Project Background and a bit of speculation as well :)

Prior to the mid-20th century L'nu'k passed along the tradition of growing and planting trail trees along their sacred pathways. Sadly, forced centralization and the kidnapping of several generations into Residential School meant L'nu'k lost the knowledge of this sacred practise.

Fieldwork suggests that each heir to this tradition was assigned his/her species in childhood, nursed them from seed somewhere (trail tree nursery?), planted them along the trail, and then over his/her lifetime culturally modified them as appropriate. These trail trees are now critically endangered in Mi'kma'ki and we are at risk of losing the knowledge of direction, seasonality and spatial significance to the landscape they represent. We welcome observations of snags, and deadfall as well as standing live examples to this project. We are still relearning how to translate this language and welcome knowledge, theory and even speculation.

What we think we know, is that the path between the forks of trail trees represented the direction, if more than one direction was indicated this was a crossroads or a turn tree. If there were many modified branches in all directions this was an arrival and/or prayer tree. Some were used as burial markers. Note: If you find what you think is a L'nu'k burial in Mi'kma'ki this should be reported to the local band. It is illegal for anyone, even an archaeologist to disturb an indigenous burial in Canada.

We only have theories for Twist trail trees. Some of them are:

  1. Whistlestops? - twist trees appear on the trail tree trail as we approach signs of an indigenous village and seem to become less twisted the closer we get. 6 twists away - 6 whistles etc. So perhaps the trees were there as distance markers and/or a reminder to give a warning to villagers of your approach?
  2. Trail tree ancestor burials - twist trees sometimes appear on burials with two different species. Did grandson bury grandad with his signature trail tree and then twist his own signature species in respect? We don't know. If you do, please share :)
  3. Meeting place from two different directions (2 villages)

There is a lot that we don't know and continue to discover and that is the fun of this project. Please join us.

Posted on 13 de março de 2022, 08:43 PM by marymacaulay marymacaulay

Comentários

Cool project. Are the trail trees found throughout NS? Where can I learn more to know what to look for. Thanks

Publicado por grivesolitaire cerca de 2 anos antes

Good question @grivesolitaire - Here is a link https://youtu.be/SLfNle2QpSk to a presentation I gave the Wild Flora Society in January 2022. The first third of it will get you started. I do recommend watching the whole thing when you have time. I have learned a lot more since then but have not yet put together a second presentation. Hoping by the time I get around to that there will be others, such as yourself, who have added to the knowledge :)

Publicado por marymacaulay cerca de 2 anos antes

Thankyou for the link. Very informative and most interesting presentation, well worth watching. Gives me another reason to wander the woods. I applaud your ongoing efforts and hope they help initiate change.

Publicado por grivesolitaire cerca de 2 anos antes
Publicado por grivesolitaire cerca de 2 anos antes

Thanks very much; and especially for all the help with IDs :)

Publicado por marymacaulay cerca de 2 anos antes

Adicionar um Comentário

Iniciar Sessão ou Registar-se to add comments