Cherished Cree hunting camps vulnerable to the flames of Quebec's raging forest fires - Action News
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Cherished Cree hunting camps vulnerable to the flames of Quebec's raging forest fires

The wildfires have forced some Cree communities to evacuate this week as some worry about the possible loss of traditional hunting and fishing camps.

'We don't know what it's going to be like when we go back,' said resident

A family wearing camo carries guns as they pose in the forest
Yoanick Dion, right, poses with two of his family members during a hunt near Ouj-Bougoumou, Que. His hunting camp is threatened by fires there. (Submitted by Yoanick Dion)

One of the last images Yoanick Dion has of Ouj-Bougoumou is of firefighters digging trenches outside the town as an eerie orange haze filled the air and ash fell from the sky.

On one side of that trench, a line of defence against the blaze, is the Cree community. On the other side is the bush that Dion and so many of his family members and friends cherish.

Dion sayshe fears for his camp, built in 1988 and handed down by his grandmother through various family members.

Thestructure in the woods, whichhe uses as a base to hunt and fish, is now located on the wrong side of the trenchthe side where a raging forest fire is consuming the forest.

"We don't know what it's going to be like when we go back," he said, describing how his family had camps near one another outside of Ouj-Bougoumou. "They're all close together. They're probably going to lose their camps too. We're all going to lose our camps."

A man in a boat carries a dead goose
One of Dions cousins shows off a goose after a successful hunt. (Submitted by Yoanick Dion)

As several Cree communities headed south, away from out-of-control forest fires raging throughout northern Quebec, people were lamenting the possible loss of hunting and fishing camps.

The camps' appeal their remoteness and proximity to the land's traplinesis now what threatens them. They are in areas that are vulnerable to the flames.

Rhonda Oblin-Cooper, the deputy chief of the Cree First Nation of Waswanipi, whose residents left their fire-threatened homes for Quebec City, said Thursday that many members of her community relied on their camps and some stayed there full time, living off the land.

"Their camps in the trapline That's their main home," she said, her voice breaking from emotion.

On Friday afternoon,Waswanipi announced on Facebook a voluntary return to the communityfor people in good health.

On Wednesday,Oblin-Cooper said that community members used band radios to communicate the evacuation order to those who livefull time in the trapline. They also relied on word-of-mouth andresorted to knocking on people's doors to let people know that the fire was close and it was time to leave.

'The forest, it's our home'

Damian-Ayden Chiskamish-Ottereyes, a lieutenant at the Waswanipi Fire Rescue service, was among the team that went door to door forthree hours.

He says he informed residents of the cabins that the fire was heading towardthe highway that leads out of town and encouraged them to leave as quickly as possible.

"They kind of panicked and they packed right away and left," saidChiskamish-Ottereyes. But, he said, somepeople chose to stay.

A fire truck surrounded by an orange, smoke filled sky at dusk drives on a gravel road.
A firetruck at the Ouj-Bougoumou access road. Fires forced the evacuation of this Cree community in northern Quebec. Several other Cree communities are dealing with the impact of fires raging in northern Que. (submitted by Jeff MacNeill)

He says the cabins hold a cultural importance to many in the Cree community.

"It's important to us because we go out to feel free and get away," saidChiskamish-Ottereyes.

"It's where we all go to enjoy ourselves, hunting and learning our culture."

Thomas Stevens, whoworks for the regional Cree Trappers Association, says some cabins have burneddown in Mistissini.

He lives in Waskaganish and says there are over 900 hunting camps across the territory of the Cree Nation. He sayslosing cabins and personal belongings is a major blow tocommunitiesand some people's livelihoods.

"It will have a lot of impact because a lot of these camps a lot of these families they stay there most of the year. They'll stay there 300 days of the year. They call this home," said Stevens.

He added that there is also the practical concern about rebuilding a camp, because that can take a long time, given the limited road access.

Allan Saganash works on forest issues forWaswanipi and says he too issaddened by the situation.

"There's a great loss. When you think about the traditional way of living, or, the Cree way of life," said Saganash.

"I'm saddened by the destruction because we are so connected to the forest, it's our home."

'A lot of animals are going to be killed'

As for Dion, he is asworried about the wildlife that makes his camp so special and worries that many animals will not be able to escape the inferno.

"A lot of animals are going to be killed," he said.

Researchers at the University of Sydney estimated that 480 million animals died during Australia's 2020 bushfires, not including insects, bats, or frogs.

In the long term, forest fires can have a positive impact on ecosystems. They release nutrients stored in litter on the forest floor, open the canopy to sunlight and allow some tree species to spread their seeds, according to a publication from the Canadian government.

But in the short term, they wreak havoc. Dion isn't sure what the forest near Ouj-Bougoumou will look like when he returns.

The Quebec government has made it clear that its priorities in firefighting have been saving people, homes, critical infrastructure and facilities which could release toxins if they burn. Cottages and camps may have to be sacrificed, the public security minister indicated.

"I know that in the region [where the fires are] that's the cost," Franois Bonnardel told journalists Thursday. "Unfortunately, those who have their hunting camps, fishing camps or otherwise, for sure also logging equipment, we don't yet know the extent of the losses."

With files from milie Warren