Page 8 Spilyay Tymoo, Warm Springs, Oregon April 6, 2022 Tribe gets land back after nearly 400 years The Rappahannock Tribe has reacquired 465 acres of sacred land at Fones Cliff, Virginia. “We have worked for many years to restore this sacred place to the tribe,” said Anne Richardson, chief of the Rappa- hannock Tribe. “With eagles being prayer messengers, this area where they gather has always been a place of natural, cultural and spiritual importance.” Fones Cliff is the an- cestral home of the tribe, located on the eastern side of the Rappa- hannock River in Vir- ginia. The area, located in- side the Rappahannock River Valley National Wildlife Refuge, will be pub- licly accessible and placed in trust with the Bureau of In- dian Affairs. The tribe plans to educate the public about their history by constructing a replica 16th-century village and ex- panding their ‘Return to the River’ program, which trains tribal youth in traditional river knowledge and prac- tices. “The department is hon- ored to join the Rappa- hannock Tribe in co-steward- ship of this portion of their ancestral homeland,” said Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland, who is of the Pueblo of Laguna Tribe, New Mexico. “We look forward to drawing upon tribal expertise and Indigenous knowledge in helping manage the area’s wildlife and habitat,” Sec- retary Haaland said. “This historic reacqui- sition underscores how tribes, private landowners, and other stakeholders all play a central role in this administration’s work to ensure our conservation efforts are locally led and support communities’ health and well-being.” The cliffs play a central part in the history of the tribe. In 1608, the tribe first encountered and de- fended their homeland against English settler Cap- tain John Smith, who played an important role in the first per manent English settlement in America at Jamestown, Virginia. Hope for spring chinook on horizon It’s early, but for once in what seems like for- ever, spring chinook are neither late nor scarce, according to counts at Bonneville Dam on the Columbia River. Through mid last week, about 460 adult chinook and 77 jacks had been counted there. That is about double the 10- year average. “We have already had a couple of Rapid River (fish) over Bonneville, which is pretty early,” said John Cassinelli, anadromous fish manager for the Idaho De- partment of Fish and Game. “Anything can happen but the early returns are promis- ing. The next few weeks will be telling but things look good right now.” This year, fisheries man- agers are predicting 122,900 spring chinook bound for tributaries above Bonneville Dam will make it at least as far as the mouth of the Co- lumbia River. That num- ber includes about 73,400 chinook headed for the Snake River and its tribu- taries, an increase of about 20,000 compared to last year.