Year end wrap-up!

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It was a busy year for the Whitefeather Forest Initiative as we saw our team expand and take on new projects. 2025 was also an intense fire season, the second hottest on record after 2023, leading to community evacuations across Canada including Pikangikum First Nation. Current estimates suggest that over 60,000 hectares of the Whitefeather Forest burned just this year. Our team has since been out on the land noting some of the changes in the forest composition after these fires.

As Whitefeather Forest Initiative, we are grateful to be part of and lead teams that prioritize understanding and managing forest health while pushing for more economic opportunities for Pikangikum people. Below are 5 highlights from this year!

Berens River Bridge

The Berens River bridge project was officially announced early in the year in February 2025 at the Neeganii-Iishawin Gathering. Over the past year, there has been ongoing development on the bridge construction that upon completion will provide all-season access to Pikangikum and beyond.

Firefighter training

Pikangikum Type II trainees with instructors and Elders in November 2025.

We helped coordinate training for over 75 Type II firefighters between March and November 2025. This included both first-time firefighters and previous crew bosses. Part of the training also involved Indigenous knowledge sessions with Elders at the Pikangikum Community Center. Our last cohort in November even got to enjoy some vivid Northern lights during the training sessions.

Certifications

Whitefeather helped certify 11 restricted radio operators and 5 drone pilots.

Whitefeather Staff operating a drone at Junction camp.
Aeriel view of the Whitefeather Forest after the July 2025 fires.

Deployment in the Whitefeather Forest

Firefighters from the July 2025 deployment in the Whitefeather Forest.  

Through a coordinated effort from many organizations, including our partnership with Horizon North, we were able to deploy 19 Pikangikum firefighters as a part of Type II crews in the Whitefeather Forest. The deployment lasted 2 weeks with teams working on the RED62 and RED60 fires.

Outreach

Whitefeather Staff meeting King Charles in London, UK in October 2025.

Many of our staff this year had the opportunity to attend and present our work at various conferences including the Wildfire Resilience Consortium of Canada in Kamloops, BC and the International Association of Wildland Fire (IAWF) in Calgary, Alberta. Through our membership with the Circular Bioeconomy Alliance’s Wildfire Resilient Landscape working group, our team also had the chance to have two face-to-face meetings with King Charles in Ottawa and in the UK.

Whitefeather Staff giving a talk about Fire and the Whitefeather forest at the IAWF conference in October 2025.

We are hopeful for 2026 and excited to deliver benefits and develop relationships at local, provincial, national and international scales.

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