NSRVCS Newsletter - July 15, 2021

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Hicks has something for everyone
Hicks Conservation Land is in the Beaver Hills UNESCO Biosphere Reserve and Prairie Pothole region, which contains numerous wetlands and aspen forest, and provides critical habitat for wildlife. Edmonton & Area Land Trust jointly owns this land with the Nature Conservancy of Canada.

Hicks contains a diverse array of plant life and is home to species such as coyotes, elk, moose, beaver and several species of woodpecker, waterfowl, and great horned owl. Historically, the Beaver Hills region’s dense forests, open plains, and lakes offered many resources for different Indigenous Nations to replenish their stores through hunting, gathering, and fishing. It was particularly known for the abundance of beavers.

Do you plan on trying to identify plants and animals while exploring? Consider helping EALT with some citizen science. There are lots of easy ways to share your finds with their conservation team and your input is greatly valued! Hicks is 149 acres, located in Strathcona County and a 40km drive from central Edmonton. Directions, parking, trails, and visitor guidelines at https://www.ealt.ca/hicks

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How is your vegetable garden looking
The river valley is a lush green and vegetables are growing throughout Edmonton in farms along the river, backyards and front yards, boulevards, and containers. Will your harvest match these vegetables from Donald Ross’ 1902 garden?

The photo was taken by Charles Mathers, one of Edmonton’s remarkable pioneer photographers. He purchased the city’s first photo studio, which had opened in 1891 at 9666 Jasper Avenue, in February 1893. Mathers built his early reputation taking photos of working-class citizens, like gold miners panning on the banks of the North Saskatchewan River.

Photography and Edmonton took their early steps together, and as the days of the fur-trading fort were coming to an end, the very first cameras were arriving on the frontier. By the mid-1880s, a handful of intrepid pioneer photographers were working out of Edmonton, amassing a remarkable visual historical record of the people and the places where they lived and worked.

Learn more about Mathers and Edmonton’s other photography pioneers, Ernest Brown, and Gladys Reeves, at https://citymuseumedmonton.ca/2014/08/21/edmontons-pioneer-photographers/

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Tennessee Warbler a caterpillar and spruce budworm connoisseur
These are dainty, thin-billed warblers that breed in the boreal forest of Canada, including Edmonton & Area. Though they lack the brilliant colors of other warbler species, breeding males are a crisp mixture of gray head, white stripe over the eye, and green back. Females and nonbreeders can look more generally yellowish, but they always show white under the tail.

This numerous species eats mostly small caterpillars and benefits from the spruce budworm outbreaks that happen periodically in their breeding habitat. Despite breeding no closer to the state of Tennessee than northern Michigan, 600 miles away, the Tennessee Warbler was given its name by Alexander Wilson based on a bird he encountered in Tennessee during its migration.

The oldest recorded Tennessee Warbler was 4 years, 7 months old when it was recaptured and released at a banding station in the West Indies. It was originally banded in Pennsylvania. More information at https://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Tennessee_Warbler/overview

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Should Edmonton build on its flood plain
In 1825 and 1830 severe spring high water covered the flood plain around Fort Edmonton, convincing the Hudson Bay Company to move the fort from Rossdale Flats to its final location up on the riverbank, just below where the Alberta legislature buildings are today.

In June 1915, the most destructive flood in modern times inundated the flood plain. The river rose 3 metres (10 feet) in 10 hours. It demolished the river valley communities of Walterdale, Rossdale, Cloverdale and Riverdale. At least 50 homes were swept away and 500 more were partly or completely submerged. Upwards of 2,000 people were homeless and 35 blocks were under water. This all happened in one day.

There is a general perception that extreme flood risk of the North Saskatchewan River has been reduced, because of the Brazeau and Bighorn dams, upstream of Edmonton. This is not the case, for at least two reasons. First, neither dam was designed to hold back flood water. Once each dam is filled in the spring, excess water from subsequent rain events must be released, or risk comprising the dam structure.

Secondly, four major river systems; Ram, Baptiste, Clearwater, and Nordegg Rivers, plus a myriad of creeks and streams flow into the North Saskatchewan River below the dams and upstream of the City of Edmonton.

Text and information for this piece from Living in the Shed by Billie Milholland https://billiemilholland.ca/

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North Saskatchewan River water
Ray writes “Some years ago, research scientists from UofA and UofSask. served on a panel with other water users, local industries that discharge into the river and the city and produced a study of the North Sask. River upstream, through the city and downstream. We learned that one of the biggest contributors to pollution was the city itself from sewers and water treatment.

But there were other serious industrial polluters. We took measurements all along the river and particularly at downstream of pollution sources. As is usual, after a one-time baseline study, the city and province never followed up with a second recommended study. You might reference this study and suggest a follow up. But I can't guide you to it.

When I was asked to serve on the committee, I discovered that there were no independent water scientists on the committee. In short, it was a bit of a setup by industry to control the outcomes and reporting. I was able to encourage the involvement of the two water scientists. And they made a huge difference as to how the study would be done.”

Fishing
Karin says “Please don't promote fishing. Fishing is another form of hunting and in this case worse because people shouldn't consume the animals they catch. Fishing for sport is essentially torturing animals for a pass time and teaches children to disregard the feelings of others and disregard animal suffering for the sake of a leisure activity. Pulling a fish out of water is like holding our head under water, it is suffocation and causes great distress.”

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The $24 million river valley funicular closed during the heat wave and will stay closed whenever the temperature is 30C or higher. Extreme weather on both sides of the spectrum closes the funicular. It did not operate during Edmonton’s cold snap in January 2020 either.

River valley concern or contribution
If you have a river valley concern or question, contact us at nsrivervalley@gmail.com
Your friends and neighbours can sign up for this newsletter on our web site.
If you have a photo, information, or event about Edmonton’s river valley and think it should be in this newsletter, email it to us.

Sincerely yours,
Harvey Voogd
North Saskatchewan River Valley Conservation Society
780.691.1712

NSRVCS Newsletter - July 8, 2021

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Province wants input on North Saskatchewan River water
Alberta’s minister of environment and parks, Jason Nixon, wants public input into a new framework for the North Saskatchewan River. The river is a critical natural resource serving many Alberta communities, as well as those at the Saskatchewan border and beyond. “Its clean and reliable flows are the source of drinking water for well over one million Albertans,” said Nixon.

The North Saskatchewan offers a healthy aquatic ecosystem, that is home to more than 25 fish species, which is almost half of all the native fish species in Alberta. Part of a larger regulatory system, Nixon says the framework will help manage development activity and protect water quality. You can give your feedback until September 17 at https://www.alberta.ca/north-saskatchewan-region-surface-water-quality-management-engagement.aspx

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Native flowers can beat the heat
During this heat wave have you been fretting about your plants? Native plants do not need much in the way of care because they have evolved to manage our extreme climate. They are also good for local wildlife which has evolved side-by-side with native plants to develop mutually beneficial relationships.

Here is a list of 10 plants native to the greater Edmonton area, as well as a radio interview with CBC Edmonton's summer garden columnist Tanara McLean https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/edmonton/native-flowers-can-beat-the-heat-in-your-edmonton-area-garden-1.6088610

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Fishing in the river valley
Fly fishing expert Philip Rowley says there is lots of fishing opportunities in Edmonton on the North Saskatchewan, which he says is "very underutilized, and has lots of shoreline access spots along the bridges that cross it."

"I call it box of chocolates fishing because there's walleye, pike, sauger, which is like a smaller walleye a little more with some different markings on it. You've got goldeye, mooneye, you've even got lake Sturgeon.”

Health Canada sets fish consumption guidelines based on the concentration of mercury in fish tissue and the human body's ability to eliminate mercury at a slow rate. The mercury in many areas of the province, including the North Saskatchewan River, is likely from natural sources.

You should not eat fish from the North Saskatchewan River more than once a week, and do not eat the liver or other organs. Pregnant women, women of child-bearing age, and children under the age of 15 should not consume the fish at all. More information at https://www.edmonton.ca/activities_parks_recreation/parks_rivervalley/fishing

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Noxious Weeds
Kevin says “Further to your comment about the city not referring to noxious weeds, when you click on the link you provided for the top 10 weeds and then click on any of the individual weeds you will see the provincial designation of noxious or prohibited noxious as per the Alberta Weed Control Act which is incorrectly hyperlinked and leads to a dead end.

The correct links to find noxious weeds are:
Provincially regulated weeds https://www.alberta.ca/provincially-regulated-weeds.aspx
Weed control act https://open.alberta.ca/publications/w05p1

Photo by Lu Carbyn

Photo by Lu Carbyn

River valley concern or contribution
If you have a river valley concern or question, contact us at nsrivervalley@gmail.com
Your friends and neighbours can sign up for this newsletter on our web site.
If you have a photo, information, or event about Edmonton’s river valley and think it should be in this newsletter, email it to us.

Sincerely yours,
Harvey Voogd
North Saskatchewan River Valley Conservation Society
780.691.1712

NSRVCS Newsletter - June 18, 2021

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Etiquette on how to share river valley trails
Have you ever wondered who has the right of way on the trails? Yes, there is etiquette that can make it safer for everyone sharing the trails. Trail etiquette is even more important when you are hiking in a group. Always hike single file, never taking up more than half the trail space, and stay on the trail itself.

The official rule is that people going uphill have the right of way. In general, hikers heading up an incline have a smaller field of vision. Since mountain bikes are considered more maneuverable than hikers’ legs, bikers are generally expected to yield to hikers on the trail.

Cyclists are required to have and use a bell. Park rangers can issue a $100 ticket to trail users who do not have one. Bike riders must sound their bell before passing slower trail users. Park rangers can issue a $250 ticket to trail users who fail to alert people ahead of them before passing.

Whether hiking, running, or biking yield to horses on the trail, since horses can have a harder time maneuvering the trail. Give the horses as wide a berth as possible and make sure not to make abrupt movements as they pass and talk calmly when approaching to avoid startling the animal. More information at https://rivervalley.ab.ca/news/trail-etiquette-how-to-share-the-trails/

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The racist legacy many birds carry
The birding community faces a difficult debate about the names of species connected to enslavers, supremacists, and grave robbers. The Bachman’s sparrow, Wallace’s fruit dove and other winged creatures bear the names of men who stole skulls from Indian graves for pseudoscientific studies that were later debunked and bought and sold Black people.

Even John James Audubon’s name is fraught in a racial reckoning. Long the most recognized figure in North American birding for his detailed drawings of the continent’s species, he was also an enslaver who mocked abolitionists working to free Black people. Some of his behavior is so shameful that the 116-year-old National Audubon Society, a premier bird conservation group, has not ruled out changing its name.

White explorers, conservationists and scientists who crossed the world conveniently ignored the fact that birds had been discovered, named, and observed by native people for centuries before their arrival.

“White people are credited for discovering the bird. White people were the ones to name the birds after other White people. And White people are still the folks that are perpetuating these names,” said Jordan Rutter, co-founder of Bird Names for Birds. Read more at https://www.washingtonpost.com/climate-environment/interactive/2021/bird-names-racism-audubon/

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Nakota Isga new name for city’s northwest ward
Ward 1’s new name honours the Alexis Nakota Sioux Nation, the furthest northwestern representative of the Siouan language family. Nakota Isga means the people, the respective English term is Stoney.

Archaeological findings suggest Siouan-speaking people may have been in Alberta's foothills before Columbus reached North America. The earliest written historical documents available indicate that Nakota people were well established along the Saskatchewan and Athabasca Rivers during the 1700s. Several fur trading posts were explicitly opened along the Saskatchewan and Athabasca Rivers to attract the trade of the "Swampy Ground Stone People".

According to Alexis' oral history, a long time ago a charismatic Nakota chief from the southeast followed his vision and led his people to the shores of the sacred lake Wakamne, God's Lake or Lac Ste Anne. The lake and the surrounding area are rich in natural resources and was used to supply Fort Edmonton with fish during the early fur trade. To this day, it remains a spiritual centre during the annual Lake Ste Anne pilgrimage.

In 1877, Chief Alexis signed the adhesion to Treaty Six on behalf of the Nakota of the North Saskatchewan, Pembina, and Athabasca River region. When the Alexis Reserve, No. 133, was surveyed in 1880, taking reserve at the shore of the sacred lake Wakamne was a logical choice for the Band. Learn about Alexis Nakota Sioux Nation at https://www.ansn.ca/

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Edmonton as arboretum, a botanical garden devoted to trees
Edmonton is a unique blend of indigenous and introduced species. As a sprawling city that contains eighteen-thousand acres of river valley, much of which is forested, Edmonton has some trees that may be as old as recorded history and could yet live for thousands of years, should we let them.

The youngest trees in the city are newcomers, horticultural experiments that may one day leave their mark on Edmonton’s landscape and history. Lilacs from Eastern Europe, cherries from Asia, and Lodgepole pines that colonized a barren landscape after the last ice age are fixtures on Edmonton’s landscape, plants around us that reflect a cultural heritage that spans millennia.

Trees and humans share the landscape and are coevolving a future character of this place. But our roles are uneven. It can take a hundred years to grow a tree and merely an afternoon to remove it. There is something incongruous about short-lived people removing three-hundred-year-old trees to make room for thirty-year developments.

Every tree has a story. Read three of those stories; the Red River Stowaway, Wild Goji, and A Trembling Giant on the south-end of Magrath Heights Park at
https://citymuseumedmonton.ca/2021/06/15/city-as-arboretum/?

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River valley concern or contribution
If you have a river valley concern or question, contact us at nsrivervalley@gmail.com
Your friends and neighbours can sign up for this newsletter on our web site.
If you have a photo, information, or event about Edmonton’s river valley and t`hink it should be in this newsletter, email it to us.

Sincerely yours,
Harvey Voogd
North Saskatchewan River Valley Conservation Society
780.691.1712