The Post

Hunt for Yellowston­e’s bison

The animal sustained a way of life for centuries. Now, the Yakama Nation’s sacred, millennia-old yearly bison hunt takes place in a vastly different landscape, writes

- Dino Grandoni.

Deer and elk were no problem for Kashius Gleason. The 19-yearold member of the Yakama Nation had hunted plenty of them around his reservatio­n in the US state of Washington.

Yet standing in freezing temperatur­es at the doorstep of Yellowston­e at daybreak one February morning, he was nervous as a herd of bison trekked out of the park.

He had driven 16 hours with his family to get to this snowy basin and didn’t want to miss.

‘‘It was my first time shooting something different,’’ he said.

Every winter, Gleason’s family makes the journey from southern Washington to the northern border of Yellowston­e in Montana to gain a semblance of something they had lost.

For centuries, bison sustained a way of life for Native Americans. Tribes hunted the huge mammal not just for its meat but to use nearly every part of its body – its hide to fashion clothing, horns to make tools and even its bladder to carry water. But in the 1800s, the US government slaughtere­d bison in an effort to wipe out tribes’ food supply and settle the West. Even the army was called in to keep Indigenous hunters out of what became Yellowston­e National

Park. Both bison and tribes nearly vanished forever.

Now Gleason’s people are among a handful of tribes hunting bison again. By exercising hunting rights enumerated in an 1855 treaty, the Yakama are able to maintain an ancient cultural relationsh­ip with the animals.

But the hunters have returned to a vastly different landscape. Today, with government officials seeking to control the animals’ migration, the hunt is constraine­d to a strip of land in Montana.

For Montana ranchers and landowners north of Yellowston­e, the hunt is key to keeping bison numbers in check over fears the wild migrating animals may spread disease and compete with cattle for grass. The tribal treaty hunt is one of the ways Yellowston­e bison are culled.

But others say the effort to control their numbers is undoing a conservati­on success story that pulled the bison – today vaunted as the United States’ national mammal, on par with the bald eagle – from the brink of extinction.

Yellowston­e’s ecosystem can sustain up to 11,000, advocates say, nearly double the roughly 6000-strong population counted last year.

This year, hunters killed about 1100 bison, a sharp increase from recent seasons. Dozens more were sent to slaughter as they sought better pastures after a particular­ly

harsh winter.

‘‘That’s too many,’’ said Tom Woodbury of the Buffalo Field Campaign, an activist group that petitioned the US Fish and Wildlife Service to protect the Yellowston­e bison under the Endangered Species Act.

‘‘That’s a product of the population being too low and demand from the tribes being too high,’’ he said, adding: ‘‘It’s not up to us to tell the tribes what their relationsh­ip with bison should be.’’

The buffalo have been both a source of food and cultural tradition for generation­s of Yakama. Before the arrival of European colonisers, tribal members travelled to the Yellowston­e area to hunt for bison, trade with other tribes and bring meat back home to their families. That history helped the tribe to secure its modern hunting rights.

For Troy Watlamet, Gleason’s uncle who took his nephew to Montana for the hunt, protests against the bison harvest are just another sign of discrimina­tion against Native Americans.

‘‘It’s something we live with every day,’’ Watlamet said. ‘‘Racism is not gone.’’

For generation­s, hunting has been how Watlamet’s family puts food on the table. But over the past few years, there were few bison migrating out of Yellowston­e for him to hunt.

Caught in the middle is the Biden Administra­tion, which wants to restore some of the 60 million bison that once roamed

North America while maintainin­g tribes’ sacred, millennia-old hunt.

In March, Interior Secretary Deb Haaland, the nation’s first Native American Cabinet secretary, announced that her department would put

US$25 million (NZ$41 million) towards helping tribes manage their own herds and other bison conservati­on work.

‘‘The administra­tion has a pretty good track record in terms of really making treaty and trust responsibi­lity a priority,’’ said Wizipan Garriott, Interior’s principal deputy assistant secretary for Indian affairs.

A new interagenc­y bison management working group establishe­d in March, he added, ‘‘provides an amazing opportunit­y for those tribes that have treaty and hunting rights to be a part of that decision-making process’’.

The fresh funding is ‘‘a great start’’, said Shana Drimal, a senior wildlife conservati­on associate at the Greater Yellowston­e Coalition, which wants to see buffalo roam more freely in and out of the park.

‘‘There are still a lot of unknowns as far as how that money is going to be allocated,’’ she added.

On that chilly morning hunt in February, Gleason was able to calm his nerves. He killed two bison. His party took 10 in total, working well into the evening quartering and trucking away the carcasses. Later in a kitchen in Washington, the family butchered, processed and packaged the meat.

For Gleason, the hunt was less about connecting with the past and more about supporting his family today.

‘‘It feels good to provide,’’ he said. ‘‘It’s not store-bought. I went all the way to Montana to take care of it.’’ And personally, he enjoyed the hunt’s spoils as well. ‘‘It was probably one of the best burgers I’ve

ever eaten.’’

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 ?? WASHINGTON POST ?? At first light a group of bison were in the shooting zone for the Yakama Nation hunters, just across the park boundary line, so hunters could make their first kill.
WASHINGTON POST At first light a group of bison were in the shooting zone for the Yakama Nation hunters, just across the park boundary line, so hunters could make their first kill.

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