or Native Peoples of the sub Arctic, snowshoeing
was not a winter recreational sport. The ability to make and
use snowshoes was a life skill essential to survival. By distributing
a person's body weight over a broader surface, snowshoes allowed
easy movement over snow.
Throughout the sub arctic, distinct snowshoe
styles developed - bearpaw, beavertail, swallowtail and elbow
shoe - in response to the need to travel over specific terrains
and snow types. Long narrow forms with upturned toes were
ideal for open country, while oval shoes with short tails
or no tails permitted the wearer to maneuver in hilly, densely
wooded or brush-filled terrain.
It was men's work to make snowshoe frames
from brown or white ash, or yellow or white birch. Frames
were hewn and shaped with a crooked knife and bent around
their maker's knee or steamed around a frame or form. One
or two cross bars were then mortised in and the tail of the
shoe pinned together. Once the frame was constructed, women
did the rawhide infilling work with babiche - lacing
made from untanned caribou, moose or deer hide. Snowshoe makers
"signed" their work with distinctive frame construction
techniques and ornate, decorative babiche work.
The snowshoes featured in this exhibit include
Penobscot, Passamaquoddy, and Maliseet examples as well as
Cree, Ojibwe, Montaignais and Innu forms. Some date to the
1800s while others were made in 2000. Each is a gift from
Gluskabe. |