Saddle, Sled and Snowshoe: Pioneering on the Saskatchewan in the Sixties
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About This Book
A first-person account of frontier life and travel across the Saskatchewan, mixing practical descriptions of long dog-sled, cart, and river journeys with scenes of mission work, timber and building projects, gardening, hunting, and prospecting. The narrative records interactions with Indigenous communities, their hospitality and tensions, the challenge of food shortages and buffalo hunts, and everyday improvisations for shelter, cooking, and medicine. Short episodes—races, close calls, and congregational duties—illustrate daily labor, survival strategies, and cross-cultural encounters during settlement and seasonal migration.
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