The fur doesn’t fly like it used to: Trappers come from across the North to the Thompson Fur Table, but sales are slacking

COURTESY PROVINCE OF MANITOBA

At 5:30 a.m., when Lane Boles opens the doors to the hall at St. Joseph’s Ukraine Catholic Church in the hardscrabble resource town of Thompson, Man., 60 trappers are already waiting to get in. One man had been there since 4 a.m., no doubt grateful for the unseasonably warm temperatures of -10C.

COURTESY PROVINCE OF MANITOBA The fur dealers dealing with trappers in the pics are as follows (senior agents indicated first; others are assistants)

Heavy with furs, the trappers are assigned a number, and given a slip that catalogues what they have to sell. Their number is called, the buyers make their bids — and a tradition that goes back to the founding of New France goes on.

The Thompson Fur Table is the only auction of its kind in North America; although it is only three and a half decades old, trappers throughout Manitoba and Canada’s north depend on it for their livelihood. They brave ice roads and poor conditions to converge in Thompson each December, more than 700 kilometres north of Winnipeg, where private buyers and representatives from the two main fur auction houses in North America – the Fur Harvesters Auction and the North America Fur Auction — bid on their pelts.

“It’s a cultural phenomenon,” said Alan Herscovici, executive vice-president of the Fur Council of Canada. “It’s exciting. It’s part of our history and heritage. It has to do with the founding of our country.”

But fur prices are down, and the event costs the Manitoba Trappers Association more than $13,000 to run, a prohibitive cost for the group. These may be the last days of the annual event being hosted in what is colloquially known as the hub of the north.

O.B. Buell / Library and Archives Canada
O.B. Buell / Library and Archives Canada Mistahi maskwa (Big Bear ca. 1825-1888), a Plains Cree chief, trading –Included are (left to right): Four Sky Thunder, Okemow Peeayis (Sky Bird, Big Bear’s third son), Matoose (seated), Napasis, Mistahi maskwa (Big Bear), Otto Dufresne, Louis Goulet, Stanley Simpson, Mr. Rowley (seated), Alex McDonald (behind wheel), Capt. R.B. Sledge, Mr. Edmund (seated), and Henry Dufrain .

Most of the furs sold in Thompson and other smaller auctions in North America end up in China, Russia, or South Korea; the pelts range from pine marten to wolverine to the Canadian beaver, from fishers to weasels to coyotes.

This year’s Thompson Fur Table, held last month, brought in $239,421 — a steep drop blamed both on declining prices and a bad year in the traps.

Library and Archives Canada
Library and Archives CanadaCanada’s earliest Industry. Colin Fraser, trader at Fort Chipweyan, sorts fox, beaver, mink & other precious furs. More than $35,000 in furs are counted in a northern Alberta warehouse in the 1890’s.

Last year, buyers paid out $618,852. The year before that, $683,559 worth of furs were bought, a record.

Mr. Herscovici said the price drop is simply the market correcting itself, and maintains that, “the last time fur was as popular as it is today was back in the ’70s and ’80s.

“Farmed mink pelts are often the benchmark for fur prices,” said Mr. Herscovici. “In 1992, following the recession of the late ‘80s, that number dropped to $20 per pelt. But since, casual fur has become popular again, and prices for farmed mink have reached and surpassed $100. When in ’92 there were 40 designers using fur in their designs, now there are about 500 using it for things like scarves, trim, and other accessories.”

But that price has since dropped. “It was warm in China last year, and with what’s going on in Russia and the ruble, the price for farmed mink has sunk back down to about $50,” he said.

And while the fur-price benchmark worldwide is farmed mink, in the northern Prairies, the benchmark is marten, “the bread and butter for the northern trapper,” said Mr. Boles.

Marten fur sold for $50 per pelt at this year’s fur table, down more than $10 from the year before. It’s a prevalent pelt at the auction, easier to catch than other, more exotic animals; 3,712 marten furs were sold over the two days.

Library and Archives Canada
Library and Archives Canada ca. 1920 – 1925 / Fort Resolution, N.W.T. — Indian trading fur for a gun.

“The more intelligent animals are harder to catch. The fox is very clever, and the lynx is like trying to catch a ghost,” said Gary Bergman, who, with his 93-year-old grandfather, George, checks 23 traps twice per week.

Gary is a hobbyist trapper, planning to preserve the tradition his grandfather passed down to him: “I’m at grandpa’s place by 8:30 a.m. and we’re checking the first trap by 9,” he said.

But for many of Canada’s 70,000 trappers, it is a livelihood. The fur trade contributes nearly $1-billion to Canada’s economy annually. And it does so over the sale of about two million pelts, half wild, the other half farmed.

The Thompson Fur Table was formed in 1979, when the then-Progressive Conservative premier of Manitoba, Sterling Lyon, decided to revive a dying wild-pelt industry, and to ensure trappers receive the highest possible price.

The Thompson Fur Table, 35 years later, is the only such auction remaining in North America, where representatives from larger outfits and independent buyers bid on trappers’ furs. The Thompson auction not only awards competitive prices to northern trappers, it allows them to do so without having to travel long distances or in adverse weather conditions.

Over the years this event has become not only an economic driver to Thompson, but also an opportunity for friends and family to gather and visit, which is important to many of our residents

Trappers can and do sell their harvests elsewhere and at different times throughout the year. In Manitoba, furs can be sold to a licensed fur dealer, on consignment to an auction company, or privately, with royalties paid, to the provincial Conservation and Water Stewardship.

These selling options are merged under one roof at the Thompson Fur Table. Each buyer/auction house competes with each other to get the best pelts for the best price, a competitive tension benefiting the seller.

Mr. Boles, MTA’s director-at-large, said the association’s revenues from the auction still does not cover its costs. The Pas, a city of about 5,000 south of Thompson, covets the fur table — it has offered to host the event and cover its costs.

But Mr. Boles said a move would push the auction out of reach for many northern trappers, many of whom rely on the income.

“Thompson is four hours southwest of The Pas,” said Mr. Boles. “Many trappers would not easily get to The Pas, as many do not have vehicles, and bus routes are not reliable due to several cuts in service over the past few years.”

The Fur Table’s fate in the northern hub rests in part on what comes of the city’s imminent budget talks, says Thompson Mayor Dennis Fenske, an advocate of the event.

“Over the years this event has become not only an economic driver to Thompson, but also an opportunity for friends and family to gather and visit, which is important to many of our residents,” said Mr. Fenske. “We are currently in budget deliberations and have requested the organization for a presentation identifying their annual operating costs so that we as the City know what type of request we are being asked for.”

Mr. Boles puts on an optimistic front about finding a way to keep it in Thompson.

Though this year’s Thompson Fur Table generated less money than other years, the prices in that crowded hall were not as terrible as expected. And he expects the city of Thompson will do what it can to keep the tradition alive. (Mayor Dennis Fenske did not return phone calls by deadline.)

“It’s not just the fur table; it’s loyalty to the north,” Mr. Boles told the Thompson Citizen. “I am going to keep doing what I have to, rattling doors, to make sure that the fur table stays in Thompson, and stays viable.”

National Post

Source:: National Post


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