Non-Timber Forest Products provide new opportunities Cedar Lake CFDC |
Most northern communities are not close to major industries and high unemployment is always a concern. The innovative idea of developing the NTFP industry builds on the North’s long-standing tradition of living off the land and brings it into today’s context. NTFP are a varied and diverse lot. They range from mushrooms and edibles to medicinals, to craft and landscaping products. Within the field, there is also room for value-added products, like ready for sale crafts, candies and syrups or pre-packaged mixes of forest edibles. Cedar Lake first began its effort to jumpstart the NTFP industry in 1999 and by March 2000, with the assistance of the equally committed Keewatin Community College (KCC), the CFDC held a conference in NTFP in The Pas. With enthusiastic feedback from the participants and increasing interest from individuals and communities, the event was expanded and held again in 2001 in Thompson. This time the other four Northern CFDCs (Greenstone, Kitayan, North Central, & Northwest) also came aboard as partners. Affirming the importance of the industry, Keewatin Community College announced during the conference the creation of a new Northern Forest Diversification Centre (NFDC), which is committed to expanding industries like NTFP and eco-tourism in the North. The goal of the conferences was to make communities in Northern Manitoba aware of the potential economic opportunities right in their back yards and to provide assistance with new product development and identifying new markets. With an abundance of NTFP options available it is easy to appreciate the effort Cedar Lake CFDC has put into developing NTFP. The spin-offs of those two conferences are continuing. Building upon the information disseminated at the conferences an NTFP training course was developed. The course provides participants with more detailed instruction in subjects like product identification and diversification, markets and marketing and packaging. The course was delivered to three communities in 2001, with a fourth scheduled for the fall. Here are some the results of this training: Cranberry Portage
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