Pamela Mitchell recalls her father telling her when she was a child about the ancient fish traps on the shoreline of K’ómoks territory, near her home.
As she learned about the traps, which were used over generations by her ancestors, and their corresponding posts sticking out of the water, she recalls her dad telling her: “Don’t touch! They are very old!”
Mitchell is Säsitla. Her ancestors joined the Sahtloot, Ieeksun and Pentlatch Peoples to become the K’ómoks First Nation.
Mitchell is now the culture and language co-ordinator for K’ómoks First Nation, and says she wasn’t the only K’ómoks First Nation member who learned about the fish traps as a kid. Many generations of K’ómoks children would go down to the beach and hear about the cultural and historical significance of the traps.
Like Mitchell, Claire Everson learned about the fish traps from her father. Everson is enrolled in First Nations Studies at the University of British Columbia, and worked as a repatriation assistant at K’ómoks over the summer.
Both women are part of a cultural heritage initiative led by K’ómoks First Nation and are supporting the conservation of a 550-year-old Pentlatch fish trap panel on display at Vancouver Island University’s Deep Bay Marine Centre Station.
The panel is the largest and most complete of its kind that exists today, and measures approximately six metres in length and 70 centimetres wide.
Everson — a K’ómoks descendant who has Pentlatch, Sahtloot, Kwakwakaʼwakw and as well as Mi’kmaq heritage — says she is excited about this K’ómoks-led cultural stewardship taking place in her community.
“I just feel so special to even look at [the fish trap], let alone being able to work on it,” she says.
Though the trap is old in itself, it’s part of an even more ancient system. K’ómoks has recently extended the oldest radiocarbon date of the fish trap stakes in the harbour from 1,350 to 1,450 years ago, according to Vancouver Island University.
The panel was made by Pentlatch ancestors of K’ómoks and Qualicum First Nations. When it was used to catch fish, it was connected to large posts that are still seen poking up along the shoreline of K’ómoks territory.
The specific kind of fish trap that the panel was attached to is called a chevron trap, due to its shape, and it caught fish using the tides.
The long laths were made from western hemlock and the short laths were made from Sitka spruce, says Lia Tarle, who works as an archaeologist and repatriation coordinator for K’ómoks First Nation. The cordage was made from roots or small tree limbs or withies.
Ancestors of the Pentlatch — and, by 1850, other K’ómoks groups’ — used elaborate fish traps to target herring and salmon in the K’ómoks Harbour, and also at Goose Spit and Saratoga Beach, Tarle says.
Tarle says the traps were built perpendicular to the shore, with a leader line that directed fish into deeper-water enclosures, where they would remain trapped as the tide went out.
“Panels like this one were like fences that could be removed to release fish if too many were trapped for a sustainable harvest, or when they weren’t being used,” she says.
Qualicum First Nation’s elected Chief Michael Recalma says the trap’s technology showcases how efficient the communities were at fishing, “even back in the old days or in the beginning of time.”
“It depicts the tie between us — K’ómoks First Nation and Qualicum First Nation,” he says.
“We’re tied in so many ways. The land is shared, it always has been, always will be. In Deep Bay, we also have stone traps that are close to this facility, and they are thousands of years old. Again, it shows a different way of fishing and how innovative we were to utilize nature and use the resources we had to trap the fish we needed.”
The chevron trap was revealed along the shoreline of K’ómoks Harbour in 2017, and a group of K’ómoks Guardian Watchmen, K’ómoks community members and archaeologists worked together to excavate it so that it wouldn’t deteriorate from air exposure.
From 2017 to 2020, the panel was held in the K’ómoks Guardian building. After that, it lived in the K’ómoks First Nation Bighouse until July, when it was transported to the Deep Bay Marine Field Station. The panel is expected to stay there until December.
In the new year, the panel is set to spend some time freeze drying at Coastal Transportation and Storage Ltd. in Comox, which volunteered the company’s trucks, movers and freezer space.
The panel is currently stored in a solution with water and polyethylene glycol to help preserve it before it transfers to the freeze-drying process. After it dries, the nation will work to find a home that is suitable for it to stay long term.
Tarle told The Discourse that the conservation of the panel has taken time because making sure it is stored and preserved properly requires a great amount of effort. Now, she says she is happy that there is enough staff to dedicate to the task.
Sitting in a room with Mitchell and Everson at the Deep Bay Marine Centre Station, Tarle says the K’ómoks-led conservation and care for the fish trap is inspiring. She says it’s part of a broader initiative that K’ómoks First Nation is working on to help expand knowledge of the nation’s history on this land.
When Tarle notes that she herself is not a member of K’ómoks First Nation, Mitchell adds: “We hired you!” with a chuckle.
Mitchell and Tarle both say the importance of these traps has long been recognized by K’ómoks and their ancestors.
“From our perspective, it’s not about making sure that the name [of who found it] gets written down, [or about] who saw it first,” Mitchell says. “It’s about preserving it.”
Some of the ancient stakes — part of the fish-trap system — made news in the early 2000s as being “found” by a local archaeologist and community members. At the time, news outlets reported that “nobody really knew what they were” prior to archaeological discovery.
“There’s a misconception that the fish traps were discovered by archaeologists because they were covered in sediment from at least 1886 — when well-known ethnographer Franz Boas visited — until 1946 when the K’ómoks community witnessed the stakes pop up from the riverbank during an earthquake,” Mitchell says.
“But K’ómoks Elders have always known about them. In 1936, my Säsitla ancestor George Mitchell talked about the Pentlatch fish mazes in an interview with an ethnographer. He said the traps were owned and maintained by specific families who had priority access to fish.”
Tarle says seeing students like Everson doing this work is good news for the future of both repatriation and cultural heritage management.
Everson, Mitchell and Tarle say there are discussions about seeing more of K’ómoks First Nation’s important ancestral areas acknowledged throughout the Comox Valley. That means referring to places with their ancestral names and sharing information about them.
The panel also fits into wider work K’ómoks is doing around cultural management. For example, K’ómoks is in the process of submitting formal repatriation requests for more of its belongings that are being held in institutions.
In an email, Tarle says repatriation work is a big undertaking, and the K’ómoks First Nation is searching for funding to cover the various ceremonial and travel costs associated with repatriations.
She says that although there has been a wave of government commitments to repatriation, there needs to be better funding and staffing at museums to fulfill them.
“There’s a massive backlog of Nations waiting for repatriations to actually happen.”
The panel, however, is an example of K’ómoks taking control of their cultural heritage from the outset.
“Which is important for many reasons relating to sovereignty/enacting rights, and cultural revitalization, but as a byproduct, it also circumvents the need for repatriations in the future.”
Candace Newman, elected councillor for K’ómoks First Nation, says protecting and preserving K’ómoks cultural heritage right now is particularly important.
“Our cultural heritage sites are under threat from the fast rate of development in the Comox Valley, so we are also investing in protecting our cultural heritage by implementing our own archaeological permitting system,” she says.
• Vancouver Island University's Deep Bay Marine Field Station is closed to public drop-in visitors from September to May. To view the 550-year-old Pentlatch fish trap panel on display there until December, school classes can book a guided station tour field trip, and interested groups of 10-30 people can book a private guided station tour. For more information, go to research.viu.ca/deep-bay-marine-field-station.
Madeline Dunnett is a Local Journalism Initiative reporter with The Discourse. The Local Journalism Initiative is funded by the Government of Canada.