Yukon River Drainage Fisheries Association
With the giveback component of her bandana design, Crystal chose to support the Yukon Riven Drainage Fisheries Association. Home to the longest Salmon migration on Earth, the Yukon River has historically served as the primary food source and way of life for many Indigenous cultures of Alaska. In recent years, several man-made factors have led to sharp declines in Yukon River Salmon populations, threatening a centuries-old way of life for local village fishers. The YRDFA was created in 1990 to conserve these salmon runs by giving a voice to the people who have managed the resource for thousands of years. Through conservation, management practices, stock rebuildings, harvest sharing, research, and habitat protection, the YRDFA hopes to ensure the sustainability of Salmon stock and to protect the way of life for the people who depend upon and manage these salmon fisheries.
In choosing to support YRDFA, Crystal cited her deep personal connection to the Yukon Salmon in these waterways. Not only have salmon played an integral role in Athabascan and Tlingit people’s lives for thousands of years, but more specifically they're also a central part of her family history. Her Grandparents would bring their whole family of 10 children to fish camp each Summer, where they all learned to catch, filet, smoke, and prepare the fish - as a means of both food and livelihood. She told us of growing up craving the delicious salmon potato patties that were a mainstay at family gatherings. And now, she explained, "My family has not been able to fish on the Yukon or Kuskokwim for years due to the lack of fish returning. They won’t be able to harvest again until the numbers get better." Without a change in the way the world interacts with these Salmon populations, not only will a way of life disappear, but also the younger generations will not learn these invaluable fishing and preserving skills that Athabascans have survived on for generations.
In Crystal's words: "We must make change in our actions and thinking about our environment."
http://yukonsalmon.org