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travel / travel magazine / march 2008

Live & Learn

Weekend voyageurs (page 3)

As for the women at South Branch House, Meyer could only tell us that there were five or six of them. One was the Assiniboine wife of the post manager (killed with her two youngest children) and two of the others were Cree. The women who were abducted likely shared in the fate that befell the entire Gros Ventre nation: starvation, sickness, and an eventual straggling retreat south from the Saskatchewan to the Missouri.



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BATOCHE AND BEYOND
Getting there Batoche National Historic Site is roughly halfway between Saskatoon and Prince Albert. Take Highway 11 - the Louis Riel Trail - northeast out of Saskatoon, turn east onto road 312, then north onto road 225. You can drive to the site of South Branch House on the unpaved road 782.

Staying there For infomation about hotels and B&Bs in the Saskatoon area, go to www.tourismsaskatoon.com and click on accommodation.

Playing there Batoche National Historic Site includes a visitor centre, with a museum and multimedia show, as well as a restored church, rectory and battle grounds. It is open from May 8 to Sept. 30. For information, phone (306) 423-6227 or visit pc.gc.ca/batoche.

For information about canoe tours on the South Saskatchewan River, contact Cliff Speer of CanoeSki Discovery Company at (306) 653-5693 or visit www.canoeski.com.

LIFE IS EASIER ON a full stomach, and Speer pulls out all the stops to make sure that his voyageurs are happy campers. Dinner surpasses even its advance billing, with cabbage salad, two kinds of stew, and the juiciest, flakiest berry pie I've ever tasted. Yet even after we've eaten and all the dishes are washed, I still find myself troubled by what I've learned. Everyone else seems to be doing fine. "I don't get into this stuff the way you do,” a fellow paddler says. But it occurs to me that there might be at least one member of the CanoeSki team who understands how I feel.

Bonnie Hamilton had first caught my eye earlier in the day with her elegant paddling technique. Then at dinner time, she had cooked up a batch of fried bannock - toasty and brown despite a shortage of dry wood - to complement the baked variety that she had made earlier and brought along. She was clearly at home on the water and in camp, but at South Branch House, she had become quiet, even withdrawn.

Just before bedtime, we sit together on a little rise overlooking the camp. It turns out that Hamilton knows the fur trade from beginning to end.

"I come from one of the last few families that was raised on the land” in northern Saskatchewan, she says. "The Lower Foster - that's the map sheet for where I grew up.” The descendant of a long line of trappers and traders, she speaks with the authority of experience.

"The fur trade for me isn't a romantic, fiddle-playing-inthe- fort kind of thing,” she says. "I think of it as work, turmoil, displacement. Rapid change. It brought technology to aboriginal people that made their lives easier, but at a great cost.”

On June 24, 1794, that cost was paid in lives. Immediately after torching South Branch House, the Gros Ventre party pressed its desperate attack against a neighbouring North West Company fort. Five Gros Ventre warriors died and nine others were wounded, bringing the casualty list on that horrific day to 20. As for the fur traders, the HBC and the Northwesters both abandoned their South Branch posts and retreated upriver to Nipawin, never to return.

As Hamilton and I say our goodnights and walk down to our tents, I untie the sash from around my waist and carefully fold it. After the visit to South Branch House and everything I've learned while playing voyageur, I have a newfound respect for the hardships and sacrifices endured by those affected by the conflicts of the fur trade era.


Saskatoon-based writer Candace Savage is the author of more than two dozen books including, mostly recently, Prairie: a Natural History and Crows: Encounters with the Wise Guys of the Avian World. Photographer Courtney Milne is based in Grandora, Sask.

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