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Restoring Secw茅pemc staple germinates hope on Salmon Arm delta

Salmon Arm students help plant root crop once key to Indigenous diet
33127334_web1_230621-SAA-Kai-Thingsted-wapato
Kai Thingsted holds a wapato tuber ready for planting. (Photo contributed)

In the Salmon River delta near Salmon Arm, a story of loss may become a story of hope.

The wapato (ckwalkwalus in Secwepemctsin) is a root crop grown in wetlands that was one of the Secw茅pemc staples. However, that changed over the past century with the loss of wetlands due to development, the thriving of invasive plants and the changing of traditions and diet following European arrival.

The wapato was one of the latest crops to be harvested in the fall, recalls Louis Thomas, Secw茅pemc knowledge keeper, who emphasizes he is not an expert in plants. His mother, esteemed elder Dr. Mary Thomas, was.

He is, however, well-known in the community for his work building bridges and developing allies with people in order to preserve Secw茅pemc culture, language and the environment.

He said he is sad salmon sa国际传媒渁re gone pretty wellsa国际传媒 from the river.

sa国际传媒淚 tried looking after it. Thatsa国际传媒檚 how we started the Salmon River Roundtable. To start looking after them. But theysa国际传媒檙e disappearing.sa国际传媒

So now hesa国际传媒檚 turning his attention to indigenous plants, like wapato, sometimes compared to the potato.

sa国际传媒淚 think in the process, too, maybe wesa国际传媒檙e looking at a new way of agriculture. I know our people a long time ago depended on Mother Nature to help us.sa国际传媒

He points to the importance of growing crops that can survive without too much human intervention or extra water.

Thomas teamed up with Kim Fulton, enthusiastic environmental educator and retired teacher and principal, who is best known to some as Dr. Fish.

Their goal: to bring back the wapato.

Fulton secured grant funding and a committee was formed which included Chelsea Prince, School District 83sa国际传媒檚 director of instruction - Indigenous education; Diyame Derrick Caterer, Indigenous student services coordinator at Okanagan College in Salmon Arm-Revelstoke; Ceren Caner, teacher at the South Canoe outdoor school; and Jake Jakobsen, teacher at Salmon Arm West.

Fulton discovered that many First Nations used wapato as a key source of starch in the winter. On the banks of the Pitt River in the Lower Mainland, a shelf built for harvesting the root was carbon dated from 4,500 to 6,000 years ago.

Fulton was able to get tubers from Vancouver Island, which were started in Shuswap classrooms in little wooden sa国际传媒榓quariumssa国际传媒 he built. Fulton said wapato are also called duck potatoes as pin-tailed ducks and muskrats really like them.

sa国际传媒淪o itsa国际传媒檚 restoring an ecosystem for the natural system as well as humans,sa国际传媒 he said.

Then, in May, South Canoe students from Ceren Canersa国际传媒檚 class put on their boots sa国际传媒 joined by Fulton, Caner, Thomas and his sister-in-law Mary Thomas sa国际传媒 and spent a happy time in the mud, planting wapato in a nearby pond for study purposes. A harvest celebration will take place in the fall as part of whatsa国际传媒檚 being called the Growing Together Project.

Louis Thomas remembers his grandmothers talking about harvesting the plants in their bare feet in a foot or two of water.

sa国际传媒淭hey could feel around on their toes and they followed the stem down, feel around with their toes, keep playing around and theysa国际传媒檒l pop to the surface.sa国际传媒

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Fulton said for all those involved, growing and planting the tubers was a sa国际传媒渞eally neat way to bring our cultures together and develop further understanding of each other.sa国际传媒

Thomassa国际传媒 hope is to go through the steps to dredge an old river bed, keep lots of water in it and establish a harvest area with possibly high-bush cranberries along the edge. He said canary grass interfered with a planting in the delta as it almost creates concrete pads with its strong roots, making it impossible to dig up the plants.

Thomas said he is often asked if he has any answers to climate change.

sa国际传媒淚 say itsa国际传媒檚 hard to battle against Mother Nature,sa国际传媒 he said. sa国际传媒淚 think itsa国际传媒檚 about learning to adapt and learning how to adapt to everything. And hopefully the answer will eventually come.sa国际传媒

Tracey Kutschker, director/curator of the Salmon Arm Arts Centre, said the wapato restoration has become a bigger project than simply the planting by the class. She said Mary Thomas accompanied the class to photograph the process, so the art gallery can include it in the exhibition, Le7 Tmicw, which is about acts of healing from all the effects of climate change.

sa国际传媒淭hatsa国际传媒檚 where Isa国际传媒檓 so appreciative of Louis and Mary for documenting this whole process of recovering indigenous food plants. Because we can show theresa国际传媒檚 hope. Theresa国际传媒檚 hope in recovery of the plants; adaptation is faster with plants. So theresa国际传媒檚 definitely the sense of hope for the ability of Indigenous food plants to come back.sa国际传媒

33127334_web1_230621-SAA-louis-wapato-potatoes
Louis Thomas, Kim Fulton and Mary Thomas assist students to plant wapato, an Indigenous root crop, in a pond in South Canoe in May to research how the plants will do. (Photo contributed)


Martha Wickett

About the Author: Martha Wickett

came to Salmon Arm in May of 2004 to work at the Observer. I was looking for a change from the hustle and bustle of the Lower Mainland, where I had spent more than a decade working in community newspapers.
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