Our North-to-North exchange started in Nova Scotia, where we were warmly welcomed by partners working at the heart of wild Atlantic salmon conservation. The visit offered a great opportunity to deepen our understanding of how communities, researchers, and conservation organizations are working together to sustain salmon and the river systems they depend on.
Community leadership along Nova Scotia’s Salmon rivers
A special thank-you goes to Matt Russell from the Atlantic Salmon Federation (ASF), whose coordination and connections helped bring people together throughout our time in Nova Scotia. We are also deeply grateful to our hosts from the Chéticamp River Salmon Association (CRSA) and the Margaree Salmon Association (MSA), who generously shared their time, experience, and on-the-ground knowledge of river stewardship.
Across the Chéticamp and Margaree watersheds in Cape Breton, two vital Atlantic salmon rivers, we were reminded that salmon conservation is deeply woven into community life and long-standing relationships with these waters. Local stewardship groups are not only monitoring salmon populations and protecting salmon habitat, but actively sustaining long-standing cultural and ecological connections to these watersheds.
Our conversations with Project Manager Jillian Bakker, Field Technician Luca Kordsmeyer, and Jimmie Pedersen from the Chéticamp River Salmon Association (CRSA), as well as with Paul MacNeil, President of the Margaree Salmon Association (MSA), highlighted the strength and importance of community-led action in driving salmon conservation on the ground. We saw this commitment in action through hands-on habitat restoration, smolt wheel monitoring projects, learned about the salmon ceremony, and educational work with local schools and sharing salmon with elders in the communities, all of which are actively strengthening salmon populations while deepening community relations to and with the salmon river.