Des gardiens autochtones pour pr茅server la nature et les traditions

Great Slave Lake is seen from a point near the mouth of the Hay River in Hay River, N.W.T., Wednesday, Oct. 26, 2022. A national network of Indigenous guardians programs that is helping restore and conserve Indigenous territories and cultural practices is in Ottawa this week hoping a showcase of its work will spur more stable and long-term government funding. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Emily Blake

OTTAWA - On the shores of the eastern arm of Great Slave Lake in the Northwest Territories, Iris Catholique and the Ni Hat'ni Dene Indigenous Guardians have spent several years watching the ice take longer and longer to form every winter.

It's another sign of climate change and the changing environment in the north, and one more thing they are keeping track of as the group tasked with conserving both their traditions and their lands.

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