Saskatoon StarPhoenix

LIFESTYLE CHANGE

Family goes back to the land

- JULIANNA MAGGRAH

Unable to accept the idea of her grandchild­ren being stuck inside at home, unsure how long social distancing would be in place due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Annie Mckenzie has done her best to ensure they’ve created lifelong memories during this unforgetta­ble point in history.

Mckenzie, an elder from Stanley Mission, decided to bring her family to her trapline so she and her grandchild­ren could stay busy, enjoy the outdoors and reconnect with the land.

“(I) wanted to bring my grandchild­ren out here to be healthy out here,” Mckenzie said. “So, they could stay active and not be indoors all the time.”

Jim’s Fishing Camp, located on a beautiful piece of land in the area, is a five-minute hike to Nistowiak Falls — one of the highest waterfalls in Saskatchew­an. The nearby Stanley Mission Anglican Church is currently the oldest building in Saskatchew­an. And, there are cliffs that have thousand-year-old paintings that have withstood the elements.

Mckenzie knows how lucky she is to live in such a location.

“(I) feel happy and blessed to be here with the waterfall and this beautiful place,” Mckenzie said.

“But it’s nothing new (to me). I grew up on the trapline way downriver, so this is my lifestyle.”

Mckenzie has been on the current trapline since March 17. When the ice was breaking up, her grandsons would check in on her every couple of days, despite the danger of travelling on the ice during spring breakup.

Mckenzie used to do plenty of fishing and trapping. Now, she relies more on her grandkids, although she can still fish off of the dock and deftly cleans and filets the catch of the day. Aside from a type-2 diabetes diagnosis 10 years ago, Mckenzie has been healthy.

She plans on staying there until the pandemic is over “unless I get sick,” she said, “or if there are any community events.”

The daily chores for Mckenzie and her family include gathering and chopping wood, and fetching water from the lake. They make time for fishing, followed by the fileting, cleaning and cooking (over a fire or an old-fashioned fish-fry are faster methods, while smoking it takes around eight hours). The store-bought food they eat was brought via three snowmobile­s to the trapline in March, and lasted the family into June.

The fishing camp is not in operation this year, a big change from most years; typically, the camp is busy during the summer months.

These days there seem to be few families that have a trapline. That wasn’t always the case, noted Chief Tammy Cook- Searson. It was as recently as the early-1980s, she said, “when everybody had a trapline, everybody would go out to the traplines. Everybody had a cabin. Everybody had a way to get out to the land.”

“But I think it’s important for us to continue that lifestyle, to teach the importance of getting out on the land, learning how to do stuff on the land, and living out at the trapline, living out on the land and having that connection to the land. Because the land is connected to our language, and the importance of passing on our language and our culture, and traditiona­l values, that way of living. It just connects us as families.”

Getting a cell signal isn’t always easy, which leaves plenty of time to visit, play games together and bond.

It requires teamwork to trap or to carry a canoe through a portage. Plenty of ways to find those connection­s, Mckenzie said.

“It’s really important for us to get out there ... Like, just to get out on the land and feel that connection." Local Journalism Initiative

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 ?? JULIANNA MAGGRAH/LOCAL JOURNALISM INITIATIVE ?? Annie Mckenzie, an elder from Stanley Mission, wanted her grandchild­ren to have time outdoors during the COVID-19 pandemic, so they spent time together on her trapline in the area, about 80 kilometres north of La Ronge.
JULIANNA MAGGRAH/LOCAL JOURNALISM INITIATIVE Annie Mckenzie, an elder from Stanley Mission, wanted her grandchild­ren to have time outdoors during the COVID-19 pandemic, so they spent time together on her trapline in the area, about 80 kilometres north of La Ronge.

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