Assuming thing is required, and with is required, the following 4 results were found.
Chapter 1https://www.pathoftheelders.com/history/chapter1
their movements very well… Our people knew where the caribou would winter and where they would stop. It’s the same thing with migrating birds. Our people had a special place for them to eat. They understood the kind of land they needed, and that the...
Monday, May 31, 2010 So, how are you at reading animal tracks and hard-nose bargaining? The neat thing about the Trapping Game is that it involves a lot more than simply catching animals. First of all, you need to understand animal behaviour, learn how...
Chapter 4B - 1https://www.pathoftheelders.com/history/chapter4b-1
The Anishiinaabe and Mushkegowuk People's view of Treaty No. Nine Kashechewan Elder James Wesley remembered through stories that one of the Commissioners, "held up a bible in his hand to show the seriousness of their intentions" (Long 1989: 37). He...
Chapter 4A - 3https://www.pathoftheelders.com/history/chapter4a-3
The Anishiinaabe and Mushkegowuk People's view of Treaty No. Nine To summarize, our people knew that more and more non-aboriginal peoples were coming into our lands. At times we came across them in the bush while we were hunting and trapping. Our...