| Salmon 
Salmon was an important food to
the Indians who lived along the Snake and Columbia rivers and their tributaries.
This included Indians living in Idaho. Lewis and Clark's party was starving when
they arrived at the Nez Perce camp of Chief Twisted Hair on the Weippe Prairie in northern
Idaho. One of the foods the Nez Perce gave them (and saved their lives) was dried
salmon.
Indians living in Idaho,
Washington, and Oregon dried salmon to eat during the winter months. During salmon
season, they caught hundreds of tons of salmon with nets and spears. Before the
coming of white people, the Snake and Salmon River systems produced more salmon than any
other rivers in the world. On a good day, one man could catch 100 salmon---a ton of
fish! Salmon were (and still are) important to many Indian traditions and
ceremonies.
Today, there are very few
salmon in the Snake and Columbia Rivers, and none at all in some of the higher
tributaries. Dams, water pollution, fishing, and natural enemies have reduced the
salmon to the point where it is now an endangered species. |