Before the European fur trade, life on the interior plains
centred on the huge, roaming herds of bison, or buffalo. Native
hunters culled the herds individually for meat, bones, and
hides. The aboriginal hunters hunted the big animals on foot.
This difficult style of hunting did not pose any threat to
the survival or size of the vast herds.
The introduction of horses to the continent by Spanish explorers
gave the Native hunters a big advantage, but still, only enough
bison were hunted to satisfy the needs of survival and modest
comfort.
The European fur trade led to marriages between French trader
men and Native women. This mixing of Native and French cultures
produced a new group called Métis. The Métis
became skilled trappers, traders, and bison hunters.
As a centre of Métis settlement through the peak of
the European fur trade, St. Norbert was an important focal
point of the bison hunt. In their role as bison hunters, the
Métis gained their sense of identity as a people, and
as a political and economic unit.
The bison hunt was fueled by the demand of European fur traders
for hides and pemmican, a staple food made of coarse dried
bison meat powder, melted fat, and Saskatoon berries. The hunt
had evolved from one based on the need to survive to one driven
by profit.
There were an estimated 50 million bison on the Prairie in
1800. The gun and an eager market for buffalo hides would push
the great herds to the edge of extinction in less than a century.
Métis bison hunts were military-style expeditions.
A Red River bison expedition consisted of an eight-kilometre
long caravan of a hundred or more wooden Red River carts, drawn
by horses or oxen. The carts were piled high with ammunition,
axes, tents, and blankets. The expedition meandered in staggered
formation to reduce dust clouds. The Métis also had
to watch for Native hunters from the South, their rivals for
control of the bison ranges.
Although the herds were huge on the Prairies, their movements
were often unpredictable. There were good years and bad years
for the hunt and plains grizzlies and wolves competed with
the human predators for the herd. Since bulls and cows grazed
separately and the massiveness of the bulls made them less
mobile, they were usually on the front lines of bison defence.
When a bison herd was spotted, the caravan positioned itself
downwind to avoid detection by the animals. Then, in a thunder
of hoofbeats, hunters on horseback descended upon the wild-eyed
bison. When the dust finally settled, many exhausted horses
had lost their riders. But the fray could net as many as 1,700
dead bison.
By 1885 the bison herds had been destroyed and were virtually
extinct. By the turn of the century, traditional Native and
Métis society based on the bison hunt was also gone.
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