I'm pretty sure the Dakota harvested wild rice in the summer, but the Ojibwe Harvested rice in the Autmn.
soft rice
Yes
Wild game, fish, wild rice, corn, beans, squash, berries, beaver tale, tea, maple sugar/syrup and they also harvested tobacco
yes they can, its easy for them to digust
Yes. Rice is a grain. Birds eat grain. The EXPLODING bird story is an urban myth. Millions of Canada geese and ducks will attest, rice is good for them. Rice is a staple diet for chickens in rice growing countries. However, the rice that birds eat in the wild is NOT the harvested and processed, dry white rice that humans use in cooking. Wouldn't it be better, then, to NOT feed this kind of rice to wild birds?
Copper was mined , most notably on what is now Isle Royal in Lake Superior and along the south shore of the lake. Quillwork and sweetgrass weaving were Ojibwe crafts as was work with birch bark. Moccasins that are similar to the commercially-produced slippers of today were produced by Ojibwe. The seams were heated at fireside, which may have been the origin of the name Ojibwe, meaning "to roast until puckered." Wild rice is still harvested and marketed by Ojibwe. Dreamcatchers, which have become kitchy decorations in homes and vehicles originated among the Ojibwe and are still produced by many members of various Ojibwe nations.
fish and deer beaver,rabbits,cod,berries,LOTS OF WILD RICE,and deer
cabbage,nuts,wild rice,corn,catfish,and seeds
cabbage,nuts,wild rice,corn,catfish,and seeds
The cost of wild rice depends on the brand and the amount of wild rice. Some popular wild rice brands include Bob's Red Mill Wild Rice, Lundberg Organic, as well as Minnesota Grown Wild.
where and when wild rice can be served