendants from the Pablo-Allard herd, which has roots in the very same reservationthe bison are headed to.The origins of theherd date back to 1873 when Samuel Walking Coyote caught several calves after a hunt on Blackfeet land.

Over time Walking Coyote's herd grew. The majority were sold to Michel Pablo and Charles Allard to form the Pablo-Allard herd. The herd would become the largestin the United States and was used to restock the country's conservation herds.

In the early twentieth century, Pablo sold his bison to the government of Canada. In 1912 the last shipment was sent to Elk Island National Park.

Now the herd is going home.

Almost a 100 bison will be making their way from Alberta's Elk Island National Park to Montana's Blackfeet Nation Reserve. (CBC)

The transfer was made possible by a combinedeffort fromElk Island National Park, the Blackfeet Nation and the Wildlife Conservation Societyto repopulate Blackfeet territory in Browning, Mont. That's the regionwhere once thriving populations of bison began disappearing from the landscape in the 19th century when they were hunted to the brink of extinction.

Harry Barnes, the Chairman of the Blackfeet Tribal Business Council, presented a gift of a Pendleton blanket adorned with the image of a bison to Parks Canada.

"This is a historic event between two countries, between two cultures and really between two species, man and buffalo," said Barnes. "We have been very unkind to the buffalo over the last hundred years. We're aiming to make it right."

"We hope this is only the beginning of a truly great relationship."

This is not the first time that Elk Island has transferred bison to the United States, but it is the first time that the bison are being shipped to the Blackfeet Nation Reserve.

We have been very unkind to the buffalo over the last hundred years. We're aiming to make it right.- Harry Barnes

Stephen Flemming, the Superintendent of Elk Island, said the bison originating from the Pablo-Allard herd are some of the healthiest on the continent.

"This is a conservation herd that is disease free with pure bison genes." said Flemming. "[They're] really valuable, this is why everyone seeks our animals,"

"We send out each year those animals we can surplus because we have a finite space."

Harry Barnes shakes hands with Stephen Flemming after presenting him with a traditional gift.

For Barnes the return of the bison is about more than justrepopulation.Theirreturn will allow the reservation to teach its youth about the importance of the bison. Barnes said it's a step in the right direction towards the reaffirmation of the Blackfeet culture.

"This return is building on an existing Blackfeet herd and raising the consciousness of our young people about this animal in our culture."

Now that they've completed60 days of quarantine to ensure they are disease free,the herd will soonbe free to roam what was once their ancestral home.