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Ojibwe Spring

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Title: Ojibwe Spring


1
The Ojibwe People of the Seasons by Mrs.
Dahlgren's Class
2
Ojibwe in Winter
3
What Foods Do They Eat?
  • They eat wild rice
  • They eat squirrel

4
What Were Some of the Chores They Did?
  • They made clothing.

5
What Did They Do For Fun?
  • They told stories
  • They played games

6
BibliographyA New True book,The Chippewa Alice
Osinski 1992The Ojibwe
PeopleThe Minnesota Historical Society 1973

7
Ojibwe Spring
  • By Cody Hemenway
  • Josh House
  • Dayna Henrichs
  • Kaitlin Glenz

8
Maple Sugar Groves
  • The Ojibwe moved to the Maple Sugar Groves from
    the Winter Hunting grounds.
  • Women made cone shaped wigwams to live in.

9
Maple Sugar
  • Ojibwe people gathered maple sap to make maple
    syrup and maple sugar.
  • Ojibwe tapped trees to get sap.
  • Ojibwe made candy out of maple sugar.

10
Food
  • Men speared at night .
  • Ojibwe used a birchbark torch to attract the
    fish.
  • Ojibwe ate venison from deer.They also ate fish
    and bear.

11
Tools
  • Ojibwe used spears to catch fish.
  • Ojibwe also used a spout to let the maple sugar
    come out.
  • Ojibwe used bow and arrows to hunt.

12
Planting
  • Ojibwe planted all sorts of food like berries and
    vegetables.
  • Ojibwe used berry juices to dye beads.

13
Leisure Time
  • Ojibwe met friends and relatives around the fire
    when all their work was done.
  • They told stories among each other.

14
Summer For The Ojibwe
  • ByRachel Kent
  • Catelyn Stamm
  • Tony Vang
  • Calahan Stoffle

15
Wigwams
  • Bent cedar saplings to make the frame
  • Peeled birchbark off birch tree
  • Sewed birchbark onto frame
  • Put large hide for door on wigwam.

16
Gardening
  • Planted corn, squash, beans, potatoes, and
    lettuce
  • Gathered cranberries, strawberries, blueberries,
    raspberries,cherries, and grapes
  • Squeezed cranberries for juice

17
Tanning Hides
  • Women put hide on round frame made out of
    branches.
  • Spread deer brain and urine on hide to smooth it
  • Scrape dirty germs off the hide with a sharp rock

18
Fishing
  • Men fished with spears in canoes.
  • Boys made arrowheads for the tip of spear.
  • When fishing at night men used torches because
    fish are attracted to light.

19
Baskets
  • Peeled birch bark off the birch tree
  • Folded and cut the shape for the basket
  • Used sinew, twine, or longrass to sew the rim of
    the basket

20
Lacrosse
  • In their leisure time they would play lacrosse.
  • They would wrap deer skin around a rock and bent
    sticks to make rackets.
  • Then they put nets on the rackets.

21
Bibliography
  • A New True Book , The Chippewa
  • Alice Osinski
  • 1992
  • The Ojibwe People
  • The Minnesota Historical Society
  • 1973

22
Ojibwe Fall
  • ByAlexis Meservey
  • Olivia Hoesley
  • Kyle Lindsay
  • Bodie Brovold

23
The Rice Camp
  • They lived in the wild rice camp.
  • They lived in wigwams.

24
Wild Ricing
  • They went wild ricing in a canoe.
  • Two people went ricing at a time.

25
Wild Rice
  • They used two cedar sticks.
  • They also used a pole.
  • They got to the marshes by a birch bark canoe.

26
Shaking Wild Rice
  • They used birch bark baskets.

27
Stirring Wild Rice
  • They stirred the wild rice in a pot.

28
Storing Wild Rice
  • They stored the wild rice in birch bark baskets.

29
Bibliography The Ojibwe People The Minnesota
Historical Society1973 A New True Book, The
Chippewa Alice Osinski 1992
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