
Ancient clam gardens nourish the Mamalilikulla's past and future
By
Rochelle Baker
News
Island Insider
May 8th 2025
Share this article
Mamalilikulla Chief Winidi, or John Powell, helps restore an ancient clam garden — a traditional aquaculture system First Nations used to boost shellfish production. Photo by Rochelle Baker / Canada's National Observer
Keep climate a national priority
Goal: $150k
$22k
Listen to article
Mamalilikulla Chief Winidi, or John Powell, wiggles his pitchfork back and forth to loosen the sand and gravel along a remote stretch of beach in the Broughton Archipelago, sandwiched between Vancouver Island and the BC mainland.
As he churns over layers of sediment, a fistful of clams surface with a couple of disturbingly large, fiery red marine worms that flail hundreds of legs to rapidly burrow back into the sand.
"Look at all those worms. That's a good sign," Powell said.
"You see those a lot when you're digging. They seem to aerate the soil."
Powell's clam digging chops are based on personal experience.
As a young teen, armed with a pitchfork and Coleman lamp, Powell spent many icy winter nights, when tides were at their lowest, digging up clams for spending money.
'As a young kid, you could make $10 to $20 a night,' he said. 'In the 1960s and 70s, that was big money.'
A historical record of the nation's sustainable resource use, reviving clam gardens will increase Mamalilikulla's food security and ensure culture and traditional knowledge is passed down from elders to younger generations, says Chief John Powell.
However, this April, Powell's not working for pocket money. During the last zero tide of the clam season, Powell has joined more than a dozen people labouring to revitalize an ancient clam garden so it can continue sustaining the nation's culture, food security and climate resilience.
There's a multitude of loxiwe (clam gardens in the Kwak̕wala language) scattered across the Pacific coast, with upwards of a hundred concentrated in Mamalilikulla territory, spanning from Malcolm Island across the Broughton Archipelago and up Knight Inlet.
The basis for a clam garden is constructing a rock wall along the low-tide line on a sheltered bay or beach. Over time, as rising tides drop sediment inside the rock boundary, a level beach terrace forms, creating good habitat and shallower, warm water favourable for growing butter and little neck clams.
'There's a lot of these clam gardens all over our territory, but they need to be turned over in order for them to be prosperous,' Powell said.
A mix of Guardians, knowledge holders, and scientists supported by the Nanwakolas Council Ha-ma-yas Stewardship Network have spent three days digging up, or 'fluffing' the clam bed and lugging rocks and boulders across the tidal flat to refortify its wall, just as people have done for thousands of years.
These marine terraces can produce four times the number of butter clams, and more than double the quantity of littleneck clams compared to unmodified beaches. But to operate at their full potential, they require regular tending. Their care and use declined, however, as First Nation communities were decimated by disease and forced relocation due to colonization.
This particular clam garden terrace is immense: it's as deep as a soccer field at its widest points and stretches 800 metres along the shoreline. It will take repeated visits over a number of years before it is fully restored, Powell said.
A tangible historical record of the nation's sustainable resource use on the land, reviving clam gardens will increase Mamalilikulla's food security and ensure culture and traditional knowledge is passed down from elders to younger generations, he said.
'Next year, we're going to try to do something from an educational perspective and get some of our young people out to help with this kind of work, so that they can have that same connection to the land.'
A terrace this size would have fed a sizable population or village, he added, noting a series of house depressions have been identified on the same island.
Clam gardens provided critical winter food when wild weather prevented people from travelling great distances to harvest other provisions, Powell said.
'Clams are the potatoes of the Pacific Northwest coast. It's the food that's available all eight months of the year,' Powell said.
'A clam garden like this for a village is like a dining room table. They just go out and dig for their food.'
Taking a break from directing the dig, Mamalilikulla Guardian Watchmen manager Andy Puglas gives a large, fist-sized butter clam a quick crack on the boulder he's sitting on, opening up the shell to expose its insides to show younger crew members.
Puglas explains what parts to eat or remove, what time of year they are at their best, and how they should look when they are fresh. Butters, valued for the amount of meat they offer, are good for soup and fritters.
'I make a famous clam chowder,' Puglas said.
Identifying a smaller cockle, he notes that the harvesters liked to eat them raw on the spot.
Puglas said he and his brother, Hereditary Chief Tom Puglas, have been digging for the shellfish commercially and for 'home food' since their childhood. As young men, they learned about clam gardens thanks to elders. Puglas has helped other nations with ancient beach terraces, but he's long been eager to restore clam gardens in Mamalilikulla territory.
' Adam Dick and Daisy Smith showed us what these were and the proper name,' Puglas said.
' Loxiwe — means turning over, or rolling the rocks.'
'It's been over 25 years since they showed us, but this is the first time we've come onto one of these beaches and [done] this cleaning up.'
Before starting the restoration project, the team did a rapid shoreline survey to assess what clam species and marine life the terrace supports, said Gina Thomas, a resource manager and longtime Guardian for the Tlowitsis First Nation.
Butter clams, cockles, soft shell and macoma clams were the most abundant species identified within the survey quadrants, but horse clams and little neck clams were also dug up elsewhere on site, she said.
Repeating rapid surveys are 'snapshots' that allow researchers to track changes over time, she said.
Marrying the traditional mariculture techniques and western science means the restoration project will expand the knowledge base about how clam gardens might boost production and even create beneficial habitat for other species.
Since the rock walls of the terrace have been raised, the speed at which new sediment will be deposited can also be measured, she said.
Thomas prefers the term 'sea gardens' to describe the ancient beach terraces because the structures support a large variety of marine life and potential food sources.
Seaweed, eel grass, ghost shrimp, sand worms, anemones, crabs, small fish, chitons and massive and relatively-rare thatched barnacles were all spotted on site, she said.
'I'm making note of the barnacles because they aren't found everywhere,' Thomas said.
'But when they are, I usually find them in [shell] middens, so that tells you our people were eating them.'
Elsewhere, other harvested creatures like sea cucumbers, sea urchins and even octopus have also been found within the tidal structures.
Powell said his grandmother taught him how to harvest foods like clams or berries respectfully, working with, rather than against, nature.
'Our people were natural ecologists. They wouldn't dig [a clam garden] until it was barren,' he said.
Clam gardens reflect the law of Aweenak'ola, which means at one with the land, sea, sky and supernatural ones, said Powell.
'We depended on nature for our medicine, food and protection,' he said.
'It's our responsibility to house, nourish, conserve all forms of life in the environment so that they'll thrive, and we'll have something for tomorrow.'
His grandmother taught him to harvest the largest clams and leave plenty of smaller ones behind to ensure a consistent food supply.
He was also schooled to resist the biggest, best-looking berries on the bush when out picking.
'My grandmother used to say you don't take the one that attracts you, because when it falls, it has the greatest chance of making new berries,' Powell said.
'She used to say, like all good mothers, [bushes] hide their children under their skirt, so when you push the branches up, that's where all the berries are.'
Rochelle Baker/Local Journalism Initiative/Canada's National Observer
May 8th 2025
Rochelle Baker
Journalist
Keep reading
Mark Carney wasn't made for TV — thank goodness
By
Arno Kopecky
Analysis
May 7th 2025
First Nations take Alberta premier to task over separatist rhetoric
By
Natasha Bulowski
News
Politics
Ottawa Insider
May 8th 2025
Mining executive under fire for email to Indigenous leader
By
Sonal Gupta
News
Energy
Urban Indigenous Communities in Ottawa
May 7th 2025
Share this article
Share on Bluesky
Share on LinkedIn
Comments
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Global News
20 hours ago
- Global News
Lost for over a century, Heiltsuk Nation celebrates return of bentwood box
The Heiltsuk First Nation is celebrating the return of a precious piece of history, lost to their people for more than a century. The nation held a special reunification ceremony for the bentwood box last Friday that coincided with a feast to mark the ratification of their written constitution. 'I was very emotional,' said Christine Smith Martin, CEO of Coastal First Nations, who helped facilitate the return of the box from an American family to the Heiltsuk Nation. 2:03 Heiltsuk Nation ratifies new written constitution through celebratory feast 'We really want to tell art collectors or whoever may have boxes similar to this, the right thing to do is to bring it home, to make sure those boxes make it home if they can because its an important piece for us, there' s a lot of teachings on that box, there's a lot of things artists might not have seen yet.'' Story continues below advertisement Bentwood boxes were specialized, watertight containers fabricated from a single piece of cedar wood that has been steamed and curved, then fastened shut with wooden pegs. Elroy white, an archeologist, hereditary chief and elected councillor with the Heiltsuk, said they were used to carry trade goods up and down the coast, as well as for the storage of important items like instruments or regalia. They were also used to store and prepare food. He said the Heiltsuk became well known for their skill in crafting the boxes in the 1860s, after their population was decimated by smallpox and came together in a single community. Ethnographers who visited the community documented them and spread the word, and soon collectors and academics from around the world began seeking them out. Get breaking National news For news impacting Canada and around the world, sign up for breaking news alerts delivered directly to you when they happen. Sign up for breaking National newsletter Sign Up By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy 'That was their premise, that they were going to preserve this cultural way of these First Nations, they were called Indians back then,' he said. 'They were either sold or they were coerced from the owners.' The provenance of this particular box is unknown, Elwood said, save that it passed through collections and galleries before being purchased in Vancouver in 2020. He believes it was made some time in the 1880s, but said that when items pass through galleries their back history is typically not shared, and information like the artist who made them is lost. Story continues below advertisement That's when Janet and Dave Deisley, a couple from Salt Lake City, Utah, purchased it at the Douglas Reynolds Gallery on Granville Street. 2:11 Heiltsuk Nation celebrates 'powerful, emotional' return of historic chief's seat 'After Dave bought the box we had we had it in our home for a couple of years,' Janet Deisley told Global News. But the item never felt right in the couple's collection, and they decided to return it — free of charge — reaching out to Coastal First Nations for help in connecting it to the Heiltsuk. 'The community in which those artifacts were created is where they belong from a spiritual sense,' Dave Diesley said. 'I would imagine they felt what we felt when we had it in our office for that short time. You can feel. It's like a piece of an ancestor wanting to come home … you look at it and you see that history in there,' Martin said. Story continues below advertisement 'I would imagine they felt that yearning, because it's not just a box, there are spirits that are attached to it, there are ancestors that are attached to that.' Coastal First Nations accepted the box, but it stayed in their office for some time as they worked to arrange an appropriate return. White came to Vancouver to authenticate the box and work on the best way and time to get it home safely. 'I knew it would have no back history, but the important part was …. it was still important to the Heiltsuk,' he said. 'Elroy came down and did some ceremony in our office, and we had a talk to the box and let them know they are going home now. It's been a long journey as you can imagine, since the 1800s, since this box has been away from their territory.' 2:11 Heiltsuk Nation hold constitution ratification ceremony Last week, the box was honoured in the Heiltsuk big house in Bella Bella as a part of the constitution ceremonies, and members had the opportunity to get up close and see a piece of their lost history. Story continues below advertisement 'It was so heartfelt to see that, seeing the artists looking at it and sort of pointing out different things,' Martin said. For White, it is just one step in the ongoing process to repatriate Heiltsuk culture that was taken from the community and now resides in museums, galleries and private collections around the world. The nation has spent decades building a database of items and has identified 34 institutions around the world that house more than 1,000 Heiltsuk items. They've repatriated four items since 2022, including a historic chief's seat that was returned to the community last summer. It's work that White intends to continue, and that Martin hopes will have more success. 'I hope that we have many more of these boxes,' she said.


Toronto Star
a day ago
- Toronto Star
Saskatchewan lays charges in wildfires while Manitoba fires force 1,000 more to flee
Prairie wildfires developed on two fronts Friday as 1,000 more Manitoba residents were forced to flee their homes, while Saskatchewan's RCMP laid charges against alleged fire-starters. Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe told a news conference that two people have been charged with setting wildfires. He said one of them was charged in relation to a fire around La Ronge, which has forced 7,000 people to flee their homes. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW 'The RCMP have informed us that they have now charged a couple of individuals,' Moe said. RCMP did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Saskatchewan has 24 active wildfires that have forced between 10,000 and 15,000 people from their homes. 'Many if not virtually all of the fires that we're dealing with in Saskatchewan, although not intentionally, are human caused. Some of those have been intentionally human caused,' Moe said. The province, along with Manitoba, is under a state of emergency, making it easier for different levels of government to co-ordinate a response. Manitoba has received help from the military to evacuate residents, mainly in remote First Nations. Moe has faced calls from the Opposition NDP to follow suit. The premier said while his government is in daily contact with federal officials, provincial emergency crews have so far been able to get evacuees out. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW He said the Canadian Red Cross is also working to set up shelters for evacuees in Regina, Saskatoon and Prince Albert. In Manitoba, the town of Snow Lake, near Flin Flon, issued a mandatory evacuation order for its residents due to a large wildfire threatening the area. 'You must leave because of the danger to your health and safety,' reads a notice on the town's Facebook page. That fire, which has grown to more than 3,000 square kilometres, has already forced out all 5,000 residents of the city of Flin Flon and about a thousand more in surrounding cottages and homes. When the Snow Lake evacuees are added in, Manitoba has about 19,000 out of their homes. There are 27 total fires in the province, eight of them out of control. Earlier Friday, Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew said evacuees have found a place to stay with friends or family, in hotels or in congregate shelters. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW He said getting those evacuees into private accommodations is tricky because many hotel rooms are being reserved for people with 'intense' medical issues. 'We just have to do a balancing act,' Kinew said. 'At this point, the big-picture challenge around rooms has largely been addressed. 'It's now just about the daily balancing act of triaging people coming in and people who are already in shelters and matching them up with rooms.' There are shelters in Winnipeg, Thompson and Brandon. The City of Flin Flon, on social media, said that no structures have been lost in the city or in nearby Creighton, Sask. 'Winds in the area are now blowing from the south, resulting in heavy smoke and fire moving towards the south side of Flin Flon,' the city said in an update Friday. The city added that fire protection, including sprinklers, is set up and firefighters would work to protect property. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW Provincial fire officials said evacuations have been completed at First Nations at Pukatawagan and Cross Lake. In northern Alberta, approximately 1,300 residents of the town of Swan Hills were allowed to return to their homes Thursday, about a week after fleeing from a wildfire. But about 340 kilometres west in the County of Grande Prairie, people in the Municipal District of Opportunity were ordered out. — with files from Steve Lambert in Winnipeg This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 6, 2025.

Globe and Mail
a day ago
- Globe and Mail
Saskatchewan RCMP charge two in wildfires while Manitoba fires force 1,000 more to evacuate
Prairie wildfires developed on two fronts Friday as 1,000 more Manitoba residents were forced to flee their homes, while Saskatchewan's RCMP laid charges against alleged fire-starters. Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe told a news conference that two people have been charged with setting wildfires. He said one of them was charged in relation to a fire around La Ronge, which has forced 7,000 people to flee their homes. 'The RCMP have informed us that they have now charged a couple of individuals,' Moe said. RCMP did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Wildfire smoke is affecting air quality across the country. Here's what you need to know Saskatchewan has 24 active wildfires that have forced between 10,000 and 15,000 people from their homes. 'Many if not virtually all of the fires that we're dealing with in Saskatchewan, although not intentionally, are human caused. Some of those have been intentionally human caused,' Moe said. The province, along with Manitoba, is under a state of emergency, making it easier for different levels of government to co-ordinate a response. Manitoba has received help from the military to evacuate residents, mainly in remote First Nations. Moe has faced calls from the Opposition NDP to follow suit. The premier said while his government is in daily contact with federal officials, provincial emergency crews have so far been able to get evacuees out. He said the Canadian Red Cross is also working to set up shelters for evacuees in Regina, Saskatoon and Prince Albert. In Manitoba, the town of Snow Lake, near Flin Flon, issued a mandatory evacuation order for its residents due to a large wildfire threatening the area. 'You must leave because of the danger to your health and safety,' reads a notice on the town's Facebook page. That fire, which has grown to more than 3,000 square kilometres, has already forced out all 5,000 residents of the city of Flin Flon and about a thousand more in surrounding cottages and homes. When the Snow Lake evacuees are added in, Manitoba has about 19,000 out of their homes. There are 27 total fires in the province, eight of them out of control. Earlier Friday, Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew said evacuees have found a place to stay with friends or family, in hotels or in congregate shelters. He said getting those evacuees into private accommodations is tricky because many hotel rooms are being reserved for people with 'intense' medical issues. 'We just have to do a balancing act,' Kinew said. 'At this point, the big-picture challenge around rooms has largely been addressed. 'It's now just about the daily balancing act of triaging people coming in and people who are already in shelters and matching them up with rooms.' There are shelters in Winnipeg, Thompson and Brandon. The City of Flin Flon, on social media, said that no structures have been lost in the city or in nearby Creighton, Sask. 'Winds in the area are now blowing from the south, resulting in heavy smoke and fire moving towards the south side of Flin Flon,' the city said in an update Friday. The city added that fire protection, including sprinklers, is set up and firefighters would work to protect property. Provincial fire officials said evacuations have been completed at First Nations at Pukatawagan and Cross Lake. In northern Alberta, approximately 1,300 residents of the town of Swan Hills were allowed to return to their homes Thursday, about a week after fleeing from a wildfire. But about 340 kilometres west in the County of Grande Prairie, people in the Municipal District of Opportunity were ordered out.