Wildlife Q&A

Wildlife Q&A

Wildlife Q&A

5 Min Video – 

We love finding out what makes kids curious!  We asked kids to send us their video questions about the Preserve and Yukon’s wildlife.  Watch the video to hear YWP staff answer:

  1. Do Caribou go in big groups?  And if they do, how big of groups do they go in?
  2. How do mountain goats climb?
  3. Do bunnies only eat carrots or not?
  4. How can people help the wildlife preserve?

Are you a kid? Do you have questions about Yukon Wildlife Preserve or Yukon wildlife? Send your video question to us at info@yukonwildlife.ca. (Some help from parents may be required 😉 )

Jake Paleczny

Jake Paleczny

He/Him - Executive Director/ CEO

Jake Paleczny is passionate about interpretation and education. He gained his interpretative expertise from a decade of work in Ontario’s provincial parks in addition to a Masters in Museum Studies from the University of Toronto. His interests also extend into the artistic realm, with a Bachelor of Music from the University of Western Ontario and extensive experience in galleries and museums.

867-456-7313
jake@yukonwildlife.ca

Explore by Category

Explore by Author

No authors found.

Gifts of the North

Gifts of the North

Gifts of the North

This time last year we released a very special limited edition hat (or toque as we Canadians like to call it). It was the product of generous Yukon businesses who care about Yukon’s wildlife.  The 5 premium toques included a donation to the Preserve. They sold out in just a day and a half!

The partnerships have continued to grow and we’re really excited to release 2 different limited edition toque styles (4 available of each style) again this Christmas! These toques were made exclusively in the north, inspired by the north. The Yukon is home to incredible people who love to celebrate and honour the uniqueness of this land. This hat directly supports the diverse community that makes this place and its people so unique!

These limited edition hats go on sale at the Preserve on Friday, December 20th.

Hand-knitted in Whitehorse

Last year we were fortunate enough to connect with a very under-the-radar knitting talent, Liz Sutton of Treeline Knits located right here in Whitehorse. Liz, like the other featured small business owners, weaved from passionate hobby into notable entrepreneurs. She balances this passion with a full time job, a love of running and sharing time with friends and her fluffy companions in Yukon’s grand landscapes. Each of these 8 hats were hand knitted and fashioned by Liz Sutton, especially for the Yukon Wildlife Preserve.

 

Toque 1: Local Hand Dyed 100% Candian Merino Wool

For the first toque, Liz sourced her wool from a little northern yarn shop with a big heart called Itsy Bitsy Yarn Store, located in downtown Whitehorse. The owner, Heather Sealey pours her heart into her store, into sharing her love and knowledge of knitting to every customer she encounters, and into encouraging and inspiring the local and northern flare.

Heather prides herself on working with other local proprietors who produce yarns, locally made wood and antler buttons, other Yukon made accessories, and in the case of this hat, local hand-dyed yarns. Crux Fibres is a product of local Brittany Vogt whose little hobby quickly turned into a business, “Dyeing yarn became an avenue for my deep desire to master creative arts. Playing with professional dyes and quality yarn isn’t easy, it’s a real challenge, but once you get over that crux, that difficult part and start to see the complimentary dance in the water, a real beautiful thing happens. A tapestry of colour emerges”. Who doesn’t love when passion turns into profit and pride in a beautiful piece of art. The wool Brittany uses is 100% Canadian merino wool.

 

Toque 2: Canadian Muskox Qiviut Blend

For the second toque, Liz worked with Itsy Bitsy Yarn Store to source qiviut from Nunavut Qiviut.

Nunavut Qiviut in turn sources arctic fibres from the Kugluktuk area of the Yukon’s more eastern territorial neighbour, Nunavut. Here, and across the circumpolar north, wonderfully woolly, ice-age creatures roam the barren landscape. Muskox are formidable animals of the arctic whom managed to survive an era that most animals (including the woolly mammoth) did not. Muskox are both a majestic and extraordinary creature, not only because of its luxurious fibre but its remarkable place in history. Today, muskox continue to provide an incredible and valuable support system to the people and communities of this shared landscape.

The Inuit name for muskox is Umingmack, “the animal with skin like a beard.” The undercoat wool belonging to this animal gives it the ability to thrive in the extreme arctic environment but also is an animal harvested by Inuit’s for traditional purposes like winter sleeping mats, protein for elders and families.

Nunavut Qiviut works with these local harvesters and community members to purchase the qiviut wool for fibre production. This on the ground activity by Nunavut Qiviut supports food security, a wage economy, cultural continuity and traditional Inuit lifestyles in an ethical and fair manner.

Sustainably Trapped in the Yukon

A toque isn’t complete without a pom-pom. This year, Liz sourced furs through the Yukon Trappers Association and Yukon Wild Furs. Yukon Wild Furs donated locally and sustainably harvested lynx from Indigenous trapper and educators, George Bahm and Chris Hobbis’ trapline located in the South Canol Road area.

Owner of Yukon Wildlife Furs, Vanessa Aegirsdottir, might possibly have the smallest gift shop in the Yukon in square feet. But her mission is huge: “being an education beacon for Indigenous culture and worldviews”.

Bahm also sees great value in sharing fur harvesting practices with consumers and their relationship with the land. Wild fur trapping can be sustainable, ethically sourced and support traditional lifestyle when a fair price is offered for the fur as opposed to farmed furs.

To the people who buy them, Bahm said they’re deepening their connection to the Yukon and the people who’ve trapped for generations.

I tell people that when they’re wearing fur we ask them to be mindful of the fact that an animal has given its life so we can adorn ourselves with its feathers, with its fur and by wearing those items they’re forever in a relationship with an animal. It’s more than just a pair of earrings.

A Community That’s Wild at Heart

The Yukon Wildlife Preserve is a non-profit charitable organization. In the 1970’s Danny Nowlan started accepting and caring for injured and orphaned wildlife at the Yukon Game Farm. Nearly 50 years later the Preserve continues to care for Yukon’s most vulnerable animals. Today we are a living centre of Yukon’s species that connects more than 30,000 visitors to the natural world, each year.

Find out more about what the  donation with the purchase of the hat means for the Preserve at donate.yukonwildlife.ca .

These toques represents so much more than fashion and warmth! It symbolizes the values and lifestyles of this unique territory and the people and animals that call it home. By purchasing this hat, you are supporting the people, their businesses and the land and animals of the north – Liz Sutton of Treeline Knits, Itsy-Bitsy Yarn Store, Yukon Wild Fur and local trappers, Brittany Vogt of Crux Fibres, Nunavut Qiviut, Yukon Wildlife Preserve – Wildlife Rehabilitation and a community that is wild at heart!

Lindsay Caskenette

Lindsay Caskenette

Manager Visitor Services

Lindsay joined the Wildlife Preserve team March 2014. Originally from Ontario, she came to the Yukon in search of new adventures and new career challenges. Lindsay holds a degree in Environmental Studies with honours from Wilfrid Laurier University and brings with her a strong passion for sharing what nature, animals, and the environment can teach us.

867-456-7400
Lindsay@yukonwildlife.ca

Explore by Category

Explore by Author

No authors found.

Strong Supporters – Major Donation

Strong Supporters – Major Donation

Strong Supporters – Major Donation

A small ceremony took place at the Yukon Wildlife Preserve the morning of August 19 just before families took off on the annual Run Wild event. On this sunny day, Steve Smyth and his son Andrew presented to the Preserve’s President, Alexandra Tait and Executive Director, Jake Paleczny a cheque for $25,000, the largest donation by anyone in the history of the Preserve since it was turned over to the Operating Society in 2004.

The Wildlife Preserve was the dream of the original owners, Danny Nowlan, who established what was then called the Yukon Game Farm in 1967. One of the reasons for the Yukon government’s purchase of the Preserve and the establishment of the Operating Society to oversee its management is the extraordinary costs of looking after injured animals that are frequently brought to the Preserve for rehabilitation. This is a very expensive service that the Preserve provides to Yukon, and one that is not supported by the base funding granted to the Operating Society by the Government of Yukon. It is for this reason that the contribution by Steve, his wife Julie and son Andrew is so critical to the work of the Preserve.

President, Alexandra Tait welcomes participants to the 2019 Run Wild event and introduces Steven Smyth, donor and long-time supporter of the Yukon Wildlife Preserve.

We have an incredible group of Yukoners who have embraced the Preserve as a jewel in Yukon, whether for research, education, animal rehabilitation, tourism or recreation. There are many quiet supporters who have donated both time and money to this institution. Steve and his family have stepped up in a big way to generously give to this great cause. Steve is one of those quiet Yukoners who continues to give to our society. He moved to Yukon in 1971 and worked in management positions in government until he retired in 2007, including the Department of Environment around the time that the Preserve was purchased. In those days he was responsible for the Preserve assets as the Operating Society was set up to take this over.

In other ways Steve has given much to this territory. He has been a Justice of the Peace for 38 years and has held appointments on a number of boards: Yukon Legal Education (14 years); the Law Society of Yukon (18 years); Motor Transport Board (7 years); Arctic Institute of North America (lifetime member); Yukon Agriculture Association Board; Yukon Science Institute; Dispute Resolution Board; Yukon JP Association Executive, Family Mediation Canada, Mediation Yukon, and the Institute of Public Administration of Canada (Yukon Regional Group), and; Friends of the Yukon Archives Society.

The foundation for his commitment comes from his family. His father and mother, Ron and Evelyn, worked for many years in the Yukon public service. His brother, Randy, spent years building Yukon infrastructure for General Enterprises and other construction companies and spent time farming outside of Dawson. Driven by his strong interest in the evolution of government in Yukon, Steve is the co-author of Yukon’s Constitutional Foundations. He has published many papers on similar governance topics, and completed a PhD in Northern Studies from the University of Alaska, Fairbanks in 2005. He links this interest in Yukon’s constitutional and political evolution with institutions like the Wildlife Preserve. So many issues relating to this evolution, whether Land Claims, Court decisions on topics like the Peel Watershed, and Devolution of land and resources from Canada to Yukon, are all part of a vision for better local management of natural resources and habitat which are central values in the continued operation of the Wildlife Preserve. 

He sees the Preserve as pivotal to the experiential learning curriculum of the Yukon Education system.

Asked about his 30 year vision for the Yukon Wildlife Preserve, Steve feels it can be an internationally recognized research facility in a world where the impact of climate change on habitat and wildlife is central. He sees a future with stronger ties with other academic research institutions such as the Arctic Institute of North America and other southern Universities with northern research programs. He sees the Preserve as pivotal to the experiential learning curriculum of the Yukon Education system.

Steve’s wish is that the Operating Society will find the resources to write a book on the history of the Preserve to capture its interesting and instructive journey.

On a personal note, Steve really enjoys the moose. He would like to see wolverines at the Preserve if the opportunity presents.

Ultimately, Steve and his family bring their core conviction to Yukon and to the Preserve. The Board of the Wildlife Preserve wish to express their deep gratitude for the family’s commitment to the future of the Yukon Wildlife Preserve.

Kirk Cameron

Kirk Cameron

Board of Directors

Kirk Cameron (pictured second from right) has been a long-standing board member and supporter of the Yukon Wildlife Preserve. Kirk was a founding Director in the Preserve’s transition. Born in Yukon, Kirk’s professional path has been predominantly working as a public servant across Canada’s Northwest. This has allowed him to work along side Steve and some
shared visions for the Yukon and the Yukon Wildlife Preserve. Kirk is also a strong silent supporter of our community.

board@yukonwildlife.ca

Explore by Category

Explore by Author

No authors found.