The South Saskatchewan Watershed, Ecological Restoration, and the Legacy of the Clavet Memorial Healing Forest
Rooted in Memory, Shaped by Ice
The proposed Clavet Memorial Healing Forest, located near Clavet, Saskatchewan, occupies a remarkable place within the South Saskatchewan River watershed. Situated on land shaped by the retreat of the Laurentide Ice Sheet more than 12,000 years ago, the site stands at the intersection of geological history, ecological restoration, and community healing.
Research by geographer Larry Edwin Hodges documented that the area surrounding the Memorial Healing Forest was influenced by the margins of glacial ice, the formation of Glacial Lake Elstow, Lake Saskatoon I and II, and the development of the Clavet Moraine. Ancient meltwater channels, glacial lakes, and ice-front deposits helped create the rolling prairie landscape that exists today. The forest site lies within a landscape forged by immense environmental change—a place where glaciers retreated, waters shifted, and new ecosystems emerged.
Today, the Clavet Memorial Healing Forest seeks to continue that story of renewal.
The project honours the sixteen lives lost and thirteen people injured in the Humboldt Broncos tragedy of April 6, 2018, while simultaneously restoring a parcel of land to ecological health. The vision, “Rooted in Memory, Growing in Hope,” reflects the powerful relationship between remembrance and restoration.
The site lies within the South Saskatchewan River watershed, one of Canada’s most important freshwater systems. The watershed supports communities, agriculture, wildlife habitat, wetlands, groundwater recharge, recreation, and biodiversity across much of Alberta and Saskatchewan before eventually contributing to the Saskatchewan River system flowing toward Hudson Bay.
As we experience increasingly complex environmental changes, our ecosystems—the very foundation of healthy, productive societies—are changing in unprecedented ways. Climate change, biodiversity loss, habitat fragmentation, invasive species, and water quality pressures are affecting watersheds throughout Canada. These challenges reinforce the need for long-term investments in ecological restoration, monitoring, stewardship, and public education.
Restoration of abandoned or underutilized lands offers significant benefits for watersheds. Native trees, shrubs, grasses, and wetlands help slow runoff, reduce soil erosion, improve infiltration, increase groundwater recharge, filter pollutants, sequester carbon, and provide critical wildlife habitat. Healthy landscapes function as natural infrastructure, supporting the long-term resilience of watersheds and freshwater ecosystems.
The Clavet Memorial Healing Forest represents an opportunity to transform a previously undeveloped site into a living ecological asset. Through afforestation, native grassland restoration, citizen science initiatives, environmental education, and long-term stewardship, the project can contribute to the health of the South Saskatchewan watershed while creating a place of reflection, healing, and community connection.
The lessons learned from this restoration effort extend beyond Saskatchewan. Watersheds are interconnected systems, and while the South Saskatchewan River watershed and the Columbia River Basin are separate drainage basins divided by the Continental Divide, they share common environmental challenges and opportunities. Both watersheds originate in landscapes shaped by glaciers. Both depend upon healthy headwaters, wetlands, riparian areas, and resilient ecosystems. Both support communities, biodiversity, agriculture, and economic activity across vast regions.
The Columbia Basin, stretching from the Rocky Mountains through British Columbia and the northwestern United States, and the South Saskatchewan watershed, flowing eastward across the Canadian Prairies, demonstrate how upstream stewardship influences downstream outcomes. Although water from these basins ultimately reaches different oceans and seas, their management requires similar approaches based on watershed science, ecological restoration, climate adaptation, and collaborative stewardship.
This shared understanding highlights an important principle: restoring land anywhere within a watershed contributes to the broader health of freshwater systems. Whether in the Columbia Basin, the South Saskatchewan watershed, or watersheds across Canada, restoration projects strengthen ecological resilience and support the long-term protection of lakes, rivers, aquifers, wetlands, and groundwater resources.
The Clavet Memorial Healing Forest embodies this vision. It is more than a memorial. It is a living demonstration of how conservation, remembrance, and environmental stewardship can work together to create lasting benefits for people, wildlife, and water.
Just as glaciers once shaped this landscape and ancient lakes nurtured the emergence of new ecosystems, the Memorial Healing Forest offers an opportunity for renewal. Rooted in memory and shaped by ice, the forest will stand as a symbol of resilience, restoration, and hope for future generations, while contributing to the health of the South Saskatchewan watershed and the protection of Canada’s precious freshwater resources.





Addresses:
Part SE 23-36-6 – Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area – 241 Township Road 362-A
Part SE 23-36-6 – SW Off-Leash Recreation Area (Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area ) – 355 Township Road 362-A
S ½ 22-36-6 Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area (West of SW OLRA) – 467 Township Road 362-A
NE 21-36-6 “George Genereux” Afforestation Area – 133 Range Road 3063
Coming soon the Clavet Memorial Healing Forest honouring the Humboldt Broncos
Wikimapia Map: type in Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area or
Google Maps South West Off Leash area location pin at parking lot
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Where is the Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area? with map
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““Be like a tree in pursuit of your cause. Stand firm, grip hard, thrust upward. Bend to the winds of heaven..”Richard St. Barbe Baker






