Videos

 

Indigenous Guardians are caring for lands and waters across the country. It's time to celebrate and support this leadership on the land.

 
Guest User Guest User

How Guardians Monitor Climate Change

Watch as Dane Nan Yḗ Dāh, Tāłtān, and Taku River Tlingit Guardians team up to install climate monitoring stations in Northern B.C. The data they collect will help bridge major gaps in understanding the changing climate of the region and safeguard wildlife like salmon and caribou populations.

Read More
Guest User Guest User

Seal River Watershed Alliance Canoe Trip

“We need to be​​ the ones taking care of these lands because we have been taking care of these lands since time immemorial.” Hop on board with Seal River Guardians as they journey on a 7-day long canoe trip, building their skills and working together as they protect one of the largest intact watersheds on the planet.

Read More
Guest User Guest User

K’ahsho Got’ine Moose Hide Camp

“One of the best parts is the stories and laughter we have together.” Guardians are helping to support a community moose hide camp that is revitalizing language, culture, and tradition in the NWT. Here, Elders pass on knowledge, ensuring that future generations are connected to their identity through the process of preparing moose hide.

Read More
Guest User Guest User

Join the Movement

We’re celebrating the incredible work Guardians do & the way the benefits of that work ripples across Canada. But Guardians need long-term investment to sustain lands and waters into the future. Here’s why we need YOU to add your voice →

Read More
Carly Pearlman Carly Pearlman

Keeping Innu Waterways Healthy | Minashkuat Kanakutuatak

“In our language, they’re called Kanakutuatak – the ones who look after the land. In English, they’re called Guardians.” In 1992, the Innu Nation launched their Fisheries Guardians Program to help ensure the health of their lands and waterways, and continue the stewardship they have practiced since time immemorial.

Read More
Carly Pearlman Carly Pearlman

How Kitasoo Guardian Watchmen Protect Waters, Wildlife & Culture

“Our histories and stories all interconnect with everything in what we do each & every day. If we lose just one, it breaks the circle.” Doug Neasloss & the Kitasoo Guardian Watchmen know that the work they do protecting lands, wildlife & waters is also protecting the history & culture of their communities.

Read More
Carly Pearlman Carly Pearlman

Haíłzaqv Guardians and Herring Roe

“It intertwines with everything.” Herring roe – or h̓a̓ṇ́t in the Heiltsuk language – has been a staple food of the community for thousands of years, and the practice of harvesting it is a part of traditional food, song, and dance.

Read More
Carly Pearlman Carly Pearlman

Monitoring Moose with Drones & Kitigan Zibi

“It’s going to take all of us working together to bring back these moose populations.” When the Algonquin Nation noticed a decline of moose in their territory, they had Guardians conduct aerial surveys to assess the health of the population.

Read More
Carly Pearlman Carly Pearlman

Elders, Youth & the Land

“Land, language, and culture are at the center.” A day in the life of K'asho Got'ine Guardians might include monitoring water quality, mapping trails, or tanning moose hide – but whatever the project, the work is rooted in the knowledge of the Elders and a love of culture.

Read More
Carly Pearlman Carly Pearlman

Why Guardians are Good for Wildlife

“We’re part of an ecosystem. We’re part of the land. We’re part of the animals.” It’s this relationship – the responsibility, generations of life on the land, and use of both Indigenous and Western science – that makes the work Indigenous Guardians do so unique.

Read More
Carly Pearlman Carly Pearlman

What Does it Mean to be a Guardian?

Being a Indigenous Guardian is a meaningful experience that can help people reconnect with the land, their culture, and community. But don’t just take our word for it: here’s what 5 Land Needs Guardians Storytellers say it means to them.

Read More
Carly Pearlman Carly Pearlman

Canada makes a historic investment in Guardians!

An investment that will get more Guardians on the ground: Canada just announced over $173 million in funding for Guardians Programs over the next 5 years. This is the largest investment in Indigenous stewardship to date. Let’s keep it up! 👏 #LandNeedsGuardians

Read More
Carly Pearlman Carly Pearlman

How Maps Tell the Story of Communities

You might not think of the meticulous work of map making as storytelling--but to Cody Anderson, it’s the story of the land that’s at the heart of this work.

Read More
Carly Pearlman Carly Pearlman

Canoes, Community & Connection

Building a birch canoe by hand takes more than just birch bark: it takes community, generations of knowledge -- and a little bit of spruce sap. Land Needs Guardians Storytellers and Wahkohtowin Guardians Amberly Quakegesic & Isabelle Allen share how the experience brought them closer to their culture and reconnected them to the land, Elders, and their community.

Read More
Carly Pearlman Carly Pearlman

Indigenous Women: Leading on the Land

Celebrating International Women’s Day by recognizing generations of Indigenous women’s leadership on the land. Indigenous women are leading the way in protecting lands and waters across the country, from coordinating Guardians programs to leading the creation of IPCA’s — they, and many others, are an inspiration to all of us.

Read More
Carly Pearlman Carly Pearlman

Tapping Birch and Tapping into Traditions | Wahkohtowin Guardians

Craving something sweet? In her debut as a Land Needs Guardians Storyteller, Wahkohtowin Guardian Amberly Quakegesic breaks down how to make birch syrup—a process the Wahkohtowin Guardians do every spring. Making the syrup is reviving a traditional practice while creating a renewable product that helps support the Guardians program, too.

Read More