
Behind the scenes of Métis cultural feasts at Back to Batoche festival
Back to Batoche Days are officially underway with lively campers and festival goers celebrating Métis culture and heritage. In the last three years, the festival has grown from 20,000 visitors to over 40,000 and if the amount of food being cooked is any indication, they expect to see more growth this year too.
As part of the largest Métis festival in the country, a large feast is cooked every day by members of the Metis Council of Saskatchewan’s Eastern Region 3. For the last three years, those feasts have been run by Darcy Lepowick, who is actually the director for Eastern Region 2A. Last year, he served around 600 people on opening night, and this year he’s planning for anywhere between 800 to 1000.
“Last year, for example, I barbecued rabbit on Thursday, and then we cooked wild boar on Friday, and then we had a buffalo we cooked on a pitch, and that’s been in the last three years I’ve been involved.”
