Ideas - Healing the Land, Part One: After the Fire

Episode Date: August 19, 2024

More than two years after a devastating fire, IDEAS visited St'át'imc territory around Lillooet, B.C. to learn how 21st-century wildfires are reshaping the landscape. This two-part series follows the... work of the northern St'át'imc Nations, land guardians, and scientists from the Indigenous Ecology Lab at UBC as they seek to document the effects of wildfires and chart a new future. *This episode originally aired on Feb. 26, 2024.

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hey there, I'm David Common. If you're like me, there are things you love about living in the GTA and things that drive you absolutely crazy. Every day on This Is Toronto, we connect you to what matters most about life in the GTA, the news you gotta know, and the conversations your friends will be talking about. Whether you listen on a run through your neighbourhood, or while sitting in the parking lot that is the 401, check out This Is Toronto, wherever you get your podcasts. This is a CBC Podcast. It is dead here, hey?
Starting point is 00:00:42 Yeah. Welcome to Ideas. I'm Nala Ayed. I see a lot of these trees to the side of us are kind of leaning over. What's happening in this area? Well, all of the root systems of these trees burned up. This is Stathliam Territory in interior British Columbia, more than two years after a devastating fire. And so, you know, many were left standing for a while,
Starting point is 00:01:09 but now it's all very loose soil, or what's left of the soil, and so now the trees are starting to fall over because there's nothing supporting them. They're just, like, basically like poles, you know, stuck in the ground. You're kind of left with these just the black trunks of the trees all the branches have either broke off or burnt off in the fire and so you're
Starting point is 00:01:32 left with these almost black telephone pole looking structures up the hillside this has changed this has changed so much even since last fall hey, just in terms of understanding the scope of the devastation because, you know, there were some branches left before, you know, and there's sort of this illusion of life. But now as time goes on, there's less and less life up on that hill. In 2021, the McKay Creek wildfire ripped through 46,000 hectares of land near Lillooet, BC. While coverage of wildfires tends to focus on the immediate effects on people, the evacuations, the numbers of homes lost, the consequences of these fires are far-reaching
Starting point is 00:02:20 and long-lasting. We don't really know, you know, the full effects of this for years down the road. And not just for human beings. It's not just the deer. It's not just the bears. It's all the other little animals that they all depend on, like the little ants right down from that to, you know, other birds and stuff. It's all interconnected. These are the connections that get lost when people talk about the number of homes that burnt and then move on in two years. It's not two years. It's 80 years when we're talking about Mildred Winter Range. These fires are going to kill our way of life if we actually don't get in there and really assert our voice and our authority to make those changes on the ground.
Starting point is 00:03:09 We're stuck with the results in the end because we're not leaving here. This is our territory. This is our home. Ideas producer Pauline Holdsworth brings us this documentary from Stathliam territory. this documentary from Stathliam Territory. And I imagine that the cultural impact and the grief is cumulative because the impact is revealed over time, and then you also have, you know, the other fires that are happening near this territory this summer. I think we don't talk enough about the cultural impacts of these fires. You know, one of the things that I often hear, you know, other Indigenous
Starting point is 00:03:47 people and people like me say, you know, we are the land. And so to see the land how it is now, where life is not coming back, it's a really difficult reality. And it's a really difficult reality and it's also really difficult to explain those cultural impacts and try and, you know, get help with tending to them. This is the first of a two-part series called Healing the Land. Part 1, After the Fire. On a hot, smoky day in September 2023, I arrived at the Lillooet Tribal Council office to meet with members of an Indigenous-led post-wildfire research project. The project is led by Northern Statliam Nations, Squyla, Hoistin, Tiquipipetla.
Starting point is 00:04:52 They're working alongside the Indigenous Ecology Lab at UBC and the Lillooet Regional Invasive Species Society. It's not recognized the devastation after and the recovery and restoration. And we've been dealing with it for two years. Since 2021, the ground was still smoldering and we started to table. Justin Kane, elected chief in Squalor. We've done a lot of work. We've had a lot of people sitting there,
Starting point is 00:05:17 but we're scrambling. And that's what I keep saying when I go to these meetings. I said, we need that support. We need funding to have a true restoration on the land. Look at the communities now. The bears are all over everywhere because there's no shrubs out there for them. There's no food. There's no food for us. No food for the animals. And I'm glad that you're here because what we're trying to do isn't being told anywhere. No one's hearing it and we need to find ways for that to to put it in writing and it's all these pieces like
Starting point is 00:05:53 Dr. Su and now we're studying the mule deer. Mule deer are probably the second most important protein source for the Stadlium nation after salmon. And these banks on the Fraser River are where Mule Deer winter range is. The McKay fire wiped out 75% of the Mule Deer winter range. I am Sue Sanger and I'm a professional biologist working with Little Wet Tribal Council. Little Wet Tribal Council has been involved in looking at Mule Deer for many, many years. The Stout Liam elders have said the populations of mule deer are in decline, and this is before these fires. Now we have this big impact on winter range. And so I'm helping to look at all the information that the nation has collected and try and help create a strategy so we can restore it. It's going to take 80 to 121 years to restore
Starting point is 00:06:47 this winter range to its function that it had before this fire. So when we talk about the government not stepping up, this isn't a short-term thing. In order to replace that winter range, the nation is going to be without that for decades to come. And when we add that to things like the salmon aren't returning, the sockeye salmon aren't returning in the numbers the nation needs them to, then families are going to hunt more. Well, where are the deer going to be? So these are the connections that get lost when people talk about the number of homes that burnt and then move on in two years. It's not two years. It's 80 years when we're talking about Milder Winter Range. The day I arrive, there are three active fires nearby, and the air is thick with smoke. A visceral reminder that it's not just the 2021 fire that threatens this territory.
Starting point is 00:07:45 It's all the other fires too. The Casper fire is blowing up right now. And it's blowing up really good. It was out yesterday, but for some reason it's fired up. Travis Peters, Heritage Supervisor, as well as Intern Lands Manager. What goes through your mind on a day like this, which I guess there have been a lot of days like this this summer, where the sky is very smoky?
Starting point is 00:08:09 It's very heart-concerning. I mean, you know, knowing how much I've displaced the wildlife, because it's not just the deer, it's not just the bears, it's all the other little animals that they all depend on, like the little ants right down from that to, you know, other birds and stuff. It's all interconnected. And when you see the smoke out here, you sort of wonder what's going through their head. Where's that fire? Which way should I go? The McKay Creek wildfire displaced wildlife to other areas, places that themselves are now on fire. So the three other fires I already know have burned more mule deer winter range.
Starting point is 00:08:51 So we're not just worried about McKay now. Now we have three more fires that we're going to have to do the same work on. I mean, some of these fires were out. Some of them were nearly out, but they backed off. And they should just stay on it until it's really out. Some of them were nearly out, but they backed off and they should just stay on it until it's really out. But what I'm really getting to is the backburns. A backburn is a fire intentionally lit on the edge of an active wildfire to deprive it of fuel and to try to get the larger fire under control. They need to start working with the communities, let us know when these backburns are happening,
Starting point is 00:09:25 and not to backburn when it's not needed. Because I know the McKay fire was out, or it was puffing smoke inside the fire when we last flew it. Then they did a backburn over in Lee Creek, and that's where it got out. It's these backburns that get away because they're burning unnecessarily timber and wildlife areas, habitats. And we've been telling the province, we'd like to at least know if you're going to back burn so we can notify our communities in case something does go wrong
Starting point is 00:10:01 or justify why they need to back burn. Not just because they want to learn from how it's going to burn, is what we hear. Is it going to put it out? Is it going to stop it? And the one thing that was really heartbreaking when I first heard about the back burns, when they were first just, they were blowing up and burning everything out there, is how our people felt watching them, knowing that they were burning their wildlife habitat, that the deer were going to be dying in these fires, that the bear, that they were actually ruining their hunting grounds, their gathering places.
Starting point is 00:10:34 Michelle Edwards, I'm the TAMU coordinator for the Statliam Chiefs Council. Over even Adams Lake, oh, the wind's going to pick up at 4, so what do they do? They light the fire at 345, and there goes the fire. That whole community just about burnt down. It's that local knowledge that's really important. And we need that because, you know, you've got elders saying, in these ashes that are falling, that's our wildlife, right? They're actually being cremated out there, and then their ashes are falling down.
Starting point is 00:11:02 We have to take this stuff seriously. We've known this stuff for years, and we're just able to actually get our voices out there and then their ashes are falling down. We have to take this stuff seriously. We've known this stuff for years and we're just able to actually get our voices out there, right? And I think they're going to become very strong, but these fires are taking away our way of life. This is, these are probably the biggest things right now, right? All that history, all that knowledge that was lost with residential school and we don't even want to go there because that's what took our knowledge base away, was when they brought us into school, and we couldn't share this. We didn't have the people to get out there. Our parents were too sad, too depressed to be able to do these things, right? So there's a lot that led up to this day, but these fires are going to kill our way of life
Starting point is 00:11:45 if we actually don't get in there and really assert our voice and our authority to make those changes on the ground. And we've said it for years, we need to be an incident command. We don't need to be a commander, but somebody needs to be there going, look, you just got here, you're going to be here for two weeks and, you know, you just wiped out our environment, our whole way of life, you just took it away. How would they feel if that's how you start telling them that's who you are? That's what you just did. You took away our whole way of life. We aren't going to have it for a hundred years. You starving my people for a hundred years. That's what they need to be told. The honest side of it. The hurting side of it. The stuff that's going to depress us.
Starting point is 00:12:23 That stuff that's going to starve us. Those are the things that they need to hear, but that's for us to make that change. Unfortunately, we have to do the hard work. We have to actually make this sacrifice so that the next generation will be able to benefit from the work that we do. We're going to end up sacrificing our way of life
Starting point is 00:12:44 so that the next generation has one. Cookston. The hillside across from us is McKay, and then this is, on our left here, is still Black Hills, and they kind of meet at the base of this hill. On the second day in Lillooet, we went out with three Stotleyan land guardians and co-researchers working alongside the nation, including members of the Indigenous Ecology Lab at UBC, led by Dr. Jennifer Grenz. She is an Inglikafna scholar of mixed ancestry, whose family comes
Starting point is 00:13:24 from the Lytton and Bonaparte First Nations. She is an Inglikafna scholar of mixed ancestry, whose family comes from the Lytton and Bonaparte First Nations. She is also an assistant professor in the Department of Forest Resources Management at UBC, and the author of Medicine Wheel for the Planet, a journey toward personal and ecological healing. So the fire complex is about 46,000 hectares, which is really hard to sort of conceptualize in your head how large it is. And, you know, it takes hours to get from site to site. So when we were planning our fieldwork, that was something that we really needed to consider. But when you're driving over that period of time, you really get a sense of actually how big the fire is. But yeah, so we've just kind of, we're coming up to the beginning of it.
Starting point is 00:14:06 And so you can see all of the tree death that happened, which is almost all of it. The Indigenous Ecology Lab at UBC works in service to Indigenous communities on land healing and food systems revitalization projects. In addition to working on Indigenousigenized wildfire recovery, the lab researches the impacts of invasive species, soil microbial ecology, and what culturally important plants need. So I'm looking at all the burn layers. So I have displayed the
Starting point is 00:14:39 high severity, low severity, and medium severity burn. All summer, Virginia Ogrely, a graduate student in the lab, has been working alongside members of Stadlium communities, setting up plots, seeing what plants are coming back, and testing the soil. On it, I have all my plot locations that we have done. So we have 80 plots throughout the wildfire area. The main thing the map tells me is just how much of this fire burnt at a high severity and how much my map is just covered in the color red, which indicates high severity burn. We have significantly increasing temperatures.
Starting point is 00:15:19 This area keeps breaking records over and over for temperatures. So now we've lost all the trees. We've lost the water retention. So now we have these exposed rock faces, essentially, and hillsides that make it that much more difficult for any recovery to occur. And that's what we're going to also be showing. And Virginia and the team noticed already this year, that southern facing slopes in particular, you know, that get really, really hot are showing very little recovery. You know, so this is the part too that we need to be thinking about when we're
Starting point is 00:15:56 thinking about wildfire is like, we're in a climate emergency and climate change is now leading us to a place where it is very difficult to start these ecosystems over again. It's just too hot. What can actually grow there and establish without water sources, you know, during the hottest time of the year? And that's what we're hoping to contribute to, you know, figuring out. but we can't just take for granted that the land is going to recover because we're in a different time in different conditions. At one of our first stops, Jennifer warns us not to step too close to the trees, because in many places, the soil around the roots has turned to ash. So it burned so hot underground that the roots burned. And so if you get close to
Starting point is 00:16:54 the trees, you might just have a little drop in. If you touch one of the trees, your hands come away black with soot. There's not much vegetation growing in this ground. And what is growing is mostly weedy, invasive species. This is some of that mustard that's everywhere through here that hasn't dried out yet. This is another weedy species. Not much has changed here, hey? This year?
Starting point is 00:17:24 No. All these plants that like really high nitrogen, after a fire there's a big release of nitrogen that happens and it's the exact kind of environment that invasive plants and weedy species like and that's why we're concerned, you know, because once they get a foothold and take off they're often more competitive also than the native plant species. So even if than the native plant species. So even if there's native plant species left in the seed bank that might come back, they could then end up being out-competed by, you know, these nitrogen-loving invasive plants that are just way more vigorous. I've never seen, I've never seen mullein like this before. I mean, this just goes to show you the nutrient release
Starting point is 00:18:05 that happens after fire. Like we see these weedy species, they're like the mullein is taller than I am. Like that's not normal. Like, you know, it's normally like half of the height of this, but then you also see really weird plant behavior. And this is the other thing that we've been paying attention to is, you know, we're not just trying to quantify like which plants are here is like, how are the plants growing? And you can see like this kind of splitting off in the flowers like these. This is not normal. There's some physiological response from stress, you know, whether it was from the fire damage to the seeds, the soil conditions like these are the things we're taking note of as we're walking through to then form research questions later. I've never seen that. That's Luther Brigman, an assistant papatla land guardian. And the stalk is super thick, too. It's like flat. It might be all
Starting point is 00:19:02 grown together. It looks like it's... It feels like flat. It might be all grown together. Like it looks like it's... Okay, okay. Feels all one. Yeah, it's thin. It's weird. The land guardians were also saying they had never seen mullein grow like this before. Yeah, I mean, not only do we need to be worried about the threats of invasive species, but now we've got conditions where these versions, you know, of the invasive species are, you know, souped up, right? And then now you can see all this bare soil.
Starting point is 00:19:38 Well, this is ripe for more. So I'm wondering if we can just listen for a moment. So what do you hear here? I hear some insects. I hear the stream not far from us. What do you hear in terms of the animal relations or the landscape here? One of the things maybe you've noticed, like, you don't hear any birds. So, yeah, we can hear the flowing stream, you know,
Starting point is 00:20:20 and we've got some crickets in the background. But this is a very quiet forest. But when you look around, it's really no surprise there's not much for food around here or cover. And so for me, you know, it's a bit of a deafening silence. But the water is, you know, sort a bit of a deafening silence um but the water is you know sort of the hopeful sound because if you if you look around this stream cutting through you can see life is in this area and that was something that we really noticed even in these high severity burn areas that we can't sort of say that high severity burn areas are entirely without life
Starting point is 00:21:07 because where there's water there's life and it's clear that the water is acting as a these are plant nurseries you know so if we look down at the species that are down there yeah there are invasive species for sure and there are some weedy species but we are seeing a lot of native species like snowberry in particular in these areas areas cadicanic and I think that is something that we're really interested in too is how do we help these plant nurseries along how do we move seed from these areas you know because we can't cover the whole landscape planting, but are there ways that we can use these sorts of processes to our advantage? You know, and this is also where, like, do we need to then be prioritizing management of invasive species in these areas,
Starting point is 00:21:58 especially as cows and then also our other animal relations are moving through, like, deer, that they're not carrying the seeds of the plants that we don't want, but maybe they're carrying the seeds of the plants that we do. We're seeing some deer tracks around here, so that's a pretty good sign to see that they're around, checking out their old winter range to see what's here. It'll be interesting to see what their decision is. The deer spend their time here because it has everything they need to live, right?
Starting point is 00:22:31 And so the fact that, you know, we call this meal deer winter range, and you can see it's all burnt. We're standing, there's no crown cover, no crown closure. So there's nothing, winter range needs to provide a place for them to stay warm. And they can't stay warm here now anymore, right? There's no cover. There's no food. At one point, we spot some mule deer in agricultural fields by the river, grazing on alfalfa. Senior Papatla land guardian Sam Copeland says he's been seeing the deer more and more here lately. This is like where all the mule deer hang out. It's safer there and they've got more food for them.
Starting point is 00:23:14 Unless they pack a lunch. Just kidding. And even right in Loloit here, in the last couple of years, we've seen a lot more deer in town before when we never used to. It's becoming more like Princeton, where you see deer just normally up and down the street now. And it's coming to that. And we're even seeing impacts to the deer. Gross and skinny. They're not very big. Some of them, you see big
Starting point is 00:23:47 gross on their face and it just doesn't look right. And I know Statlim has been trying to do some assessments with our hunters to bring in some of the carcasses to understand the head. To check to see what kind of diseases there are and stuff. It's very concerning. The wildfire basically capped what's been happening in our territory. And we know there's been, the wildlife's been threatened for many years,
Starting point is 00:24:27 and this just pushed it over the top. I know the deer population here is bad, like we've seen nine. I remember when I was 13, just over here past this mountain, you could see in the sagebrush fields, you could look down and they're just, you don't even see them, you just see the whole ground moving, thousands of deer. And that's how they used to be when they come in here and getting ready for winter feeding. I know a lot of it is from these fields and if we could prove that through data, because they get a lot of dise the deer and, you know, different things.
Starting point is 00:25:11 And they say it's from overpopulation, but it's more from what they're eating and stuff, you know. They were never supposed to eat the alfalfa that's out there, eh? Anything that's got any kind of hydration in it, right? They're going to have to eat it when it gets this hot out here. So it's scary to know that they might get more diseases with this fire taking away most of the grasses up here that they would healthily live off of. Like, to me, I think of them eating out there. It must taste good to them, you know, but it's not for them. It's kind of like us going to McDonald's, you know. It's tasty, but it doesn't fill you up, and it doesn't do anything for your health or nothing, right? Today, with the costs of everything,
Starting point is 00:26:01 food security, food sovereignty needs to be at the top of our minds. And the processes of fire management doesn't protect our cultural, traditional foods and our medicines that are out there that not only we survived off, but the wildlife survived off, the birds, the four-legged, the ones that live in the ground. They all rely on those systems as well. On a cultural perspective, looking at it, like all of our stories, like Transformers stories,
Starting point is 00:26:42 like if you look into the legends, there's some sort of ecological factor in there that ties the story to the land. Denise Antoine, Natural Resource Specialist for the Papetla Council. So currently, you talk about having endangered species in an area, whether it be a plant or an animal. It's tied to our old stories of the land. And, oh, look, there's an eagle. Oh, wow. It's a young one. That's cool.
Starting point is 00:27:22 So it's going to fly right by us I bet so as I was saying like any endangered species of the area like right now they're current like we talk about them they're there and we have stories like we were taught by our grandparents and they were taught by their grandparents and when a species becomes extinct then it becomes a legend so when it becomes a legend you know that means that they're gone forever so we're at that time where we're critical. On Ideas, you're listening to Healing the Land, Part 1, After the Fire. You can find us wherever you get your podcasts.
Starting point is 00:28:31 And on CBC Radio 1 in Canada, across North America, on US Public Radio, and on Sirius XM. In Australia, on ABC Radio National, and around the world at cbc.ca slash ideas. I'm Nala Ayed. Hey there, I'm Kathleen Goldtar, and I have a confession to make. I am a true crime fanatic. I devour books and films and, most of all, true crime podcasts. But sometimes, I just want to know more. I want to go deeper.
Starting point is 00:29:03 And that's where my podcast Crime Story comes in. Every week, I go behind the scenes with the creators of the best in true crime. I chat with the host of Scamanda, Teacher's Pet, Bone Valley, the list goes on wildfire ripped through 46,000 hectares of land near Lillooet, B.C. This is a region with a long history of fire. But this fire left a new kind of devastation in its wake. We're working in an entirely new space. These are climate events that have caused destruction that we don't really understand. You know, as an example, where we were in the high-severity burn area, we were walking on ash.
Starting point is 00:29:54 And what we have to recognize is what is in there normally is the seed bank of all those native trees and shrubs. And so, yeah, what do we do? Like, does stuff grow if we're just planting it straight in ash? We're not really sure. What are the soil microbes that are there? Are the ones missing that other tree species, shrub species might be reliant on?
Starting point is 00:30:17 We also don't know that. Everybody's learning in real time here. In September 2023, IDEA's producer Pauline Holdsworth visited the affected area, along with members of Northern Stathliam Nations and their co-researchers, to document their efforts to bring this land back to life. This is Healing the Land, Part 1, After the fire. While we're studying the kinds of plants coming back here,
Starting point is 00:30:52 Luther and the other guardians notice lithics on the ground, arrowheads made of flint. I was finding some flint from the pit hoses here, the old village that used to be here. That's what we used for spears and arrowheads and different tools and stuff. You could see how the depressions in the ground here where the houses used to be up and then they collapsed, and then you could see the depressions around.
Starting point is 00:31:20 Since the village is here, there's got to be a burial site, and they're usually along the hill slopes, where we bury in a fetal position on the side of a hill. I would imagine it's down here somewhere along. I think one of the things that's important to remember is even where we're standing right now, their ancestors resting beneath our feet. even where we're standing right now, their ancestors resting beneath our feet.
Starting point is 00:31:52 So, you know, that's something that is often not considered when we're talking about what to do next, you know, but how do we honor the people who are still here, who are resting here, what's appropriate in this place versus 200 meters up the hill that way where they aren't. And ultimately, those aren't my decisions to make. This is stallion territory and it's up to the stallion what they want here. And I really hope that, you know, they're going to lead the way. There's a lot of village sites out there. People have been there since time immemorial. My family, my roots are personally from out West Pavilion. And through the changes, through the Indian Act, we were alligamated to move across the river.
Starting point is 00:32:41 And my ancestors are out there. And they lived off the land. They didn't have a vehicle to come into town to buy rice and flour and things, you know, and everything we needed was there for the time. The culture there just shows our past history. I mean, you look at it. We lived on the banks of the Fraser because of the salmon.
Starting point is 00:33:07 And then we used the hillside because of the mule deer winter range. That's why it's so rich there. We could walk within a day of each other. There's trails that connect to those. And a lot of it's been impacted just by range and wildfires. But it's all connected. Everybody knows that they had family in these areas just through the stories that have been handed down.
Starting point is 00:33:37 Like each watershed used to be taken care of by one family community and each stream that came out of the mountains, one family was taking care of it. So they had the responsibility like having like a garden from there to the next stream coming down the mountain because here it's a mountainous area. I've done interviews with elders where they were knee-high when they did cultural burns back then. They'd travel throughout the territory and say, okay, well here, this one needs a little managing.
Starting point is 00:34:16 And then they'd move on and move the parcels over and over into certain areas that had certain medicines and stuff. We've lost that, and we're trying to bring that back. At what point was that partially lost? At what point have elders told you that they stopped seeing that happen on this land? Colonial times? So with the Indian Reserve, like where all the people were put into one place and they weren't being nomadic to travel with the plants, travel with the food, travel to each elevation to get the medicines or go down the river,
Starting point is 00:35:02 go up in the mountain in the fall. That's like covering the whole stallion territory, where now we're just looking after little plots of IR land. I would say just around before the residential, they started getting put in residential schools, as well as a survivor of residential I'm sort of maybe I guess you could say one of the last generations because they closed, the one I went to was
Starting point is 00:35:36 in Mission and I believe that closed in 83 and I was in there in 81, 82 but just hearing from, you know, my dad who went to residential, knowing that they were put there, they weren't allowed to speak the language, you can only eat so much, they were starving,
Starting point is 00:35:58 they had to sneak out into the orchard to climb into trees to get food and there was other bad things that happened. But otherwise, you know, I believe it was around that time when we started losing our culture by not practicing it. Something that really struck me in the room and that kind of stopped me kind of cold was when Michelle said that the wildfires today are, they're sort of replicating that. And I wonder what you see as the cultural impact of the wildfires that have been happening in the last few years.
Starting point is 00:36:37 The wildfires are huge. I mean, when we did our culture burns, they weren't that big. They were more controlled. There were certain times of the year. These mega fires are coming in big and hot. You know, in 10 years, 20 years ago, it was, you know, every couple of years, you'll see a big fire from here. I used to be a unit crew as well in 90 to 95. If I know what I know now, back then, I probably would have became an archaeologist. You know, just because of, you know, knowing that our ancestors were out there. I never knew that. I never had the chance of having my grandfather, you know, teach me or anything, or my dad, because my dad had lost that, lost the culture, because he went to the residential school.
Starting point is 00:37:33 Standing by the pit houses, Luther imagines what this village once looked like. Before residential schools, before the reserve system, even before contact. residential schools, before the reserve system, even before contact. I think it would have been fully forested. And, like, it's not the same as how you see it now. There would have been a different forest, probably more lush. And it was always the winter range for the deer. So that's why it's probably the village here so they'd be here
Starting point is 00:38:06 hunting deer or whatever there's there's lots of pit houses and villages here it was a big we had a lot of people before contact i think you know we had hundreds of thousands of statlium here moving around stewarding the land to different places if we were here fishing up here hunting back west picking berries or wherever it may be and a lot of different mountains have just sacred meanings for like if this village was here there'd be a spot where the women would go and a spot where the young men would go and stuff for their different ceremonies and stuff.
Starting point is 00:38:52 There's so much that can come from one site that, you know, the traditional foods that they were here for at the time, and wow, I don't know, it's pretty neat. But you can also see now the impacts that the fires had on archaeology. So you can see that there's really no plant life and you can see the compaction of the soil and evidence of the runoff that has happened as well. So that is eroding these areas considerably.
Starting point is 00:39:23 And when we were talking about cultural impacts, you know, this is this is one of them. And then you can also see the impacts of cattle grazing now. This is a concern that keeps coming up, the presence of cattle in the burn area. So everything we're looking at here, these kind of white, dry areas, this is cow patties. And you can see that it's everywhere we are, all around us, right on top of a cultural area. Not far from the pit houses, we come across the burnt remnant of a fence lying on the ground. Okay, so this used to be keeping cattle out of this area. Potentially, yeah.
Starting point is 00:40:07 Yeah, you can see the burned fence post. So this is the thing, too, is, like, there's cattle that are allowed into the area before fence repair's been done. You know, and these fences were here to protect these cultural areas. So, you know, if that doesn't tell you where the priority in management is and or the use of the land, I don't know what does. I was very big on, you know, my concerns
Starting point is 00:40:35 were on range, you know, and it's a province that's catering to the ranchers out there and not knowing that the impacts to our food source is huge, but yet they continue to do it. The first funding that really comes out goes to the Cattlemen's Association and nothing to the communities. And if it's to the communities, it's pennies on the dollar. It's very little, you know, $20,000, $30,000, maybe $50,000 to do some monitoring and stuff. But other than that, it needs to go farther than that to try and really revive the land back.
Starting point is 00:41:15 And then there's a tension here too. You know, we don't necessarily want people to know where these places are. You know, there are people that come and rob these areas of their artifacts and disturb our ancestors. And so how are we protecting those areas, you know, in this kind of situation with also revealing where they are? And I think that's the other thing is that these lands are, and these cultural areas are that much more vulnerable now because look at what has opened up.
Starting point is 00:41:44 Before this was dense forest, no one really could access and come in here. I would have never even, if I was walking through here, you wouldn't be able to see all these flints and stuff. But after this burn, you could see a lot of evidence of where we were. We were up at McKay Creek there, and that village site like this, there was flints and everything just everywhere.
Starting point is 00:42:08 Because before the grass and the weeds came back, you could see a lot of evidence and stuff. Last year, there were mushroom pickers, you know, coming in here, just kind of traipsing through these village areas, you know, picking mushrooms because the burn has, you know, provided that opportunity. But it just feels so disrespectful. And people, maybe they don't know, but it feels very, it feels harmful, you know, to see that. You know, you wouldn't traipse through someone's church or cemetery casually blasting music and pulling things out of the ground. But for us, that's what it feels like to watch that happen. There are a few other reasons the presence of cattle in this area
Starting point is 00:42:58 is so concerning to Stadlium members. One is the effect on soil and plant life. That was concerning when the cows were going in there because it disturbs the topsoil and then it just starts to erode away. And once that soil's gone, it can't be replaced, really. Well, it'll take hundreds and hundreds of years. It's pretty delicate right after the fire
Starting point is 00:43:23 because the earth's trying to rebuild itself, soil to grow again and once the cows come through and just start mashing the ground up it just leaches all the topsoil out and then you're pretty depleted for much growth and maybe just all the invasives start popping up because it's not the proper soil and stuff for natural. Those concerns have informed research questions for the Indigenous Ecology Lab. So part of our experiment is setting up plots that cage out cattle so then we can
Starting point is 00:44:02 compare the vegetation outside the fence versus what's inside the fence to see what happens and this is going to be a long-term study so you can actually see right now there's not a whole lot of difference because this is the first year that these plots were installed but it will be very telling in another year or two years time you know to see are there different species inside there you know what's the abundance of those species and so these are all throughout the fire area at different burn severities as well. I just want to go back to the soils the soils there are very important you know having range allow cows to go back into a fire, even just to go through and not manage it properly, that's going to happen. The displacement breaks it open, rain hits, bang, and it's going to start sliding.
Starting point is 00:44:56 And we saw huge chunks of material just right down to mineral soil, mineral rock. Everything is just hard and it didn't look right you're walking on just rock no soils whatsoever and it was very this is very concerning and you know we've we've tried to talk with the range here about this just recent and they're saying the same thing i'm sorry but we'll get that contract signed and we'll cover your time. But that's not it. Time is on the land. It's keeping that soil back there so we can get our medicines back a lot sooner.
Starting point is 00:45:39 Wildfires also increase the risk of landslides by making the soil hydrophobic. Can you explain what that means? Yeah, so hydrophobic soil is in a way like soil that's almost afraid of water. So we're looking for water-repellent layers, basically, in the soil. So when a fire burns, the organic material that burns will become volatile, and then it will transfer down in the soil column and then it condenses when it reaches a cool soil. And that layer where it condenses, some of these compounds are hydrophobic and they coat the soil. And so depending on how hot the
Starting point is 00:46:23 soil is, that can impact where this water repellent layer is in the soil column. The idea is that in lower burn severities, you're going to find that repellent layer closer to the surface, maybe one centimeter down. Whereas if you get a really hot fire, the soil is going to be hot deeper into the soil column. And so you might find that water repellent layer at five centimeters. So you get a big rain if your water repellent layer is at five centimeters, that top five centimeters could just all slough off because it hits that layer and the water can't penetrate any further. So then that's when you start getting large amounts of erosion. As one person in Lillooet told me, we have wildfire season and then we have landslide
Starting point is 00:47:07 season. And even this spring, multiple of the creeks washed out. And so they all had to get repaired. So I came up here in the spring and locals were saying, you're not getting out past this kilometer today because this creek's washed out. and so it's just all gone because the water came so quick because there's nothing left to retain in that soil. People live out here and people need to be able to get to town and come back to where they live or visit go up the roads for hunting and so with this like landslides like and washouts you're again restricting access to the land and impacting food security. Somebody said maybe it will take 80 to 100 years, you know,
Starting point is 00:48:15 for the mule deer winter range to come back as it was. I wonder what, you know, when you think about the land 80 years from now, what do you hope that looks like and feels like? In 80 years? I don't know. The times we're in today with climate changing, with drought, honestly, I don't know where we're going to be in 80 years, but the more we can do today to at least attempt to recover the land,
Starting point is 00:48:56 we can say we did our best to put back out there what should have been out there, what was out there, and we can hope that these you know, these heat domes don't continue to happen, that we get more moisture, less drought, that less wildfires. You know, the idea is to have all those things, those sources of foods out there for the meal deer to come back.
Starting point is 00:49:29 That my grandchildren would have traditional practices that my generation, generations before me, we've survived off of those proteins and fruits and vegetables. fruits and vegetables. What I'm hearing I think is that it must be hard to think about you know 80 years to recover from 2021 but not knowing what's going to happen in 2025 or 2027 that would also need to be recovered from. Yes that's correct. I feel the pain of the communities that are impacted last year and this year. They're going to be going through the same struggles we've been going through for the last two years. And the processes aren't changing. The policies aren't changing. And I can guarantee if I went and sat in a working group next year,
Starting point is 00:50:21 I would hear the same things that we talked about two years ago this year. And we're still going to be talking about next year I would hear the same things that we talked about two years ago this year, and we're still going to be talking about next year. While life in Stadliam territory has radically changed, it seems like the rest of the world wants to move on and go back to doing things the same way. The policies don't change. The practices are still the same as like a fire never happened. I think we've had some good supports from some of the ministry people who've been sitting with us from day one. McKay is still under a protected area.
Starting point is 00:50:55 Unfortunately, when we talk about the hunters, the hunters are still allowed in there. We fought with that. The process has never changed. Even with the risks of the mule deer has been on the table for many years, and they still haven't limited the amount of hunter access in there at a high level government. I don't think they have even thought about or looked at addressing those. I mean, we talked about global warming for years.
Starting point is 00:51:22 We talked about climate change. Now we're in climate crisis and nothing's changed. Yeah, following up on what Chief Justin was saying, the policy shift that needs to happen is outside of McKay Fire in the Mildred Winter Range. So if, according to the government, you can go log it, even though it's right beside where we've lost all of this winter range. So when we talk about policy shifts that have to happen,
Starting point is 00:51:48 there needs to be compensation or understanding that these animals have been displaced and they're going to go into adjacent areas, and there's no protection for them in the adjacent areas. Those areas could be logged. Part of the work we'll be doing is not just on the McKay Footprint Mule Deer winter range, but the adjacent winter range as well, pushing it for protection. There should be laws against destroying lands like this for habitat. We just had a meeting with the Ministry on Heritage.
Starting point is 00:52:22 Get cattle going through villages, heritage sites. Gerald Michelle, better known as Bobo, lands resource liaison and council member. There should be some laws for this protection. We can make laws for that. Statlin can make laws for that. We do have them in our Statlin land use plan, and we should carry on with that.
Starting point is 00:52:44 Use our laws. It's our land. Thank you. We're not going anywhere. This is our home. Proponents can come and go, and they will come and go when the economics doesn't work. But we've been putting our hand up saying, we're here. Train us. Use us. Who knows our backyard better than we do? You know, it's just a matter of trying to bring back.
Starting point is 00:53:14 There's a lot more for generations to come. On Ideas, you've been listening to Healing the Land Part 1, After the Fire. Tune in tomorrow for Part 2, From Eden Ecology to Indigenous Ecology. We're not separate from the land. You know, we are the land. And so we can't, you know, just try and fix an area and that's it. We're so tied to it. For me, when we're doing these projects, it's like facilitating, strengthening that relationship, being part of cultural resurgence.
Starting point is 00:54:06 The land is a mirror of us, and we are a mirror of the land. And so we have to be working to heal the land so that we can be healthy. In the next episode, what an Indigenous ecology approach to restoring this landscape looks like and how Indigenous philosophies
Starting point is 00:54:23 inform decisions about what comes next. Special thanks to Chief Justin Kane for welcoming ideas to Stathlium Territory. And thank you to Dr. Jennifer Grenz and the Indigenous Ecology Lab at UBC. At CBC, thank you to Wameesh Hamilton. This episode was produced by Pauline Holdsworth and Philip Coulter. Our web producer is Lisa Ayuso. The technical producer for Ideas is Danielle Duval. Our acting senior producer is Lisa Godfrey.
Starting point is 00:54:57 The executive producer of Ideas is Greg Kelly. And I'm Nala Ayed.

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