NSRVCS News - September 16, 2021

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Yellowjackets and wasps here until the first frost
While the hot, dry summer meant fewer pests like mosquitoes in Edmonton, it has created ideal conditions for the worst year for wasps and yellowjackets the city has ever seen. The city does not have exact data on how many of the pests the region sees each year, but pest management coordinator Mike Jenkins says no one can remember a season with more calls to deal with nests on city property.

Most wasp species in the Edmonton area do not construct paper nests and generally do not or cannot sting. Yellowjackets can sting multiple times and are attracted to meats and sweet beverages. They may be inside empty pop cans, poking around in poorly tied garbage bags or in the immediate proximity of fruit trees, especially in the fall.

The peak for these pests is usually mid to late August but expect the populations to continue to grow until at least the first frost. Read more at https://www.edmonton.ca/programs_services/pests/yellowjacket-wasps

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Edmonton has one of the world’s last stands of healthy elms
Rows of stately elm trees once proudly lined boulevards across North America. Then, in 1930, a furniture company in Cleveland imported elm logs from England infected with a pathogen known as Dutch elm disease. Millions of elm trees have fallen to the disease, stripping cities of their presence across the continent.

Alberta has almost completely succeeded in keeping out the disease. Efforts led by the Society to Prevent Dutch Elm Disease (STOPDED) mean that the province today counts about 600,000 healthy American elms. Edmonton alone boasts about 80,000 elm trees.

But elm bark beetles, which carry the disease, have been found in our province since 1994. In other areas, disease arrived 3 to 7 years later, which is why the City of Edmonton has invested in a preventative strategy to protect one of the world's last stands of healthy elms.

Be on the lookout for these symptoms of Dutch elm disease: drooping and yellowing leaves in summer, branches with smaller leaves than rest of the tree, branches with no leaves, and brown wilted leaves that remain on the tree. If you suspect disease on any public or private elm tree, please call 311 or email treebugs@edmonton.ca Learn more at https://www.edmonton.ca/programs_services/pests/dutch-elm-disease

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Chinese market gardens part of river valley history
In an early map of Fort Edmonton, twice the land is given to cultivation as to all the first four buildings combined. An 1872 traveller remarked that “the same land has been used for the farm for thirty years, without any manure worth speaking of being put on,” which suggests the fertility of the loamy soil.

A series of Chinese gardeners leased land from the J.B. Little Brickworks, north of Riverdale School between 88 and 92 Streets at 101 Avenue. Yet You is remembered for adding gates to the fences for children to walk past “row upon row of lovely cabbages, radishes, lettuce, corn and carrots” as a shortcut to the school.

By 1935, there were fifteen Chinese gardens “strung out along the North Saskatchewan River valley from Beverly in the east to Government House in the west.” An Edmonton Journal commentator enthused about “a veritable Chinese tapestry worked out in rectangles of harmonious greens, sea green, sage green, olive green, and the delicate apple green of lettuce beds.”

Chin Lock’s gardens were on the former site of John Walter’s lumber business. Jung Suey and Gee Gut cultivated the riverfront now occupied by Kinsmen Park. Hong Lee developed Groat Flats until the expansion of Victoria Golf Course and the Groat Bridge.

Hop Sing and another man, remembered as extremely hard workers, operated a huge market garden before and during the war that spanned over six city blocks in Belgravia. Previously, these fields may have served as a Depression relief garden, because the Edmonton Journal reports 35 acres in five communities, 15 acres in Belgravia, cultivated by “work parties of men on relief” in 1933. Read more at https://citymuseumedmonton.ca/2021/07/13/early-market-gardens-in-edmonton/

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Thanks for the newsletter
Andrew writes “As always, I'm enjoying the newsletter this morning very much. Thank you for these well written and fascinating treasures.”

Comment on photo
Burns says “I read each of your emails every time you send one. Thank you for that. I thought the picture in your last one was of four Yellow Jackets gathered together. I know there are many wild bees, but I’m not sure about the insects in the picture.”

Editor - Yes those were Yellowjackets. Photo was confusing as it followed a story on bees collecting pollen from Manitoba Maples.

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Comment or contribution
If you have a comment, concern, or question, contact us at nsrivervalley@gmail.com Please also email us river valley photos or event information. Your friends, neighbours and colleagues can sign up for this newsletter on our web site.

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

NSRVCS Newsletter - September 9, 2021

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Cat-faced spider helps balance bug populations, especially mosquitoes
Some think the biggest, scariest looking spider in Edmonton is the Jewel or cat-faced spider. These spiders are orb weavers that appear in late summer and spin large, circular webs seemingly overnight. While many people believe most spiders spin webs, the opposite is true. Webs are very visible, so orb weavers get all the press.

You may find them near porch lights and windows on buildings. These higher traffic areas tend to have more flying insects and often have safe places for egg sacs. This spider is harmless to humans, biting only if their life is threatened, but their bite is very mild. They are not passive to mosquitoes however, and on high skeeter years their webs spring up everywhere. Celebrate every web you see, because Jewel spiders can eat their own weight in bloodsuckers every day.

Cat-faced spiders do have many natural predators. The weirdest predator might be the black and yellow mud dauber wasp. These wasps will sting cat-faced spiders and then use them as part of their construction materials while building their mud nests. Learn more at https://salisburygreenhouse.com/cat-faced-spider/

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Edmonton ward Sspomitapi honours the Buffalo Old Man meteorite
Sspomitapi means star person in Blackfoot. This ward name is given in honour of the Buffalo Old Man meteorite that was located within Blackfoot territory. They permitted all tribes to share and perform ceremonies before the meteorite was taken away in 1866.

Methodist missionary George McDougall felt the stone hampered his ability to convert Indigenous people to Christianity. So, he stole it and moved it to his churchyard near Smoky Lake. It sat there for nearly 10 years before he donated it to his alma mater Victoria Methodist College. For almost a century, it remained in Victoria College, which became part of the University of Toronto.

Studies determined the 145-kilogram rock was more than four billion years old. It returned to Alberta in 1972 when the UofT loaned it to the Royal Alberta Museum, and it was renamed the Manitou Stone. In 2002, the UofT transferred stewardship of the stone to the museum.

In Blackfoot cosmology, the sun is the father, and the moon is the mother. There are many stories acknowledging the sky beings which include the stars. Sspomitapi was sent to earth by the creator for the Blackfoot and the bison to have a reciprocal relationship. It is also brought sacred teaching which are still used today. Watch video at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cmUhuqbGIJY

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Learn more about YEG wildlife in less than 2 minutes
A coyote eats around 1,800 mice a year. Additionally, they eat various types of different dead animals that they come across. They provide a cleaning service as they remove these dead animals form the city.

Canada geese can nest in all sorts of different areas. Under the Migratory Birds Convention Act these are federally protected birds, and it is illegal to touch a nest or move their eggs. Watch video at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dz8QGgKb-TI

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Renaming is not a new practice in Edmonton
Renaming in Edmonton is far from new. Instances that may be well known to Edmontonians are Mayfair Park being renamed Hawrelak Park, or city roads being renamed in recognition of Edmonton Oilers hockey players, part of St. Albert Trail is now called Mark Messier Trail and Capilano Road now bears the name Wayne Gretzky Drive.

While Indigenous place names have long been a part of Edmonton history, the word Saskatchewan derives from the Cree word Kisiskatchewanisipi which means swift-flowing river, renaming has occurred in recent decades, such as replacing the city’s numerical ward designations with Indigenous names, to reflect a renewed appreciation and recognition of local Indigenous communities and history.

This part of history was long sidelined by the settler society that held control of naming places at the official level. Much of the place-naming in Edmonton’s early urban history was the product of its British associations, which certainly reflected the sentiments of the city’s political leadership at the time.

Renaming has occurred for a variety of reasons and with differing motivations. People refer to Edmonton as The River City, The Festival City, and in a cheekier spirit, as Deadmonton. The nickname City of Champions still lingers, despite its formal removal in 2015. Read more at
https://citymuseumedmonton.ca/2021/08/24/place-renaming-in-edmonton-a-constant-in-the-citys-history/

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Manitoba Maple tolerates both flooding and drought
Patty writes “Though Manitoba maples are wind pollinated, their pollen is still collected by honeybees and possibly other bees, though I haven’t personally observed them, early in the season. It is an important source of nutrition because they bloom earlier than other flowers. They are usually full of bees around Mother’s Day! Here is a video link of a Manitoba Maple buzzing with bees https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=781607836048419&ref=sharing

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Comment or contribution
If you have a comment, concern, or question, contact us at nsrivervalley@gmail.com Please also email us river valley photos or event information. Your friends, neighbours and colleagues can sign up for this newsletter on our web site.

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

NSRVCS Newsletter - September 2, 2021

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Edmonton concerned about coal mining impact on watershed and ecosystem
Edmonton City Council accepted the recommendations of its Utility Committee that the mayor write a letter to the provincial government underscoring the potentially “serious impact of coal mining on our regional watershed and ecosystems.”

Other recommendations direct the city manager and Epcor to make a submission to a provincial coal policy committee, and direct city administration to report back on both the status of the North Saskatchewan River Regional Plan and the need for a formal watershed management plan.

Epcor’s assessment noted two relatively recent tailings dam failures, one at the Obed Mountain coal mine in Hinton in 2013 and another at the Mount Polley gold and copper mine near Quesnel, B.C. in 2014, that contaminated water with mine waste.

Epcor recommended that a precautionary approach be taken in any assessment of potential coal mining. “Despite advances in treatment technologies, exposing rock rich in selenium and other metals has been shown to affect water quality for decades in downstream water bodies,” the report notes. Mitigation and remediation is cost prohibitive and difficult.” Read more at https://thenarwhal.ca/edmonton-drinking-water-coal-mines-report/

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Manitoba Maple tolerates both flooding and drought
The native range of Manitoba maple is limited to the far eastern part of Alberta’s grasslands and aspen parkland as far north as the Battle River. However, the species is remarkably adaptable, and has thrived when planted in many other parts of the province.

Manitoba maple is rare in that it can tolerate both flooding and droughts. It is also moderately salt tolerant and grows well in full sun or partial shade. Manitoba maple does not sucker but it can nevertheless spread quickly by seed into large, thick groves that persist for decades as the species is long lived as well as fast growing

Manitoba maple is wind pollinated, so it does not provide food for pollinators. However, many birds and squirrels feast on its characteristic and abundant ‘helicopter’ seeds. Manitoba maples can also be tapped for their sap in the early spring when temperatures are above freezing during the day and below freezing at night. This sap can be boiled down into a sweet syrup that tastes very similar to the syrup made from sugar maples in eastern Canada.

A famous Edmonton Manitoba maple was planted by Laurent and Eleanor Garneau at the rear of their home, to which they moved in 1874. The tree was on 111 Street just north of 90 Avenue and was removed for safety reasons in September 2017. Read more at https://www.edmonton.ca/city_government/edmonton_archives/emwalker-historic-trees

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City ward Karhiio honours Michel First Nation
Karhiio is Mohawk for tall, beautiful forest and this ward was given its name to honour Louis L'Iroquois and his son Michel Caliheue.

Louis, a Mohawk from Kahnawake, was hired by the Northwest Company in 1800 as a canoe man and later a steersman. ​Louis' son Michel was born in 1823 and became the first Chief of the Michel band and signed an adhesion to Treaty 6. The band resided in what is now known as Calahoo and consisted of families of Mohawk, Cree, and Metis descent.

Michel First Nation was enfranchised in 1958. Enfranchisement is a process for terminating a person’s Indian status. This process was part of the Government of Canada’s plan to assimilate Indigenous people. Michel Band was the only one in Canada to be enfranchised during the twentieth century.

Since 1988, Michel First Nation is governed by an elected Chief and Council and has 750 status members. In the absence of band status, the Friends of Michel Society was formed to provide a legal entity. Watch a video at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RL6i5L_8gWI

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Bark cut off at the base of a beautiful birch tree
Trudy writes “I’ve been noticing a large, beautiful birch tree along the path behind Mayfair golf in Edmonton that someone is cutting the bark off at the base trying to kill the tree and have cut a lot more off lately. I’m wondering who would benefit from this and how do we stop or protect the trees?”

Thanks
Brian says “Thanks for the well researched and insightful articles. I always enjoy reading your river valley news.”

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Comment or contribution
If you have a comment, concern, or question, contact us at nsrivervalley@gmail.com Please also email us river valley photos or event information. Your friends, neighbours and colleagues can sign up for this newsletter on our web site.

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