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Guide to Indian Country
- June, 2000
Cultural ecotourism
- Ktunaxa style
Take in Alberta's southwest
Powwow - a healing experience
The do's and don'ts of powwow
Powwow etiquette
dictates respect for tradition
Painter believes "art
is us"
Experience the people
of a time long ago
Generations recorded
Can't travel? Try Native film
Summer solstice celebrated
in far North
Law student crowned
Miss Indian World
Escape to nature
Gathering of Nations
powwow biggest yet
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WINDSPEAKER'S ABORIGINAL TOURISM SUPPLEMENT
Phone: (780) 455-2700 Fax
(780) 455-7639
Email: edwind@ammsa.com
Take in Alberta's southwest
By Shari Narine
Windspeaker Contributor
Travelling south along Hwy 2 from Calgary takes you almost
into the heart of Indian country.
About an hour and a half outside of Calgary, turn west at Buffalo
Junction and you're on your way to the UNESCO-World Heritage
Site of Head-Smashed-In Buffalo Jump.
All interpreters at the centre are Native, from either the nearby
Peigan or Blood reserves, which adds an interesting and unique
perspective to the commentary. Walter Crowshoe, who's co-ordinator
and supervisor for the interpretive guides and a Peigan, points
out that people from around the world come to Head-Smashed-In
to not only hear the tales of the Natives who once, along with
the buffalo, roamed the open plains, but also to meet Native
people.
"It's definitely one of our drawing points," said Shirley
Bruised Head, education officer.
Buffalo Days Pow Wow and Tipi Village from July 21 to 23 attracts
both participants and visitors from across North America and
Europe. As many as 250 dancers participate in children, youth,
teen, adult, and senior powwow categories. There are usually
seven drum groups. This powwow is heavily attended by tourists
because it is accessible - and visible.
"We're a world renown interpretive centre," said Bruised
Head. "That helps to attract visitors."
There are four tipis available for rent between April and October
at the interpretive centre.
"They're usually very popular during the time of the powwow,"
said Bruised Head. "People just want to experience sleeping
in a tipi."
Tipis sleep up to 10 comfortably, with a charge of $50 per night
for an occupancy of six. Additional people are charged extra.
Dancing and drumming demonstrations are held in the early afternoon
on Wednesdays throughout the month of August. Dancers and drummers
come from the Blood and Peigan reserves. Interpretation is provided,
explaining each dance.
Head back to Hwy 2, exit on Hwy 3 west and you will travel deeper
into Indian country.
Indian Days are celebrated on the Peigan reserve on Aug. 4 to
6.
"It was the first Indian Days ever in Canada," said
this year's committee chair, Brian Jackson. This year marks the
42nd celebration. Originally begun as a traditional gathering
for ceremonial uses and an opportunity to meet with family, the
celebrations have taken on a new meaning over the years - although
still a celebration of Native ways.
The powwow, which attracts dancers from all over North America
and as far away as Arizona and the Yukon has in excess of $38,000
in total prize money.
Another attraction is the second annual stick game tournament,
which this year has had the purse raised to $25,000 from $5,000.
The rodeo, sanctioned by the Indian Cowboy Rodeo Association,
attracts Native cowboys from all over Alberta, Montana and the
northwest United States. The purse here is as high as $25,000.
The first ever youth rodeo will be held this summer with total
winnings of $5,000 offered. The rodeo is a popular one on the
powwow circuit, said Jackson, noting that the przie money is
better than most and even higher this year.
A little further west and a couple of weeks later, is the Pincher
Creek Fair and Rodeo. Held Aug. 18 to 20, the fair has been getting
more and more of an Indian presence.
"Napi [Friendship Centre] has been fundraising and the prize
money for the Native component of the parade has enhanced the
number of floats from the reserve," said Quinton Crowshoe,
program co-ordinator with the friendship centre.
The friendship centre is also involved with the "cultural
component" of the fair, which sees a tipi village erected
on the grounds. Six to seven tipis are set up; all tipis must
be painted and their owners must be able to interpret the symbols.
They're opened for public viewing and tipi residents are encouraged
to do beading, crafts or tell stories for visitors, said Crowshoe.
Four of the six tipis are open at all times during the weekend.
Also a growing part of the fair is a Native show, whether dance
theatre, story telling or a dance troupe.
"We'll be doing dancing this year because it's so popular,"
said Crowshoe. "We get local dancers involved because we
firmly believe this is Blackfoot territory and we want to promote
our dances, our culture."
Dances are held twice daily, but not during rodeo competition.
A softball tournament will also take place during the fair. Held
for the first time last year only for fun, prize money this year
will heat up the competition.
In the other direction, heading east on Hwy 3 at the junction
of Hwy 2, Fort Macleod offers some entertainment. While there
is nothing new this summer season at the Fort Museum, the First
Nation's Art of Adornment, a permanent exhibit, is a popular
one. It follows Native dress from pre-contact with the white
man to the 1950s, said executive director Ron Ulrich.
"It's the most popular exhibit," he said. "Partly
because of its presentation and also because people have a genuine
interest in various forms of adornment First Nations people use.
People are familiar with it."
The evolution of Native dress is obvious. From pre-contact days
when Native people would tan leather (buffalo, deer, or caribou)
and adorn with shells and sinew to contact with the white man,
when dress included flannels and cottons and the introduction
of beadwork.
"The beadwork changed and became sophisticated," said
Ulrich. "The 1900s and on saw highly elaborate work done
- and sold."
Continuing east on Hwy 3 and then connecting back with Hwy 2,
but this time heading south, the Kainai Powwow, Fair and Rodeo
takes place on the Blood Reserve, July 14 to16. Dancers and drummers
come from all over Canada and the United States to take part
in the powwow competition, said Hank Shade, committee chair.
The Indian Cowboy Rodeo Association sanctioned rodeo attracts
Native cowboys from all over Canada and the U.S. as well. Rodeo
competition includes youth (July 12) and old timers, too.
A midway comes in for an added attraction for the fair.
Returning to Hwy 3 and heading east again, a stop in Lethbridge
is warranted.
Fort Whoop-Up provides some insight into Indian Country. Two
of the Fort's six interpreters are Native, which is a big hit
with visitors, said executive director Richard Shockley. Tours
are given on a daily basis throughout the summer and it's more
realistic, said Shockley, when the guide talking about tipis
and the Blackfoot side of trade is Blackfoot himself.
Wild West Weekend, held Aug. 12 and 13 at Fort Whoop-Up, is into
its fourth year, expanded from its one day version. Intially
with a couple of hundred people attending, the show has had an
amazing increase in attendance with 500 to 600 people taking
it in each day.
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