today, we're gonna go down and we're gonna fish in ishi pishi falls. it's very... it's very romantic in some people's eyes, very frustrating and others'. i'm both of those. i love it, that's my way of life, but the health of the river runs parallel with the health of the people. we need to put to action, the physical actions on the landscape. we've got to start cleaning the sacred trails. we've got to start igniting and cleaning the forest once again. everything we do in our world the salmon benefits from. (soft orchestral music) - so in our tribal ceremony is to fix the world. it's not just to fixed this creek or fix our family or fix our river. we want to fix the whole world, because if things are wrong here, they're wrong on the other side of the world too. that's just the way the world works on the balance. so in our tribe, we knew that in fix the world ceremony, pic-ya-wish, even a small group of people with great energy, great focus and pure thought can actually trigger the world, the earth, and put it back on its balance. (fire crackling) (wind whistling) (c