NSRVCS News - September 18, 2020

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River lots a history of the Métis and their kinship networks
As the area’s fur trade was winding down, farming began to take on greater importance in the lives of the people around Fort Edmonton. Many began staking claims to land in the Fort’s immediate vicinity, farming in a river lot fashion. A staple of Métis culture, this style of farming allowed for access to the river, wooded areas, cultivated land, and provided space for hay lands.
 
A government approved survey in 1882 formalized the division of the land in terms of a river lot pattern, which is what the predominantly Métis population in the area at the time desired. The survey created 44 large lots across the banks of the North Saskatchewan, most of which stretched east of the Hudson’s Bay Company reserve lands. In many ways, the early history of these river lots is a history of the Métis and their kinship networks, marriage between the area’s families was common, as were friendship and support systems.
 
One the south side, several river lot owners homesteaded on land by agreements made with the Papaschase Cree. Joseph McDonald traded a gun and with some other considerations, concluded this arrangement with the band. A similar understanding allowed Laurent Garneau to settle his nearby river lot number 7, from present day 112 to 109 St. The relationship between the Garneau family and Chief Papaschase was close. In 1885, when Garneau was imprisoned for his previous involvements with Louis Riel, Papaschase personally took care of Garneau’s family. 
 
By the turn of the twentieth century, river lots around present day Old Strathcona began to become urbanized. River Lot 5 became the initial land grant for the University of Alberta, purchased in 1907 from Annie Simpson and her daughter. River Lot 3, immediately west, was sold to a land development syndicate and became the Windsor Park neighborhood. Learn more at https://citymuseumedmonton.ca/2020/09/09/edmontons-river-lots-a-layer-in-our-history/

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River valley residents alarmed by use of toxic pesticide
Residents in Edmonton’s Riverdale community are concerned about use of a toxic pesticide in the river valley to kill noxious weeds. TransEd, the group responsible for the Valley Line Southwest LRT construction, is spraying the product Trillion on either side of the river inside fenced worksites by the Tawatinâ Bridge.
 
Area resident Kristine Kowalchuk said she was shocked to find out a toxic pesticide was being sprayed so close to the river, with the chance of it drifting into the water and causing harm to wildlife. She was even more alarmed to find that two of the chemicals in Trillion have contentious pasts. The chemical 2,4-D, which makes up 31 per cent of Trillion, was declared possibly carcinogenic to humans by the World Health Organization in 2015. Dicamba, accounting for four per cent, was banned in the United States this summer.
 
Elisabeth Beaubien, a botanist who works at the University of Alberta, said using pesticides to get rid of noxious weeds is not always the best solution. Even when sprayed with care, they can kill other plants in the area or have an impact on local wildlife. Read more at https://edmontonjournal.com/news/local-news/river-valley-residents-concerned-about-pesticide-use-to-remove-poison-ivy

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Join socially distance river valley trail walk
Join the River Valley Alliance on September 26 for a walk through Gold Bar Park across the river to Rundle Park to discover your river valley. The walk is around 6 km and should take about 2 hours to complete. The path is mostly flat, wide, and paved, and is accessible for strollers and wheelchairs.
 
The walk will begin at the parking lot for Gold Bar Park and walk along the river to the Ainsworth Dyer Footbridge. After crossing the bridge, the walk continues through Rundle Park, where you will enjoy the sight of autumn leaves, the flowing river, and the Rundle ponds. After reaching the Rundle footbridge, participants will turn around and return to Gold Bar Park.
 
Though the event is free, registration is required. More information and registration at https://www.eventbrite.ca/e/trekthetrails-river-valley-alliance-monthly-trail-walk-tickets-120232415391 Newsletter sign up and contributions
Know someone who would enjoy receiving this weekly newsletter? You can sign up for this newsletter at https://www.edmontonrivervalley.org/
 
If you have a photo, news, an event, volunteer or employment opportunity involving Edmonton’s river valley and would like to see it in this newsletter, please email the material to nsrivervalley@gmail.com
 
Sincerely yours,
Harvey Voogd
North Saskatchewan River Valley Conservation Society
780.691.1712
nsrivervalley@gmail.com
https://www.facebook.com/NSRVCS/
http://www.edmontonrivervalley.org/

NSRVCS News - September 10, 2020

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Alberta's raccoon population has traditionally resided largely in the province's southeast. However, in recent years their territory has expanded to include central Alberta and Edmonton.
 
Raccoons have a highly developed sense of touch. They use water, not for washing, but to soften the tough bristles on the bottom of their paws. This makes the bristles better able to pick up and transmit information about the object the raccoon is handling.
 
Raccoons are omnivores that can easily adapt to whatever food sources are available. In the wild, they feed on fruits, nuts, berries and insects, and foods that can be found near water such as fish, birds, eggs, and frogs. Near human habitation, raccoons will eat garbage, chickens, compost, corn, bird seed or pet food.
 
Though nocturnal, raccoons may also roam in the day. They make their dens in culverts, attics, chimneys, outbuildings, tree hollows, barns, abandoned buildings or rock crevices. Like bears, raccoons spend the warmer months fattening up for winter dormancy. Though not true hibernators, raccoons still become inactive enough to lose up to 50% of their body weight.
 
Tips on living with raccoons at https://www.alberta.ca/raccoons.aspx#:~:text=Related%20Information-,About%20Raccoons,expanded%20to%20include%20central%20Alberta.&text=Though%20not%20true%20hibernators%2C%20raccoons,50%25%20of%20their%20body%20weight

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Hawrelak park named after mayor forced to leave office twice
At the centre of Edmonton’s river valley system sits William Hawrelak Park, an emerald oasis that plays host to ice castles and Shakespeare festivals, small family gatherings and the Edmonton Heritage Festival. 
 
What Edmontonians heading into the park may not be aware of is the namesake behind the park: an incredibly popular mayor who sat in the big chair for a dozen years between 1951 and 1975. He was also forced to leave the mayor’s seat two times, once resigning, and once being removed by the Supreme Court of Alberta. 
 
As mayor of Edmonton, Hawrelak was forced twice to leave office over questionable deals he made for his own profit, using his position as mayor to benefit himself. Both times, all the information was in the public domain, available to all Edmontonians and all of Hawrelak’s political challengers. 
 
Hawrelak died in office in November 1975, serving less than half of his three-year term. Thousands of people paid their respects as his body lay in council chambers. City council voted to change the name to William Hawrelak park in 1976. Learn more at https://citymuseumedmonton.ca/2020/08/19/mayor-william-hawrelak-resigned-removed-re-elected/

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Bears can eat horsetails, but horses cannot
Horsetail, also known as puzzle plant and scouring rush, is a living fossil. For over 100 million years, they dominated the understorey of late Paleozoic forests with some varieties growing as large as pine trees. In modern times most varieties only grow a few feet tall, although a stand of horsetail reaching 20 feet was discovered in Australia several years ago.
 
Horsetail regenerates soil health through depositing minerals onto surface soil. It can grow in the most unlikely places including waste areas, fields, open slopes, packed gravely soil and even through cement in sidewalks. Horsetail often emerges in places where topsoil is removed or disturbed, a remarkable expression of nature taking care of herself.
 
All varieties have hollow, jointed stems that can be easily pulled apart – hence the name puzzle plant. Scouring rush refers to the silica-rich stems that have been used to file stone, polish wood, and scour cookware. Knights were said to shine their armors with horsetail and Indigenous woodworkers used it to produce a smooth finish.
 
Medicinally it is a useful plant too. Of all known herbs, horsetail contains the highest amount of silica, important for healthy hair, skin, nails, and connective tissues throughout the body. Since ancient times horsetail has been used to heal wounds, treat urinary infections, and strengthen bones. Recipes and medicinal uses at http://wildfoodsandmedicines.com/horsetail/

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Celebrate and learn more about our river valley
The Edmonton River Valley Conservation Coalition annual fundraiser, Night Out on the North Saskatchewan, will happen online Saturday, September 19, 2020 from 7 to 8:30pm. Admission is free, though a financial donation is requested.
 
This fundraiser is an opportunity to celebrate and learn more about our beautiful North Saskatchewan River and Valley. The event will feature presentations from four incredible river valley experts: Michael Sullivan, Dr. Dwayne Donald, Christopher Smith, and Carolyn Buffalo.
 
Information and registration at https://www.eventbrite.ca/e/night-out-on-the-north-saskatchewan-2020-tickets-116179553171

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Newsletter sign up and contributions
Know someone who would enjoy receiving this weekly newsletter? You can sign up for this newsletter at https://www.edmontonrivervalley.org/
 
If you have a photo, news, an event, volunteer or employment opportunity involving Edmonton’s river valley and would like to see it in this newsletter, please email the material to nsrivervalley@gmail.com
 
Sincerely yours,
Harvey Voogd
North Saskatchewan River Valley Conservation Society
780.691.1712
nsrivervalley@gmail.com
https://www.facebook.com/NSRVCS/
http://www.edmontonrivervalley.org/

NSRVCS News - September 7, 2020

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Cougar a shy and occasional river valley wanderer
In Alberta, cougar sightings have been confirmed across the entire province, although they are most common in the mountain and foothill regions. In recent years, sightings in the prairie, parkland and boreal regions have become more frequent.
 
Cougars are adaptable and can survive in any location that provides them with cover and a food source, such as deer. They normally do not prefer open terrain, but cougars may use river valleys, ravines and other travel corridors that pass through open terrain
 
Though rare, cougars have been sighted in Edmonton’s river valley. A May 6 Reddit post describes seeing one on the north side of 98 Avenue as the person was driving up the big hill. “I have never seen a cougar before and I thought it was cool to see one in our river valley in Edmonton!” In October 2018, a cougar was spotted at the Terwillegar dog park and in September 2015 a cougar was killed in a back yard near 107 Avenue/151 Street.
 
A healthy cougar population is an indication of a thriving local ecosystem. They are efficient hunters that prey on deer, elk, moose, sheep, and other mammals. They may also occasionally feed on domestic pets and livestock. They can be active any time of day but most often hunt at dusk, night, and dawn. Learn more about them and what to do if you meet one at https://www.albertaparks.ca/media/4477103/preventing_conflict_with_wildlife-cougars.pdf

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How our urban public spaces challenge and connect us
North Saskatchewan River Valley Conservation Society board member, Dr. Raquel Feroe was featured in a recent article in the National Post. She wrote “Now that I’m older, my days often start the same way — a walk in Edmonton’s Dawson Park with both my two-footed and four-footed housemates.”
 
“People ask if I get bored going to the same park every day. To which I answer: Does life get richer with time? Can relationships grow? People can be in good relationships with the land and learn how to be in better relationships with each other by just being in a park. I am left wondering if urban parks could become a model for how we could shift to a new view of prosperity, too.”
 
“One that: Better respects nature and people; Offers more blue and green ‘infrastructure’ such as modeled by beaver; Creates opportunities for more park attendants, park ambassadors and interpreters; Gives priority to people power (labour) instead of carbon (two-stroke engines); and Stops the war on weeds and embraces coexisting in the right relationship with nature.”
 
“I am going to keep thinking about this possibility and what it might look like. I am going to think more about the question: What is a park?” Read more at https://nationalpost.com/news/canada/a-day-in-the-park-how-our-urban-public-spaces-challenge-and-connect-us

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Raspberry one of river valley’s wild resources
Raspberry is the edible fruit of a multitude of plant species in the rose family. They are perennial with woody stems. Various kinds of raspberries are cultivated around the world from hardiness zones 3 to 9 and can also be found in Edmonton’s river valley. Rubus idaeus, the wild raspberry native to Alberta, bears fewer and smaller fruits but they are of exceptional taste.
 
Raspberries propagate using extended underground shoots that develop roots and individual plants. They can sucker new canes some distance from the main plant. For this reason, raspberries spread well, and can take over gardens if left unchecked. They are often propagated using cuttings and will root readily in moist soil conditions.
 
Raspberries should not be planted where potatoes, tomatoes, peppers, eggplants, or bulbs have previously been grown. These crops are hosts for the disease verticillium wilt, a fungus that can stay in the soil for many years and can infest the raspberry crop. Raspberries in Alberta fact sheet at https://www1.agric.gov.ab.ca/$department/deptdocs.nsf/all/agdex817/$file/237_20-1.pdf Share river valley event, job posting, or news
If you have a river valley event, job posting, or news that you would like to see published in this newsletter, please send the info to nsrivervalley@gmail.com
 
Sincerely yours,
Harvey Voogd
North Saskatchewan River Valley Conservation Society
780.691.1712
nsrivervalley@gmail.com
https://www.facebook.com/NSRVCS/
http://www.edmontonrivervalley.org/