Bringing back dugout canoe culture, starting with students
Around 500 students in West Kelowna and Kamloops were carving traditional dugout canoes at school — now their carving teachers are finishing the job.
Around 500 students in West Kelowna and Kamloops were carving traditional dugout canoes at school — now their carving teachers are finishing the job.
Rylie ‘Coyote’ Marchand is a force to be reckoned with. The 18-year-old from the Okanagan…
“It’s a memorandum of understand, it’s not the end, it’s the beginning.”
The Haida Nation and province of British Columbia have reached a logging agreement on the…
Pandemic highlights need to ensure better data is collected and shared
‘This lack of proper consultation and secrecy means the governments are acting in bad faith’
Indigenous companies in Alberta, Saskatchewan and British Columbia are starting to sign up to get…
“It’s a teaching time.” This is something that Rob Edwards, an elder from Lower Similkameen…
How do you say “the zoom video call is frozen,” in Nsyilxcən? This is something…