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IN THIS EMAIL:
 

- Learn about the irrigation project set to expand in the Prairies — and the pressure it's putting on the South Saskatchewan River

- Read about the history of Treaty 3 and its continued importance since it was signed 150 years ago 

- Discover Canada's newest marine protected area and the unique deep ocean it protects

- Looking for your next getaway? Discover more about Maple Leaf Adventures and their photo journeys through the Great Bear Rainforest 

 

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Elder Marjorie Beaucage praying for the South Saskatchewan River.

A prayer not a protest

The South Saskatchewan River is under unprecedented pressure. Now, a major irrigation project is set to expand.

 

By Candace Savage with photography by David Stobbe

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EDITOR'S NOTEBOOK
 

I remember it was our CEO John Geiger who first came to me about a story idea he received from acclaimed writer Candace Savage about a planned billion dollar irrigation project on the South Saskatchewan River. Knowing the depth and care she gives to sharing important environmental stories, particularly from the Prairies, I leapt at the chance to work with her. Coupled with Saskatoon-based photographer David Stobbe’s keen eye, Candace’s piece came together beautifully: a thoughtful tale of a river in the drought-prone Prairies, put to work since the 19th century and supporting a heavy load of ever-growing agriculture, industry and urban expansion. As Métis Elder and Water Walker Marjorie Beaucage shares in the piece, “A river is the lifeblood of Mother Earth and Mother Earth is suffering a lot right now — a lot — with the droughts and the floods and the fires and all the harm that we’ve caused her. How is it that we are treating water like an unlimited resource?”

-
Michela Rosano, Senior Editor

Sherry and her sister Hazel Copenace look at the community copy in Winnipeg. (Photo: Anne Kierans)

Treaty 3: A community copy’s 150-year journey through ancestral hands

 

It’s been a century and a half since Treaty 3 was signed. Anishinaabe Elder Sherry Copenace, whose great-grandfather was a signatory of the treaty, discusses its history and continued importance.


By Katrianna DeSante

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Remote operated vehicle holding a temperature probe on the side of NEPDEP 58 seamount measure the temperature of the warm water being spouted from this previously assumed dormant sea-mountain. Warm water is flowing through the cracks (center of the screen), supporting an oasis of life in the deep. (Photo: The Northeast Pacific Deep-sea Expedition partners and Canadian Scientific Submersible Facility-Remotely Operated Platform for Ocean Science

The underwater mountains that can’t be hiked: Canada’s newest marine protected area

 

Tang.ɢwan-ḥačxʷiqak-Tsig̱is isn’t merely Canada’s largest and newest marine protected area; the deep ocean life protected in its bounds is truly unique.

By Jacksen Friske

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