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Sky-watching domes connect Mtis Crossing visitors with Indigenous knowledge

Mtis Crossing, 120 kilometres northeast of Edmonton, continues to expand year-round tourism offerings with the addition of a star-watching experience.

Destination near Smoky Lake, Alta., opens 8 stargazing suites, with more in works

Elder in a pink coat stands next to a hard shell dome in the sunshine.
Lilyrose Meyers gives a tour of the new sky-watching domes at Mtis Crossing, 120 kilometres northeast of Edmonton. (Adrienne Lamb/CBC)

Knowledge-holder Lilyrose Meyers calls the eight new sky-watching domes at Mtis Crossing the ultimate experiencein land-based learning.

Mtis Crossing is a year-round cultural interpretive destination on 200 hectares of land, made up of five river lot titles dating back to the 1800s. It's 120 kilometres northeast of Edmonton, a few minutes' drive south ofthe town of Smoky Lake.

Each hard-shellinsulated dome is equipped with a bathroom, a kitchenetteand a king-size bed.

But there are no TVs. Instead, Meyers points to the transparent ceilings that allow visitorsto comfortably watch the show in the skies above.

WATCH | Check out the new sky-watching domes near Smoky Lake:

New sky-watching domes connect visitors with Indigenous knowledge

1 year ago
Duration 2:08
Heres a look at the eight domes now open at Mtis Crossing northeast of Edmonton.

"Part of the roof is clear ...so you can see the stars at night," Meyers says. "You're nice and warm. It's fully heated;even the floor is heated."

Meyers gives interpretive talks about the night sky. She tells visitors that for generations, Mtis people have used the stars to timehunts, harvest plants and berries and track changes in the weather.

"We are seasonal people," she says. "Welook to the heavens for that. We don't study the stars like astronomers do."

Meyers says therural location with little light pollution makes the experience a great fit.

Sky view of domes illuminated at night connected to a pathway near a stand of trees and the North Saskatchewan River.
A view of the domes and the pathway from the lodge at Mtis Crossing. (Rick Bremness/CBC)

Peter Severn, director of facilities at Mtis Crossing,says half of the domes face north, to catch the northern lights. The others facesouth to view a variety of constellations.

There's a trail system from the cultural gathering centre and lodge to the domes, "so we have the option of walking over, we have the option of skiing in the winter, or the option of the golf cart," says Severn.

The domes took about a year to build and included open cut excavation for the mechanical, power, communication lines in a major construction project.

"The dome areas, the indoor garden, the potable water treatment plant and all the infrastructure was in the neighbourhood of $6.2 million," says Severn.

Brown dirt, a circle of grey concrete and two big orange excavators with workers dotting the construction project.
A look at the construction process for the dome project. (Submitted by Mtis Crossing)

CEO Juanita Marios says the projectis thelatest move by Mtis Crossing to become a signature four-season destination on Alberta's landscape.

The new water treatment plant will beup and running this fall.

"We collect all of that wastewater, we redistribute it over the land base and it becomes fertilizer for our hay fields, which we then harvest to feed our buffalo, which we then harvest to feed our people," says Marios.

Dome staysrangefrom $400a night for the two-person suites to closer to $500 for the family suitethat can accommodate six.

Marios says a stay is "an investment into Mtis Crossing, the Mtis people and into yourself as you become a more knowledgeable Canadian."

The goal is to build 10 more domes to the site.

They're just the latest additions on a site owned by the MtisNation of Alberta that saw a $10-million, 40-room lodge open last year, and a $8.9-million cultural gathering centre open in 2021.

"Right now we have 25,000 visitors coming to Mtis Crossing on an annual basis and we hope to have that up to 80,000 people a year, in the next 10 years," says Marios.

An open door to a bed with a handmade quilt and oval rug, on a grey concrete floor.
The interior of a new sky-watching dome at Mtis Crossing. (Adrienne Lamb/CBC)