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Documentary directed by Fort Nelson resident set to make worldwide premiere in Vancouver

The project was conceived in April 2021, and filming didn’t start until a year later. 

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The documentary, titled “Tea Creek”, about Jacob Beaton’s initiative toward Indigenous-centric agriculture sovereignty, being shot last year in Kitwanga, B.C. (Ryan Dickie)

FORT NELSON, B.C. — A documentary directed by Fort Nelson’s Ryan Dickie, titled “Tea Creek,” is set to make its worldwide premiere next month at Vancouver’s Doxa Documentary Film Festival. 

Set in northwest B.C., the film details Jacob Beaton’s efforts to turn the Tea Creek Farm into a training hub focusing on Indigenous food sovereignty. 

According to a video on the Tea Creek website, the farm located in Kitwanga is about 140 acres, with three fields in production. According to a 2022 Tyee report, the initiative features land-based, culturally safe Indigenous-led farming that produces about 20,000 pounds per year.

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“The Gitxan Peoples of that region had a long history of agriculture that I wasn’t aware of pre-colonization. When the residential school system was established, that part of their history was essentially lost,” said Dickie.

“Tea Creek is one of the first concrete solutions for them to get that part of their history back.”

Dickie and producer Ben Cox ended up deviating from their original idea of covering three separate stories.

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“It was stories of Indigenous folks doing Indigenous food sovereignty within the north,” said Dickie.  

The film’s direction changed once they reached the Tea Creek Farm in April 2022.

“When we got there, we realized it was a film itself.  There were so many compelling storylines and people.”

While the entirety of the project took more than three years, a massive chunk of that Dickie says was just assembling the resources.

The project was conceived in April 2021, and filming didn’t start until a year later. 

“The first year and a half is just spent trying to get fundraising,” said Dickie.  “There’s lots of writing for grants and Zoom meetings.  With projects like this, there are constraints when it comes to budget and funding, especially in the north where everything is more expensive.”

Filming went into most of 2023, and the team spent this past winter and spring editing.

A primary facilitator of the project was Cox, a freelance filmmaker based in Vancouver. 

Dickie says he had to “tip his hat” to Cox for allowing him to piece the story of Tea Creek together. 

“I had worked with friends of [Cox] on a project called In the Land of the Dreamers for CBC,” said Dickie. “That featured myself and Wayne Sawchuk exploring the Muskwa-Kechika area.”

“He had been looking for an Indigenous director to help him tell his story. Ben allowed me the opportunity, and I, living in the north, am somewhat disconnected from the film industry. It was a good learning experience and one I am grateful for.” 

According to Dickie, shooting a film such as this has a profound impact on him, and the hope is that it brings a lot of issues faced among Indigenous peoples, including intergenerational trauma and the impacts of colonization, to light.

“Growing up on the reserves in Fort Nelson, our stories are often intertwined with the trauma,” said Dickie. “This film will touch upon that.”

“Tea Creek” will premiere at the Doxa Film Festival on May 4th.  For more information and tickets, visit the website here.

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Authors
Ed Hitchins

A guy who found his calling later in life, Edward Hitchins is a professional storyteller with a colourful and extensive history.

Beginning his journey into journalism in 2012 at Seneca College, Edward also graduated from Humber College with an Advanced Diploma in Print and Broadcast Journalism in 2018.  After time off from his career and venturing into other vocations, he started his career proper in 2022 in Campbell River, B.C.

Edward was attracted to the position of Indigenous Voices reporter with Energeticcity as a challenge.  Having not been around First Nations for the majority of his life, he hopes to learn about their culture through meaningful conversations while properly telling their stories. 

In a way, he hopes this position will allow both himself and Energeticcity to grow as a collective unit as his career moves forward and evolves into the next step.

He looks forward to growing both as a reporter and as a human being while being posted in Fort St. John.

This reporting position has been funded by the Government of Canada and the Local Journalism Initiative.

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