In a landscape transformed by dams, young Fox Lake Cree Nation fishers, hunters work to preserve traditions - Action News
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Manitoba

In a landscape transformed by dams, young Fox Lake Cree Nation fishers, hunters work to preserve traditions

Two young men from the Fox Lake Cree Nation are passing down the traditional knowledge of hunting, fishing and trapping as it was passed down to them, despite changes in northern Manitoba that now make it harder than ever.

It may be harder than ever to keep their traditions alive,but they have no plans to quit

John Henderson III and Drayden Jobb say they learned about the water and the bush from their dads and uncles. Now they're passing on the knowledge to the next generation of Fox Lake Cree. (Andrew Wildes/CBC)

On a clear crisp morning in northern Manitoba, John Henderson III and Drayden Jobblaunch a single-engine boat from the Conawapa boat launch in Gilliaminto the waters of the Nelson River,to pull the net they set overnight to catch sturgeon.

The two young men, both in their 20s, are from the Fox Lake Cree Nation, whose people have been hunting alongside the river and fishing itfor generations.

"The mighty Nelson," Jobb says as the boat makes its way from shore.

The water stretches as far as the eyecan seewhen looking up or down the river. On each side, the high banks are blanketed with rows of tall green trees.

Henderson, who is piloting the vessel, knows the river at every point shallow or deep, choppy or calm like the back of his hand, except perhaps for how wide it stretches from bank to bank.

Keeping traditions alive in Fox Lake Cree Nation

2 years ago
Duration 2:28
Young hunters from Fox Lake Cree Nation are passing on traditional knowledge of the land despite challenges.

"I'm not even sure about Polo Park to Boston Pizza" he says with a huge laugh, referring to local landmarks in Winnipeg a city more than 700 kilometres to the south of Fox Lake.

As they speed down river, they recall a long list of men dads, uncles, and elders who took them out on the water and into the bush early to teach them traditional practices of hunting, fishing and trapping.

Henderson says he learned what he knows from his dad, John Henderson II, who died in 2009.

For Jobb, it was his stepfather, Ryan West.

"That's my dad raised me since I was a kid. He's taught me everything I know."

Culture devastated bydams

Many young Fox Lake men, including Jobb and Henderson, also point to lessons they learned from Elder Robert Beardy, who died just recently.

Elders likeBeardy have had to be deliberate about passing down the knowledge they received from previous Fox Lake Cree generations, owing to the rapid changes in the landscape of the community, following the introduction of hydroelectric dams along the Nelson.

Kettle Generating Station was the first of three major dams built along the lower Nelson River in the traditional territory of the Fox Lake Cree Nation. (Walther Bernal/CBC)

Starting in the late 1960s, Manitoba Hydro built the Kettle, Long Spruce and Limestone generating stationsalong the lower Nelson River, within Fox Lake's traditional territory.

The town of Gilliamwas also created as a community for workers who service the mammoth structures.

Not only did the dams alter the course of the water,the tall power lines trudged through long-established traplines and hunting grounds, and the town displacedmany Fox Lake community members from their homes, resulting in a community scattered across the province.

'A thick line of sturgeon'

As they pull their net, Henderson and Jobbseem to see how theeffects of the dams continue to impact people of their generation.

Henderson and Jobb cut the line to the net they came to pull. Henderson smiles, sayingthe line feels "heavy." Jobb checks it and feels it violently twitching.It could be a monster of a fish.

Jobb hauls in the net they set overnight in the Nelson River to catch sturgeon. (Walther Bernal/CBC)

Energized with anticipation, Jobb stands atop the bow and begins to heave in the net. With every pull the net seems to get heavier. Jobbgivesit his all.

Finally, he makes a mighty pull and uppops a stick.

They've caught massive sturgeons before, but not today.

Jobb is shown with a sturgeon he caught on a previous trip in Stephens Lake. (Submitted by Drayden Jobb)

ForHenderson and Jobb's generation, empty nets are proof of what elders have saidabout the devastating impact of the dam on their way of life.

Jobb says he remembers Beardy describing how abundant the sturgeon population was before the dams were built.

"He was telling me that you could see them and you can go up and touch them and there'd just be just a long, thick, thick line of sturgeon like, it looked like rock, but it was just sturgeon, nothing but sturgeon. And now you can't see that," Jobb says.

'Nothing's gonna stop us'

Back at the boat launch, Henderson and Jobb pack their boat with supplies to head back on the river to spend two weeks in the bush hunting a moose for their community.

Jobb says they know the river has changed. The dams and hydropoles have affected the abundance of wildlife.

He knows itmay be harder than ever to keeptraditions alive,but he says the fact that they've stuck to it so far just just shows how tough their community is.

"Nothing's gonna stop us you can put up 10 dams. It ain't gonna stop us from getting out on the river and still providing food for our families and our elders and communities," says Jobb.

They say they see it as their duty to pass on knowledge to others, as it was passed on to them.

Jobb and his daughter Andrea after one of their trips into the bush. Drayden Jobb provides meat for their community. (Submitted by Drayden Jobb)

Jobb immerses his two young daughters where he can, especially the older, now sixyears old. He provides her with experiences he modifies to keep her safe, but whicharestill authentic enough to kindle a passion, he says.

"She loves it. I love it passing down knowledge to my babies, just the way I was brought up."

Henderson is now taking overFox Lake's youth trapping program from Jimmy Lockhart, one of the older men who taught him and Jobb some of what they know.

In the program, Henderson teaches the youth everything from building traps for martensand lynx to working withtheir catch including stretching anddrying the hides, and then selling their fur. The young people get to take home their earnings.

Henderson teaches young members of Fox Lake everything from building traps for animals like martens and lynx to how to work with their catch. (Walther Bernal/CBC)

Living near the Nelson River means Henderson and Jobb must interact with the town of Gillam and Manitoba Hydro forces Henderson says they heard horror stories about from elders who were there when the dams were being built.

"It's good to know the stories in the past, but we can't live in yesterday. You can only look for tomorrow," Henderson says.

He says that's why he and Jobb are out on the riverand teaching younger kids.

"You can't live on yesterday. You gotta keep moving forward."