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Moosehide tanning goes urban in Yellowknife's Somba K'e park

The organizers bringing a moose and caribou hide tanning camp to a downtown Yellowknife park say its location is what makes it special.

Camp showcasing Dene culture runs until end of July

Tania Larsson and Melaw Nakehk'o of Dene Nahjo are helping organize an urban hide tanning camp July 11-29 in Somba K'e Park in downtown Yellowknife. (Randall Mackenzie/CBC)

The organizers bringing amoose and caribou hide tanning camp toa downtownYellowknife park say itslocation is what makes it special.

The urban hide tanning camp runs July 11-29 in Somba K'e Park, located next to city hall and near the downtown core. Tania Larsson said she hoped officeworkers take advantage of the convenience.

"Take a break and come visit the camp," she said. "That's not something you can often do. Usually you have to travel out of town. Grab your coffee and come here, or come and have tea and bannock."

MelawNakehk'osaidmoosehide, and the skills required to prepare it and work with it,are an important part ofDeneculture and identity.

"Throughour entire history asDenepeople,moosehidehas been our transportation, our clothing, our housing," she said.

"It's a sense of pride when we wear our moccasins and are able to make our children moccasins. Just the smell of it it's like in our DNA, in our genes."

Larssonsaid visitorswill be able to see the different stages of the tanning process.

"You'll be able to see someone cutting the hair off a moose or a caribou, scraping the flesh and then there's going to bedifferent set ups, so some are going to be using the birch beam, some are going to be up on a frame and as the weeks goby, you'll be able to see the progress happen."

Larsson said visitorswill also be able totry their hand at scrapinga hide on a frameto see how it feels.

Dene Nahjo is organizing the event and it runs until the end of the month in the park near the playground and the Frame Lake Trail.