San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

State taps tribal sites to attract tourists

Campaign ‘perfect timing’ in effort to reverse slump

- By Gregory Thomas

Alex Mitra rides Muni’s 49-Van Ness to catch the 5-Fulton bus to make it to his next meeting in San Francisco.

Starting this month, California’s tourism bureau is trying something it’s never tried before: nudging travelers toward the state’s tribal lands, many of which haven’t historical­ly hosted large numbers of sightseers, in hopes of benefiting from a largely untapped resource of rich cultural history.

A promotiona­l campaign called “Visit Native California” represents the bureau’s first effort to spotlight the cultural heritage of some of the 109 federally recognized tribes here and help them gain a foothold in the state’s immense tourism market. It comes at a time when several tribes and Indigenous communitie­s are just beginning to build tourism businesses.

“When I found out about (the campaign), I started crying because I’ve been waiting for something like this to happen here,” said Ashley Bowers, marketing lead for Yurok Country, the promotiona­l arm of Northern California’s Yurok Tribe, of which she is a member. “This is huge.”

The idea came about organicall­y from con

versations between tourism bureaus and tribes around the state, coordinato­rs say, and comes as California’s tourism industry tries to pull out of the economic hole left by the pandemic. Internatio­nal and business travel to the state is still well below 2019 levels and not expected to rebound until 2024.

Midwestern states have been promoting visitation at Native American reservatio­ns for years, and British Columbia has showcased tours, restaurant­s and cultural exhibits on its native lands as well. But this is a new step for California.

“We think this is perfect timing. More and more tribes are developing visitor experience­s,” said Visit California President and CEO Caroline Beteta. “This is a unique differenti­ator that you can’t experience anywhere else.”

The Yurok have about 7,000 members whose ancestral lands trace the Klamath River and span Humboldt and Del Norte counties. Last year, the tribe consulted with the California Department of Parks and Recreation in renaming an oceanside state park north of Eureka with a tribal term used to describe the land for centuries. Bowers called it “a huge step for native people in general.”

The tribe owns a small casino-hotel, RV parks and a visitor center. But recently it has expanded its approach to attract a newer type of tourist, Bowers said.

Yurok tribal members Walker Gensaw (left) and Kobe Mitchell paddle a traditiona­l redwood canoe on the Klamath River.

“I’ve seen the change in people,” she said. “They’re becoming more aware and they want to learn — they’re more interested in who we are.”

Last year, the tribe began offering tours on the Klamath in traditiona­lly made, 20-footlong redwood canoes where guests learn about the Yurok’s creation stories and relationsh­ip to the land.

“It’s the first real ecotourism we’re doing here,” Bowers said.

Visit California and some of its tribal partners announced the campaign Wednesday at the site of a soon-to-be Indigenous cultural plaza under constructi­on in downtown Palm Springs. Owned by the

Kate Anderson, Agua Caliente tribe’s director of public relations

Agua Caliente Band of Cahuilla Indians, the plaza will open next year and include a museum and mineral spa.

The tribe, which has more than 500 members, has offered interpreti­ve guided hikes on its ancestral lands for 20 years. But the prominence of a downtown venue in a city that drew more than 14 million visitors in 2019 will vault the tribe’s profile and clue travelers in to the broader shift on native lands in the state, according to Kate Anderson, the Agua Caliente

tribe’s director of public relations.

“People just don’t yet think of California as a place where tribes are,” said Anderson, a member of Citizen Potawatomi Nation, a tribe in Oklahoma. “We’re on the verge of becoming a major hub for Native American cultural tourism in Southern California.”

Bringing in visitors isn’t just an economic boon to tribes; it’s an opportunit­y to establish direct connection­s with people who may know

little to nothing about the presence of Indigenous communitie­s in California, said Agua Caliente Chairman Reid Milanovich.

“It’s important for each tribe to have their own voice and educate the public about who they are,” he said. “That way, when people come to visit our tribal lands they have a better understand­ing of our culture, our history, the fact that we’ve been there since the beginning, so they respect our traditions.”

“People just don’t yet think of California as a place where tribes are.”

 ?? Photos by Jessica Christian / The Chronicle ??
Photos by Jessica Christian / The Chronicle
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 ?? Delaney Mayo / Yurok Country ??
Delaney Mayo / Yurok Country
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