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From LeahConnecting with my Ojibwe heritage by learning to harvest wild rice MPR News senior editor Leah Lemm walks with her son Marvin from his school bus stop on Jan. 2. So, she set out with a ...
Wisconsin Menominee, Potawatomi, and Ojibwe still produce bark containers traditionally used to store wild rice and maple ... Earl's relatives living on the Bad River Reservation in Wisconsin ...
The documentary highlights longstanding issues facing the Bad River Band of Lake Superior Chippewa in northern Wisconsin ... Superior and devastating the wild rice beds and fishing populations ...
Wetlands are places where land and water meet. They provide wildlife habitat, improve water quality, store carbon and slow water down during floods. Wisconsin has about six million acres of ...
An curved arrow pointing right. Manoomin, meaning "the good berry," is a type of wild rice that has been harvested by the Ojibwe people in the Great Lakes region of North America for centuries.
On a twilight so calm the red and white pines are reflected in the waters of northern Wisconsin's Chippewa ... hunting and harvesting wild rice. Now Ojibwe and other Indigenous people are fighting ...