Indigenous Fire Stewardship

Reigniting Relationships: Indigenous Fire Stewardship and Community Resilience

🔥 Reigniting Relationships: Indigenous Fire Stewardship and Community Resilience with Amy Cardinal Christianson, Alvin First Rider and Jordan Melograna

Good Fire Podcast — Special Live Episode

This episode of Good Fire was recorded in front of a live audience of 300 people at the Fire and Ice Symposium during the Banff Centre Mountain Film and Book Festival, on Treaty 7 territory. What unfolds is not just a conversation about fire, but a gathering of stories—about land, memory, responsibility, and the work of rebuilding relationships that were deliberately broken.

Resources

Video from this episode: Reignition: Bringing Good Fire Back to the Land

Alvin First Rider

Jordan Melograna

Banff Centre Mountain Film and Book Festival

Indigenous Leadership Initiative

Blood Tribe Land Management

Block by Block Creative

Kainai Nation ignites the first Indigenous fire guardians program in Canada

Reigniting Cultural Burning with the Blood Tribe Fire Guardians

Show Notes

Host Dr. Amy Cardinal Christianson (Métis, Treaty 8) is joined by Alvin First Rider of the Blood Tribe (Blackfoot Confederacy), along with visual storyteller Jordan Melograna from the Indigenous Leadership Initiative. Together, they reflect on Indigenous fire stewardship as a living practice—one rooted in sovereignty, cultural continuity, and care for future generations.

Listeners are invited into a deeper understanding of good fire: fire as a gift, a teacher, and a tool for healing. Alvin shares how fire and bison have always shaped Blackfoot grasslands, and how restoring these relationships is both ecological work and an expression of Indigenous self-determination. From Fire Guardian programs on the Blood Reserve to community-led wildfire training in the North, the episode highlights how Indigenous Nations are reclaiming fire on their own terms—despite legal, financial, and colonial barriers that remain firmly in place.

The conversation also explores how fire stewardship is year-round work. It includes winter planning, community education, youth training, and storytelling—long before flames ever touch the ground. Through lived examples, the episode challenges dominant narratives that frame fire only as disaster, replacing fear with knowledge, preparedness, and respect.

A powerful thread throughout the episode is storytelling itself. Jordan reflects on the responsibility of documenting cultural fire in ways that are accountable to community, emphasizing co-authorship, consent, and long-term relationships over extraction. These stories—shared freely—are meant to shift public understanding, counter misinformation, and make visible the calm, collective, and deeply intentional nature of cultural burning.

At its heart, this episode is about hope. While there is grief for the landscapes altered by fire exclusion and climate change, there is also determination and possibility. Indigenous fire stewardship is not a relic of the past—it is happening now, led by communities who know their lands intimately and are working every day to restore balance.

Fire does not have to be something we fear. When practiced with care, knowledge, and respect, it can help heal the land—and our relationships with it.