, 2022-12-31 08:50:00,
April 2022, early spring Chinook season
Total tribal catch in 2021: 1.605 million pounds, including the worst spring season in 22 years
The salmon were late and the nets were empty.
It had been two weeks since the Yakama Nation opened its ceremonial, subsistence spring fishing season on the Columbia River. Randy Settler and Sam George had spent $400 on gas for their boats and so far only had two fish to give to their tribe for the ceremonies.
This year’s salmon catch is forecast to be better than last year’s. But it was the slowest start to the season that Settler could remember. It was also his first season without his mother, Mary Goudy-Settler, who died in October 2021.
Settler sat in the riverside house that used to be his, reflecting on all that had been taken from his family, all that his parents had done to win back what they could. They had fought for their right to fish, a right the US government promised to honor more than 150 years ago and then violated generation after generation through laws, policies, and outright discrimination. He inherited that fight. Now, with climate change threatening the remaining salmon, he thinks about the legacy they left him, one he will pass on to his nephew George and George’s 10-year-old daughter.
“Áwna sɨ́nwit UllaQut’.” Her eyes filled with tears as she introduced herself with the name Yakama given to her by her mother.
“But I have never claimed that name,”…
,
To read the original article from news.google.com, Click here
April 2022, early spring Chinook season
Total tribal catch in 2021: 1.605 million pounds, including the worst spring season in 22 years
The salmon were late and the nets were empty.
It had been two weeks since the Yakama Nation opened its ceremonial, subsistence spring fishing season on the Columbia River. Randy Settler and Sam George had spent $400 on gas for their boats and so far only had two fish to give to their tribe for the ceremonies.
This year’s salmon catch is forecast to be better than last year’s. But it was the slowest start to the season that Settler could remember. It was also his first season without his mother, Mary Goudy-Settler, who died in October 2021.
Settler sat in the riverside house that used to be his, reflecting on all that had been taken from his family, all that his parents had done to win back what they could. They had fought for their right to fish, a right the US government promised to honor more than 150 years ago and then violated generation after generation through laws, policies, and outright discrimination. He inherited that fight. Now, with climate change threatening the remaining salmon, he thinks about the legacy they left him, one he will pass on to his nephew George and George’s 10-year-old daughter.
“Áwna sɨ́nwit UllaQut’.” Her eyes filled with tears as she introduced herself with the name Yakama given to her by her mother.
“But I have never claimed that name,”…
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, 2022-12-31 08:50:00,
April 2022, early spring Chinook season
Total tribal catch in 2021: 1.605 million pounds, including the worst spring season in 22 years
The salmon were late and the nets were empty.
It had been two weeks since the Yakama Nation opened its ceremonial, subsistence spring fishing season on the Columbia River. Randy Settler and Sam George had spent $400 on gas for their boats and so far only had two fish to give to their tribe for the ceremonies.
This year’s salmon catch is forecast to be better than last year’s. But it was the slowest start to the season that Settler could remember. It was also his first season without his mother, Mary Goudy-Settler, who died in October 2021.
Settler sat in the riverside house that used to be his, reflecting on all that had been taken from his family, all that his parents had done to win back what they could. They had fought for their right to fish, a right the US government promised to honor more than 150 years ago and then violated generation after generation through laws, policies, and outright discrimination. He inherited that fight. Now, with climate change threatening the remaining salmon, he thinks about the legacy they left him, one he will pass on to his nephew George and George’s 10-year-old daughter.
“Áwna sɨ́nwit UllaQut’.” Her eyes filled with tears as she introduced herself with the name Yakama given to her by her mother.
“But I have never claimed that name,”…
,
To read the original article from news.google.com, Click here