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Traditions in Bloom: Indigenous Ethnobotany of K’xeen and Beyond Field School

Jul 25, 2025

Prince Rupert, BC – From July 7 to 18, 2025, students at the Coast Mountain College Prince Rupert campus spent time on the land and in the lab with Traditions in Bloom: Indigenous Ethnobotany of K’xeen and Beyond, an immersive two-week field school. Led by instructor Joanne Nelson, the course explores the relationships between plants, people, and place through a blend of scientific and Indigenous knowledge. Students learnt to identify local plants, examined their cultural and medicinal significance, and took part in hands-on labs that included salve making, dyeing with natural materials, and even pH testing of local berries. Of course, since this was a field school, the class spent a significant amount of time outside the classroom with daily field trips and time spent learning directly from traditional knowledge holders. During these outings, students collected and dried a selection of plant specimens to create their own herbaria.

A highlight of the course was the weekend ethnobotany camping trip, held July 11 and 12. Students explored the diversity of flora found on Ferry Island in Terrace with a guided plant identification walk and then spent the night at Kasiks Wilderness Resort, where they put their learning into practice preparing wild tea and traditional medicine. Field notes, sketchbooks, and respectful observation were all part of the experience. Around the campfire, students shared reflections and listened to storytelling that deepened their understanding of the cultural connections to the land and plants of the region.

The trip to Ferry Island was made extra special thanks to an engaging plant presentation by Dustin Gaucher. Students loved his knowledge and energy. You can find him on TikTok as @Dustin.Gaucher where he shares stories and plant wisdom. The overnight stay at Kasiks Wilderness Resort, which offers comfortable accommodations ranging from cozy rooms to glamping tents and traditional campsites, also left a lasting impression for the students. Although they’d originally planned to set up their tents and camp, in the students end spent the night indoors due to the rainy weather. Thanks Kasiks Wilderness Resort for welcoming our students and keeping them cozy and dry!

Student gathering plant specimens during the Traditions in Bloom field school.

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Media Contact:

Heather Bastin
Executive Director, External Relations
hbastin@coastmountaincollege.ca