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sqigwts
ha'chsetq'it
(Water Potato Day)
The Coeur d'Alene Language term for the month of October,
sch'edp, tells us that "darkness approaches".
At this late time in the year of seasonal gathering, Coeur d'Alene
families returned to the lake to take the last foods, the water
potatoes or
sqigwts. We learn from anecdotes collected in
1904 that the root diggers used at this time, the
pitse', were probably of the wide and curved
kind, for digging in the soft mud of the marshy areas around the
lake. The
pitse' were made of the wood from service trees,
syringa, or haw. Points were hardened by charring in the fire, and
elk antlers were attached for handles. Woven bags for carrying the
sqigwts only came into fashion after woven baskets
had gone out of use.
Margaret Stensgar told us that the water potatoes were dug at Chatkolet
(or
chatq'ele'), Hayden Lake, and near Harrison.
Irene Lowley remembers her
qine' digging for
sqigwts near her cabin on Benewah Lake. She
also remembers that it was not, in her family, an activity that
her grandma wanted the younger children doing, because of the difficulty
and potential danger of the soft mud, cold, and icy water.
Today school children, their families, caregivers, teachers, and
guests are gladly invited to take part of the activities at Hawley's
Landing, organized by the Coeur d'Alene Tribe's Department of Natural
Resources. Tribal employees and their invited friends share in the
opportunity to appreciate the knowledge, practices, and homeland
of the tribe's ancestors, while engaging in the bracing fun of gathering
food from the store that Nature granted the Coeur d'Alene People.
How do I say "We
will celebrate Water Potato Day" in snchitsu'umshtsn (Coeur
d'Alene Language)? Listen now:
chełchtu's'ya'(pqi'n'm sqigwts ha'chsetq'it |
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