Horse tail ferns are one of the traditional plants Tla'amin Nation used for medicinal purposes.

Garden Vision to bloom in a west coast First Nation

qathet Living, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter

Indigenous forest gardens will soon be sprouting once again in Tla’amin, according to Erik Blaney, Tla’amin executive council member, and housepost of lands and resources. 

“The Forest Garden Project is something that I came up with when Tla’amin bought the 111 acres of land in Lund,” says Erik.

“I want to see a place where ancestral teachings on land could be used to culturally modify the boggy areas to produce more medicinal and native edible plants for our people.” 

Erik says he has memories of he and elders John Louie and the late Pete Harry going up to many boggy and swampy areas to harvest traditional medicines. “We figured we could make those teachings more accessible to those who needed them if we utilized ourland in Klah ah men (Lund),” Erik says. 

The garden will be on the southern portion of Tla’amin’s Klah ah men lands, in between Longacre Road and Quarry Place. 

While the project is only a concept right now, Erik hopes to get more planning done in the 2022 fiscal year. 

Skunk cabbage was a plant used by Tla’amin traditionally for medicines and creams.

Some of the traditional plants that would be seen in the gardens are Labrador tea, devil’s club, skunk cabbage, green false hellebore, nettle, cat tail, cat’s claw, mullein, mugwort, berries, ferns, mushrooms, and many others. 

“It will act as a community garden that does not look like a typical garden and is more part of the natural landscape and would be community owned,” Erik says. “I foresee classes on how to cultivate, harvest, and prepare the items grown on this land.”

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