Ripples through time: Nipmuc-led organization hosts an Indigenous canoe-making event in Ashfield

Andre Strongbearheart Gaines Jr. • May 6, 2026

Ripples through time: Nipmuc-led organization hosts an Indigenous canoe-making event in Ashfield

by Johnny Depin - May 6, 2026

Burning a Mishoon at Belding Memorial Park in Ashfield. PAUL FRANZ / Staff Photo


Under a biting morning chill at Belding Memorial Park in Ashfield, the scent of white pine smoke signaled the start of a tradition once silenced by law. As the first embers took hold of a 15-foot log, Andre StrongBearHeart Gaines Jr. and his team began the rhythmic work of a mishoon burn — an Indigenous practice of transforming a single tree into a dugout canoe through the use of fire, water and hand tools.


This particular vessel was crafted from a white pine log sourced from the Mount Grace Land Trust in Warwick. Gaines, the creative director and founder of the Nipmuc-led organization No Loose Braids, said he walked the park with forester Mike Mauri, who later shipped the tree out.

“We’ve been working together in collaboration to create better forestry management plans,” Gaines said. “This tree came because there needed to be a cut on the property. Before the cut happened, me and the forester walked the land, and [I] said ‘Why are we cutting these trees, why are we not cutting those trees, let’s work together with a different mindset.’ … This was one of the trees that came down during that cut, and we put it to use.”

Andre R Gaines-Roberson of the Nipmuc Nation supervises a Mishoon at Belding Memorial Park in Ashfield on Friday morning. PAUL FRANZ / Staff Photo


Those in attendance were in all sorts of dress; some had winter coats with beanies, while others wore sweatshirts with both hands tucked in their pockets. Those taking part in the mishoon burn weren’t wearing heavy clothing — at least not for long. Gaines started the morning in a sweatshirt, but around 10 a.m., the sweatshirt was off and he was enjoying breakfast.


The sweatshirt and the breakfast made a lot of sense for Gaines. While the mishoon burn was open to the public beginning at 9 a.m., Gaines and his team had been there since sunrise.


“We told people [9 a.m.], but we like to have a little time by ourselves first,” Gaines said. “That time we need with each other, [before] we welcome the public.”


And the public was welcomed, with just over 30 people gathered by the time the burn began. Among them was the chief of the Ashfield Fire Department, Kyle Walker, who stood around the mishoon burn along with Alexis Fedorjaczenko, the town clerk for Ashfield. Fedorjaczenko said that the process of holding the mishoon burn in Ashfield dated back to late 2024.


“It was the fall of 2024 when we applied to the [New England Foundation for the Arts] (NEFA) for their ‘Making it Public’ grant,” Fedorjaczenko said, “which gives funding to towns to do a public art project, as well as training. … [Chris Nelson] was the one who actually had the idea on doing a mishoon collaboration, so he started reaching out to a few folks who might be interested in the spring of 2025.”


Nelson, who described himself as a “co-organizer” of Ashfield’s Lighted Boat Parade taking place on Sept. 12, said he thought the mishoon burn would be a “nice sister project, or parallel project with the lighted boat parade. “You have the boats, but the mishoon is probably the first watercraft ever floated out in these waters,” he said.



Regardless of who the attendee was, Gaines — in between working on the burn — went around to everyone, thanked them for coming and answered questions about the process.

Wood is added to the center as the sides are kept moist at a Mishoon at Belding Memorial Park in Ashfield on Friday morning. PAUL FRANZ / Staff Photo


“To get to know us a little bit more is something special. To come and hear our music, see us eating our food, see the way we’re living,” Gaines said. “To see the numbers come out in support like that, even [at] the first thing in the morning, that’s beautiful.”


When a child asked what a mishoon was, Gaines paused to toss more wood into the center of the vessel before explaining that it is the Indigenous word for canoe. No question from the crowd was dismissed; if someone wanted more information, the team worked to answer them to the best of their abilities.


The three-day event, which ran from Friday, May 1 to Sunday, May 3, is just one step in a longer process. A mishoon burn typically takes seven to 10 days to complete. However, Gaines noted this was a smaller craft, as the last one he constructed measured 24 feet. This 15-foot mishoon was not finished by Sunday. Gaines said it will be completed at another location, which will be announced by No Loose Braids so the public can see the finished product.


The town of Ashfield served as the host and organizer, with several departments making the event possible.



“Big thanks to the Park Commission who voted to allow this event to happen at [Belding Memorial Park]; we’re really grateful for their support,” Fedorjaczenko said. “Huge thanks to [Chief Walker], who has worked with me and [Gaines] on this probably more than anybody else — in choosing a site that would be visible to the public but not in the way, and thinking about … how we could accomplish this without causing any health hazards.”


Attendance fluctuated throughout the first hour, but as some visitors left, more arrived to witness a process, that until 1978, was still illegal to practice in the United States.

Mishoon camp is set up at Belding Memorial Park in Ashfield where a dug out canoe, or Mishoon, will be created over several days from 15 foot white pine log from Warwick. PAUL FRANZ / Staff Photo


“As a Tribal Historic Preservation Officer for the Nipmuc Nation … it’s really important that we keep our cultural revitalization efforts at the forefront of all the work that we do,” Gaines said. “There’s a lot of important work within our communities. … Our actual work that we had to do here … if we’re not acknowledging being land stewards, or harvesting our foods, or hunting our animals, building our mishoonash, or building our traditional homes, then what does that mean to who we are as a culture here?”


“Cultural revitalization means much more than just having a workshop like this,” Gaines continued. “It actually means that all these young Nipmucs here are remembering who they are here, and what that’s going to do is, it’s going to ripple past into the next seven generations.”

View Article Here
By Andre Strongbearheart Gaines Jr. January 6, 2026
New England native tribes work to honor and uplift heritage
By Andre Strongbearheart Gaines Jr. August 13, 2025
Written by Margaret Smith Worcester Magazine August 13th, 2025
March 27, 2024
Celebrating Native American Culture and Voices in Marlborough
Mishoon canoe burning at sunset in Wesport, MA
December 12, 2023
On May 2023, the collaborative effort of Westport River Watershed Alliance, Westport Land Conservation Trust, and Wampanoag Experience resulted in the 24/7 burning of a traditional Native American canoe, overseen by tribal members. The event, from May 13th to June 24th, provided a unique insight into Native American traditions and culminated in the River Day festival on June 24th.
Melissa (Harding) Ferretti, Golden Dragonfly, standing next to the burning mishoon canoe.
August 23, 2023
The Herring Pond Wampanoag Tribe embarked on a significant cultural endeavor by crafting a canoe from a white pine trunk in a traditional mishoon burn.
3 indigenous Nipmuc men wearing traditional clothing
August 7, 2023
Andre Strongbearheart talks about the work of preserving Nipmuc traditions, decolonization, and passing these practices to the next generation with LTC Production Volunteer Carolyn.
Trees being harvested by members of the Nimpuc Nation
July 16, 2023
Town officials in Natick met with members of the Nipmuc Nation to address an incident where Nipmuc individuals harvesting trees were confronted by the police due to a lack of awareness about their agreement with the Conservation Commission.
Annawon Weeden (right) and Andre StrongBearHeart Gaines talking.
May 22, 2023
Annawon Weeden and Andre StrongBearHeart Gaines recently led a traditional Wampanoag mishoon (canoe) construction as artists-in-residence at the Westport Town Farm
Crossroads change in rural America
February 1, 2023
Andre StrongBearHeart Gaines, Jr., and his nephews, Daishuan Reddeer Garate and Miguel Wandering Turtle Garate, present an original spoken word program offering a Nipmuc Tribal perspective on place. This program will explore the common themes that connect ten-thousand-year-old traditional Indigenous social songs with modern day spoken word poetry. hey will share stories about their ongoing relationships to the land, the persistence and resilience of the Northeastern tribes, differing world views, and ways they are able to maintain balance at the intersection between the traditional lifestyle and values they inherited through their ancestors and functioning respectfully in today’s complicated world.
No Loose Braids Hide Workshop information flyer
February 1, 2023
This workshop is intended to educate non-Indigenous people on the importance of supporting and centering Indigenous sovereignty, promote Indigenous cultural reclamation and preservation, and offer a comprehensive introduction to the relationship between food, animals, and garments.