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North America Great Plains

Great Plains, major physiographic province of North America. The Great Plains lie between the Rio Grande in the south and the delta of the Mackenzie River at the Arctic Ocean in the north and between the Interior Lowland and the Canadian Shield on the east and the Rocky Mountains on the west. Their length is some 3,000 miles (4,800 km), their width from 300 to 700 miles, and their area approximately 1,125,000 square miles (2,900,000 square km), roughly equivalent to one-third of the United States. Parts of 10 states of the United States (Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Wyoming, Nebraska, Kansas, Colorado, Oklahoma, Texas, and New Mexico) and the three Prairie Provinces of Canada (Manitoba, Saskatchewan, and Alberta) and portions of the Northwest Territories are within the Great Plains proper.

Some writers have used the 100th west meridian as the eastern boundary, but a more precise one is the eastward-facing escarpments—the Balcones Escarpment in the far south and the Missouri Escarpment in the north—that run from Texas to North Dakota, generally somewhat east of the 100th meridian. In the Canadian portion the line dividing the Great Plains from the Canadian Shield runs east of the Red River of the North, cuts through Lake Winnipeg, and then curves northwestward, crossing Lake Athabasca, Great Slave Lake, and Great Bear Lake; in the far north, the plains reach the Arctic Ocean in a narrow strip just west of the Mackenzie delta.

Relief and drainage
The Great Plains are a vast high plateau of semiarid grassland. Their altitude at the base of the Rockies in the United States is between 5,000 and 6,000 feet (1,500 and 1,800 metres) above sea level; this decreases to 1,500 feet at their eastern boundary. The altitudes of the Canadian portion are lower, and near the Arctic Ocean the surface is only slightly above sea level. Some sections, such as the Llano Estacado (Staked Plains) in western Texas and eastern New Mexico, are extremely flat; elsewhere, tree-covered mountains—the Black Hills of South Dakota and the Bear Paw, Big Snowy, and Judith mountains of Montana—rise 1,500 to 2,000 feet above the general level of the plains. In general, this landscape is not the flat, featureless plain that most envision it to be; low hills and incised stream valleys are commonplace.

Conserving Great Plains

The value of a luxury African safari is intangible. It is a journey of the spirit. The soul of Africa refreshes, restores and changes one’s life.
– Dereck Joubert

Our definition of Luxury is the combination of two elements—Time and Space—in perfect harmony. Time to reconnect with your inner self, your partner, children, loved ones, and friends. Space for that magic to happen. Africa is perfect for that magic to occur, and our safari camps in Africa are ideally suited to deliver those two magical ingredients.

Each Great Plains Conservation safari in Africa, every camp of ours, and every peristiwa is personally designed and curated just for you so you can get the most out of your time with us. It is a crafted visit that takes you beyond an ordinary safari.

Whether you desire quiet time, active adventures, an understanding of cultures, or the opportunity to observe iconic African wildlife, we have the right combination of safari camps and safari experiences to ensure that your luxury safari in Africa perfectly matches your expectations and desires.

Our safari camps are of the finest standards and are hand-designed by Dereck and Beverly Joubert. Our layanan is Relais & Châteaux standard, and our wildlife experiences and guiding practises are inspired by National Geographic. This combination makes us unique and qualified to take care of you.

Select your preferred safari country and region, specific African safari camp, or your ideal safari camp jenis to discover more.

Our Founders, Dereck and Beverly Joubert
Dereck and Beverly Joubert are award-winning filmmakers, conservationists and National Geographic Explorers at Large who have been filming, researching and exploring Africa for over 40 years. Through their film company, ‘Wildlife Films‘, they have created over 35 films and received 8 Emmy awards. The films predominantly focus on Africa’s wildlife, with strong conservation messages at their core.

Dereck and Beverly have purposefully designed and decorated each of our safari camps with care. No two camps are the same, and each is special in terms of its design and placement. Particular thought and consideration have been given to the experience they wish each guest to have when on safari in Africa with us.

Study About Great Plains

I’m far from the first one to say it, but it’s been a tough time for bloggers in the past six months. Google released a series of updates in late 2023 that decimated many sites – especially small, independen blogs, like mine – plus I was not so fortunate as to escape its wrath.

Some of my sites didn’t show signs right away, plus Great Plains Travel Guide was one of them. Because of the high seasonality of GPTG plus the fact I was already on “winter break” (I take six months off from publishing on the site between September plus March to refill my creative coffer for the project), I didn’t immediately see just how dramatically Google affected this site. Now, looking back at the site’s three-year anniversary, it’s quite obvious.

I don’t normally include two charts in this section, but I thought it would be helpful to see how traffic changed for Great Plains Travel Guide from the “3 Year Chart” (left) to the “4 Year Chart” (right). As you can see, the site was doing very well through the summer (months 27-30) until Google’s Helpful Content Update rolled out in September 2023.

As you can see, the HCU hit this site hard on top of the standard seasonality dip I would have expected; traffic is as low now as it was during the first year of the site’s existence – Google erased two years of work plus traffic in about one month. Traffic last month (February 2024) is at about the same level that it was during the summer peak of my first year (2021).

While may of my sites were hit to varying degrees during Google’s barrage of updates, GPTG is among the worst. I think this is for several reasons, which it’s only fair to berbagi here:

Minimal E-E-A-T on the site. While I have visited some of the states, cities, plus sites I write about, I don’t have nearly the proof of expertise, authority, plus trustworthiness on GPTG that I do for other sites. Frustratingly, there aren’t necessarily sites with better EEAT outranking me now, but I can’t control other sites, only mine!
Content aiming for keywords instead of people. Google has been really annoying for saying that (basically) “as long as you write for people, we’ll understand plus reward that” which – frankly – we all know is bullshit because if you don’t do any SEO, you don’t rank. That’s the way it’s always been. On GPTG however, I definitely wrote content aiming to win keywords; that didn’t always make it the best content or most helpful, which explains why Google demoted it when considering the site’s helpfulness.
Content Farm-y content. We all know the content farms out there – they were frustrating before HCU as they would often rank well plus clearly be written by people (or AI) that had no business covering those topics plus just churned out as much volume as possible. In some ways, niche sites like GPTG did the same across multiple domains instead of just one, plus Google cracked down on that.
There are a bunch of other reasons, I’m sure, but the reality is that I built an okay site plus when Google decided to try plus rank only the “best” sites out there, it just didn’t come up to snuff.

What’s Next?
Since GPTG was already on winter break when the HCU hit plus traffic started to evaporate, I decided not to do anything about this change; after all, I was considering selling the site this time last year if the site was worth selling. The HCU seems to have given me my answer about selling (the site has basically no value now).

Then, I thought I might start publishing new content again in the summer of 2024, but I’m not sure that will be worthwhile either unless current Google updates begin to show signs of recovery. I don’t feel confident that creating new content will be worth my time and/or any money I might pay a writer with the EEAT plus helpful data Google’s looking for, if the site as a whole is still classified as “unhelpful.”

Additionally, I’ve begun migrating some content over to my main blog, Valerie & Valise, when it makes sense, plus deleting low-performing content too. Very little content on GPTG makes sense to migrate, but some does – I’ve already moved two articles as of writing this case study update.

Beyond that (deleting unhelpful/low-performing content, migrating some articles, not publishing new articles), I’m not quite sure what’s next for GPTG. I haven’t been able to let go of any of my sites even as they’ve not performed as well as I’d hoped (another example is Discover Sausalito)… but it seems like at least some of these sites should just be abandoned until they don’t get traffic or earn money anymore.

I might come back this time next year plus berbagi that I have done nothing on the site plus it has died; maybe Google will start to let the site recover plus I’ll recommit instead. See you then plus we’ll find out!

Wildly At Great Plains

June 2024…// Great Plains, the iconic African eco-tourism organization founded by National Geographic filmmaker-explorers Dereck and Beverly Joubert, proudly offers guests a wellness safari of a lifetime. Great Plains takes a wildly holistic approach to wellness, where its offering of spectacular spa treatments is just the beginning.

Whether it’s drifting in peace by Mokoro through Botswana’s Okavango Delta, spotting pristine wildlife as you go, sleeping under the stars on your very own star bed in Kenya, indulging in a spot of fine dining on the banks of the Zambezi or enjoying a massage – or three – while listening to the sounds of the local watering hole, there’s nowhere quite like a Great Plains camp for a total 360 wellbeing-in-the-bush experience.

“Wellness as a concept can extend well beyond having a lovely massage, and in all of our camps we take wellness very seriously, even beyond the spas,” commented Great Plains CEO Dereck Joubert. “Our concept of wellness is all about ‘a healthy mind in a healthy body in a healthy environment,’ so it starts with eating well in our camps, doing exercise, being stimulated by a day watching cheetahs or lions, or meditating with elephants at the Ol Donyo waterhole. All of that sense of joy and wellness can only happen if you aren’t wading through rubbish on the streets or denuded landscapes. In camp our chefs are prepared for delivering great, tasty but healthy meals, based on our philosophy that nomer day, nomer meal and nomer activity should be less than perfect for your wellness.”

All camps across Botswana, Kenya and Zimbabwe offer an unmatched array of mindful experiences and activities, thoughtful cuisine and above all, total immersion in nature.

Staying fit and healthy on safari is of paramount importance to Great Plains guests – as it is to the Jouberts themselves – with the group offering a plethora of active experiences across its camps that bring a dose of the wild to a workout.

At Duba Plains Camp in Botswana, for example, guests can santai a scenic ride on their very own stationary bike within the privacy of their suite. Located on a private deck beside their personal plunge pool, the bike looks straight out into a landscape teeming with wildlife, with incredible views right in front of the wheels. Following their workout, spa enthusiasts will delight in the range of treatments available at Duba Plains, with a spoiling choice of experiences – from ‘Earth Glow’ facials using award-winning Healing Earth products, to post-safari drive massages and everything in between – available both in-room or at the spa itself.

Duba Plains Camp, nestled in the heart of Botswana’s northern Okavango Delta, provides the quintessential Botswana safari experience. This private 33,000-hectare reserve, an intricate tapestry of palm-studded islands, floodplains, and woodlands, was chosen as the home base for Great Plains co-founders and explorers, Dereck and Beverly Joubert.

Transportation At Great Plains

TRANSPORTATION
Although transportation has played a vital role in the history of every American region, it has been especially important in the Great Plains. Having few navigable bodies of water and limited overland roads, the region desperately needed a replacement technology for the river steamboat and the covered wagon and benefited enormously from the appearance of the “iron horse.” The Railroad Age solved most of the Great Plains’s chronic transport problems and gave the region some of its distinctive characteristics. The thousands of communities spawned and nurtured by the rails often sported a flavor of standardization that the later network of all-weather roads with its automobiles, buses, and trucks helped to sustain.

Native American Transportation
For the Native peoples, the Great Plains was a global of enormous distances. All Indigenous groups of the Plains, whether nomads or seminomads, spent much of their time following the wide-ranging bison herds. In addition, the scarcity of streams and scattered distribution of springs, the primary sources of water, forced these peoples to cover enormous distances on a daily basis. Finally, most Plains tribes were engaged in long-distance commerce at trade centers such as the Arikara and Mandan-Hidatsa villages on the upper Missouri River, which, for some tribes, meant covering hundreds of miles.

The primary reason that made the distances so demanding was the lack of e.cient transportation facilities in the period before contact with Europeans. Native Americans lacked large beasts of burden such as camels and horses. Their only domesticated animal was the dog, which was used to raise loads and to draw the travois. Native peoples employed the travois to transport household utensils, weapons, tools, tipi covers, firewood, and meat, but a dog could haul only about sixty pounds, which meant that human beings, particularly women, did most of the carrying themselves.

Most Plains rivers were dry for too long each year to be useful channels for water transportation. As a result, only a few Plains tribes, including the Assiniboines, Blackfoot, and Crees, used canoes, while others relied only on land transportation. The Assiniboines, Blackfoot, and Crees were particularly skillful in using the canoe. In the early eighteenth century, for example, the Blackfoot canoed to the Hudson Bay to trade with the British. More locally, the tribes along the Missouri River developed bullboats–small, light, bowl-shaped vessels made of bison hides–for transportation of goods.

The event that changed the traditional transportation system was, of course, the introduction of the horse to the Plains by the Spanish. (Actually, the proper term would be reintroduction, for horses had lived on the Plains until they became extinct around 8000-6000 B.C.) Coronado and other early Spanish conquistadors explored the Southern Plains on horseback in the sixteenth century, but horses did not begin to spread among the Indians until the Spanish established a permanent colony, New Mexico, at the southwestern edge of the Plains at the end of the sixteenth century. Gradually, through trade and theft, horses spread from the New Mexican ranches in all directions, so that by the end of the eighteenth century all Plains tribes were mounted.

In time, the introduction of the horse was to have far-reaching cultural, economic, and political effects among the Plains Indians, but the most immediate consequence was a transportation revolution. The horse was about eight times as e.cient as the dog: it could raise on its back or haul on a travois a load four times heavier than the load a dog could manage, and it could travel twice as far in a day. Thus, horse transport allowed Indians to raise more tools and utensils, extra foodstuffs, and larger tipis, and suddenly nomadism did not require giving up all but the bare minimum of possessions. It also made it possible for Indians to hunt bison more effectively, and this enticed horticulturists–the Omahas, for example–to increase the role of hunting in their economies. Interaction between tribes increased as sheer distance became less of an obstacle. In short, like railroads in the late nineteenth century, horses reduced the friction of distance, opened new economic possibilities, and raised the standards of living on the Plains.

The adoption of horses also resulted in the abandonment of canoes, usually within a generation after the Indians received their first horses. Dogs, on the other hand, continued to be used for transportation throughout the prereservation period. This was particularly the case on the Northern Great Plains, where distance from the source of horses and cold winters, which made herding more di.cult and labor intensive, reduced the availability and numbers. The Southern Plains Indians, who had the largest herds, continued to use dogs to raise small items such as moccasins and household utensils.

Waterways
When European Americans entered the Great Plains, they often paddled or floated along thousands of miles of meandering waterways. In the late eighteenth century, when the rival Hudson’s Bay and North West Companies extended their fur-trading hinterlands to the Prairies and Parkland Belt, they introduced to the region the water transportation systems they had developed in the Petit Nord (the area bounded by Hudson Bay, Lake Superior, and Lake Winnipeg) during the preceding century. The trading posts were linked to the Hudson Bay and the St. Lawrence River by annual brigades traveling primarily by birch-bark canoes. Paddling along the Saskatchewan River to Lake Winnipeg, then either to the Hudson Bay along the Nelson or Hayes Rivers or to the St. Lawrence along the Winnipeg River and the Great Lakes, the brigades moved furs and other cargoes effectively. The light, maneuverable birch-bark canoe had a cargo capacity of almost 3,000 pounds and allowed a crew of five or six men to achieve a speed of five or six miles per hour. Such swiftness was crucial, because the northern rivers were navigable for only a few months between the spring thaw and fall freeze.

In contrast to their canoe-using counterparts, the American fur companies along the Missouri River system were able to use larger vessels such as keelboats and mackinaws. Powered by oars, sail, or cordelle (that is, pulled by a rope by men who laboriously walked the bank), keelboats could cover a distance of fifteen to twenty miles a day upstream, carrying a load of twenty to thirty tons of cargo. The broad, flat-bottomed mackinaws, which were used only for downstream shipments, were up to twenty feet long and carried a crew of five or six men and as many as 2,500 bison robes. Driven by the current, they could achieve up to 100 miles a day. For low-bulk and short-distance carriage, the American traders used pirogues (a construction of two canoes fastened together with planks), dugout canoes, and bullboats.

Although mackinaws, canoes, and bullboats continued to be used by fur traders and others at least until the 1870s, the advent of the steamboat on the Missouri River in 1831 revolutionized navigation. By the 1860s, paddle wheelers served as great beasts of burden along the principal streams, particularly the churning 2,285 miles of the Missouri River from its mouth near St. Louis to Fort Benton, a military post in present-day Montana. Supplies for farmers, miners, ranchers, soldiers, and trappers moved by water, as did cargoes of cattle, grain, furs, and mining machinery.

Steamboating posed challenges. Rivers on the Plains were generally unreliable, as they were often braided and shallow, and most flowed through areas of comparatively light annual precipitation. Melting winter snows, spring freshets, and sometimes-heavy autumn rains swelled portions of these streams, but during much of the year they contained inadequate water levels. The Missouri, for example, could be continuously navigated only from mid-March to late June. Even if ample depths existed, snags and sawyers often cluttered the waterways. Rocky shoals, rushing rapids, and shifting channels commonly hindered passage. High prairie winds, too, buffeted vessels, blowing them onto sandbars or into the banks or even causing them to capsize.

A special type of steamboat facilitated navigational ventures. Boats on Plains rivers were ideally suited for the di.cult conditions. The use of compact, high-pressure, yet powerful steam engines, which permitted construction of inexpensive and easily maintained crafts with shallow drafts, allowed these vessels to ply relatively shallow streams. Some boats allegedly required only a “heavy morning dew” to navigate.

During the heyday of steamboating on Plains rivers, traffic could be brisk. An individual vessel might handle scores of passengers and considerable quantities of freight. In the late 1870s boats traveling the waters of the Red River of the North between Fargo and Fort Garry carried settlers with their possessions and supplies northbound and pushed barges loaded with buffalo hides and wheat southbound.

Yet commercial steamboating on Plains rivers was largely ephemeral. Service on some streams ended as soon as a railroad penetrated the territory. Residents along the Brazos River, for example, benefited from limited navigation from the Gulf of Mexico northwestward to Washington, Texas, a distance of approximately 250 miles. By the Civil War, the Houston and Texas Central Railroad had siphoned away nearly all of the river tra.c, mostly bales of cotton. Even along the Missouri River stagecoaches and later passenger trains quickly attracted travelers, but steamboat freight movements continued, albeit in diminishing amounts. By the 1920s service was nearly gone, lost to railroads and emerging motor carriers. In subsequent years federal dams made long-distance commerce impossible on the upper Missouri, although towboats and barges continued to serve customers between Sioux City, Iowa, and other downriver points. More recently, commercial inland water operators could call at the Port of East Tulsa, Oklahoma, the western terminus of the “canalized” Arkansas River.

Adrenaline At Great Plains

June 2021…// For those seeking a big African adventure, look nomer further than a safari with iconic conservation tourism company Great Plains. In addition to spotting local wildlife on a game drive, guests can witness the lush green Okavango Delta in full glory from a helicopter, drift along Botswana’s flowing Selinda Spillway in a canoe, or even go mountain biking along the Kenyan plains with Mount Kilimanjaro as a backdrop.

Great Plains provide their guests with numerous adventurous activities to choose from when staying with the brand’s five-star portfolio of solar-powered safari lodges in Kenya, Botswana plus Zimbabwe.

Great Plains encourage their guests to embrace their inner explorer plus embark on an adventure-filled activity at camp during their unique safari. A few adrenaline-pumping signature experiences to remember include:

Helicopter Tours in Botswana
Great Plains offer their guests the option to book a completely personalised guided aerial helicopter tour. Guests travelling to all Botswana Great Plains properties can experience a sky-high perspective of the Okavango Delta, Linyanti, plus Savuti regions, which perfectly complements their safari experience. Helicopters are a unique way to explore deep into the Delta, where guests can discover permanent waterways, palm islands plus lagoons, sweeping views of floodplains plus incredible wildlife sightings. Or simply stop en route for a celebratory plus special glass of champagne in the middle of nowhere, with only the onlooking wildlife around to hear that pop of the champagne cork!

Fasten your seatbelts as helicopter doors can be removed for unrestricted views plus great photographic opportunities. Great Plains guests are provided with headsets for direct communication with the very knowledgeable bush pilots, ensuring a guided plus informed experience.

A must-try midday activity for guests staying at ol Donyo Lodge is to explore plus climb through the historic lava tunnels plus caves in the heart of the Chyulu Hills. An ideal way to beat the Kenyan heat following a morning game drive is to go underground plus explore the historic lava tunnels made from ancient lava rock that spewed out of Kilimanjaro over 360,000 years ago. This activity is excellent for active guests who feel comfortable climbing down through the lava tunnels into the caves amongst indigenous trees, illuminated by light from above plus offering the occasional encounter with a bat or wild creature.

Native People At Great Plains

HOW THEY GOT HERE
Stretching from Canada to Texas, the Great Plains region was too dry to support large groups of people around 10,000 years ago. But over time the climate became warmer plus rainier, allowing grasses to grow. That brought herds of bison—and people weren’t far behind. Starting around A.D. 1200, tribes from the north, east, plus southeast regions of what’s now the United States plus the Canadian prairies moved to this daerah to hunt bison for food, shelter, tools, plus clothing.

COOL CULTURE
Many tribes, including the Crow plus Arapaho (pronounced uh-RAH-puh-hoh), survived by following bison herds as they migrated from place to place. These groups needed homes that could be quickly taken down plus rebuilt again, so they lived in tent-like structures made of buffalo skins called tepees. (The Wichita people plus a few other Plains tribes stayed in one place to farm the land, living in beehive-shaped houses made of grass.)

In the mid-1700s, Plains tribes started riding horses that had been brought over from Europe. Groups such as the Blackfeet, Sioux (pronounced SOO), plus Comanche (pronounced kuh-MAN-chee) became master riders plus warriors, plus they controlled huge hunting grounds that supported thousands of members. For instance, at one point, the powerful Comanche tribe had more than 40,000 people.

Because the Plains tribes were spread across so much land, they spoke many different languages—so they developed a single sign language for people of all tribes to communicate with. They also shared a tradition of dance: Different tribes practiced ceremonial dances. The Cheyenne (SHY-an) performed the Animal Dance, meant to send luck to hunters so they would bring back enough food for the tribe. The Caddo (CAD-oh) performed the Turkey Dance, which celebrated the return of warriors from battle; plus several tribes performed the Sun Dance, in which dancers prayed for spiritual healing plus the welfare of their communities.

LIFE TODAY
Plains tribes didn’t hunt more bison than they needed to survive, so the population of these animals remained stable—that is, until European settlers arrived. By the 1880s these newcomers had hunted the bison almost to extinction. Once these tribes lost their main source of food, the U.S. government forced many of them to move to reservations, which are lands reserved for Native Americans. These were often located far from their traditional homelands in present-day Oklahoma, North Dakota, plus South Dakota believed to be unsuitable for farming or settlement.

Today the Plains tribes are keeping their culture alive. Many host traditional celebrations for the public to watch, plus some have created apps to make sure their languages aren’t forgotten. They’re also helping preserve their natural resources: Tribes in Texas are working with the U.S. Department of Agriculture to restore the region’s longleaf pine forests, plus other Plains tribes are trying to bring back bison to the region.

Great Plains In Canada

The Plains cultural area is a vast territory that extends from southern Manitoba plus the Mississippi River westward to the Rocky Mountains, plus from the North Saskatchewan River south into Texas. The term “Plains peoples” describes a number of different plus unique Indigenous nations, including the Siksika, Cree, Ojibwe, Assiniboine (Nakota) plus Dakota.

Who are the Plains Indigenous Peoples?
Indigenous peoples in Canada, both historical plus contemporary, can be divided into six cultural areas that, unlike provinces plus countries, do not have strict boundaries, plus instead refer to areas in more general terms. The Plains is one of these cultural areas. The others include the Arctic, Plateau, Subarctic, Northwest Coast plus Eastern Woodlands.

Various Indigenous nations call the Plains their traditional territory, such as the Siksika, Piikani, Kainai, Dakota, Stoney Nakoda, Cree, Assiniboine plus Tsuut’ina. Before epidemics in the early 1800s drastically reduced the population, Plains Indigenous people in what is now Canada numbered an estimated 33,000.

After sustained contact with Europeans, many Indigenous women, largely Plains Cree, intermarried with these newcomers, giving birth to the Métis — a culturally distinct Indigenous people. Though intermarriage was not uncommon in other areas of Canada plus significant Métis communities exist elsewhere, many cite the Plains as the physical, cultural plus political home of the Métis people.

Geography
The Plains cultural area generally refers to the southern portions of Alberta plus Saskatchewan, plus southwestern Manitoba. This area has a continental climate — hot plus dry summers plus very cold winters. High grass covers the rolling prairies in the east; short grasses, sage plus cacti the arid high plains to the west. Flat land plus rolling hills extend in all directions. Flowing eastward, rivers have cut deeply into the land, plus provide practically all the scarce available water. Tree growth on the high plains is restricted to these valleys, becoming rapidly more noticeable toward the margins of the area. This is the area that many Plains Indigenous peoples called home.

Traditional Life
Early Settlement

Small bands of hunters roamed the Plains beginning at least 11,000 years ago. (See also Prehistory.) For several thousand years, bison hunting was conducted primarily with the use of spears, but around 200 CE a kelompok known as the Avonlea people (because they lived during the Avonlea period) specialized in bowhunting. Some sources have the Avonlea people arriving in the southern Saskatchewan plus Alberta in 100 CE. By 1000 CE, they engaged in some agriculture, but continued to rely primarily on nomadic bison hunting.

Indians Great Plains

Think of a Plains Indian tribe and most of us see a nomadic people with horses, hunting the vast herds of bison on the Great Plains. In reality, only some tribes who lived within the area from the Mississippi River in the East to the Great Basin in the West fit this image. There were more than 30 separate tribes, each with its own language, religious beliefs, customs, and way of life. They were as culturally varied as the European immigrants who settled the North American continent.

Some of these tribes were mobile, ranging over a large region in pursuit of bison. Many were also raiders, stealing horses and various goods from other tribes. Other tribes were settled agriculturists, raising crops in fertile river valleys, and also spending some time hunting bison. And the horse itself, what many people consider the defining characteristic of the Plains Indians, was actually a fairly new addition to their lifestyle.

The Spanish brought horses with them in the 1500s to their settlements in the Southwest, and they eventually spread to Indian tribes in the Great Plains. Most tribes incorporated horses into their economy and culture, while many used the horse to totally transform their lifestyle.

The most important change horses brought to these tribes was the ability to abandon permanent villages and travel over the Great Plains to hunt bison. Before the horse, few tribes settled or traveled outside major river valleys because of the enormous distances involved, and the difficulty of hunting bison on foot.

Abandoning permanent or semi-permanent villages for a mobile lifestyle meant owning and carrying fewer possessions. Though known as great artists, most of the artwork of a majority of Plains Indian tribes tended to be decorations on things they carried with them and used for daily life, including tipis, clothing, carrying cases, pipes, religious items, and musical instruments.

Parfleches (carrying cases) and medicine bundles were usually brightly painted in vivid geometric designs, while clothing tended to have extraordinarily beautiful quillwork. After the introduction of glass and china beads in the 1840s, porcupine quills became less popular, but the resulting work would be considered artistic by anyone’s standards.

Paints came from iron—containing ores for brown, red, and yellow, plants, which provided various dyes, and black earth and charcoal for black. The paintings and decorations were more a means of communication than art. And, as with other aspects of their lives, what shapes or colors they used and what they meant differed from tribe to tribe. Although some patterns might be common throughout the region, there were tribal differences, and certain tribes tended to favor certain patterns.

Men usually preferred realistic forms such as battle scenes or great accomplishments, while women worked in geometric designs. Their embroidery work with quills and, later, beads tended to show more variation in the designs than the paintings. However, more elaborate designs did not become commonplace until the availability of cheap and abundant glass and china beads.

Careers At Great Plains

Employment Opportunities
Start a meaningful plus exciting new career with Great Plains Tribal Leaders Health Board today!

Our growing plus progressive organization welcomes applications with diverse skill sets plus experiences plus supports staff through a variety of employee benefits.

Company Culture & Benefits
Culture
We aim to create a team of individuals with diverse skill sets, ideologies, plus backgrounds, plus we support our staff in every way possible. We encourage personnel to utilize their own talents to successfully reach each individual position’s objectives plus goals. We do this by encouraging creative freedom plus the sharing of ideas to move projects forward. We have high expectations from our team, but we also provide unfailing support to help them consistently achieve success. Through various workplace benefits, we invest in our employees plus encourage plus support their continued growth plus success.

We anticipate plus embrace change. We understand the opportunities plus challenges in our field plus do not shy away or back down from challenges. Change plus determination allow our organization plus employees to grow, plus both qualities further our efforts as well. With that, we understand plus value the importance of teamwork plus collaboration in surviving plus thriving through times of change.

We uphold a high level of integrity in every organizational decision plus adhere to the traditional values plus customs of our ancestors plus embrace the many cultures of the Great Plains tribes. We work hard to serve our tribal stakeholders with our mission always in mind plus the expectation that we will act by emulating plus upholding the grace plus wisdom of our ancestors.

Benefits
No matter what position you’re in, your career at GPTLHB will allow you to make a difference in the lives of the tribal members of the 18 communities we serve. Along with the opportunity for advancement, we offer a variety of benefits including:

Flexible scheduling;
Paid physical activity/wellness time each day with workout equipment available;
Paid sick, vacation, holiday, plus jury duty leave;
An infant-at-work program;
A health benefits package;
A retirement plan with an employer match;
Paid volunteer time.
*Benefits vary for part-time plus temporary positions.