Indigenous Peoples in British Columbia Tended 'Forest Gardens' Found near villages, research suggest [View all]
Found near villages, research suggests the Indigenous population intentionally planted and maintained these patches of fruit and nut trees

The Stsailes forest garden near Vancouver, British Columbia seen from the air. (Nick Waber)
By Alex Fox
SMITHSONIANMAG.COM
APRIL 29, 2021 8:05AM
Along the coast of British Columbia, Canada, former villages of the Tsmsyen and Coast Salish Indigenous peoples are flanked by what researchers have termed forest gardens. On lands covered in forests dominated by hemlock and cedar trees, these forest gardens represent abrupt departures from the surrounding ecosystem. The dark, closed canopy of the conifer forest opens up and is replaced by a sunny, orchard-like spread of food-producing trees and shrubs, such as crabapple, hazelnut, cranberry, wild plum and wild cherry.
New research, published last week in the journal
Ecology and Society, makes the case that these forest gardens were planted and maintained by Indigenous peoples until roughly 150 years ago when the original inhabitants of these settlements were displaced by colonialist expansion and the smallpox outbreaks the encroaching colonizers brought with them, reports Andrew Curry for
Science.
"These plants never grow together in the wild. It seemed obvious that people put them there to grow all in one spotlike a garden," says Chelsey Geralda Armstrong, an ethnobiologist at Simon Fraser University and lead author of the study, in a statement. "Elders and knowledge holders talk about perennial management all the time. It's no surprise these forest gardens continue to grow at archeological village sites that haven't yet been too severely disrupted by settler-colonial land-use."
These Indigenous-managed food production sites in the Pacific Northwest are the first forest gardens to be described outside of Central and South America, according to
Science.
More:
https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/indigenous-peoples-british-columbia-tended-forest-gardens-180977617/