“…Wildcat et al states "Land-based education, in resurging and sustaining Indigenous life and knowledge, acts in direct contestation to settler colonialism and its drive to eliminate Indigenous life and Indigenous claims to land" (Wildcat et al, 2014, p. lll). Further, land-based pedagogy acts through engagement in direct conversations with and "on the land in a physical, social and spiritual sense" (p. 11).Through this direct engagement, participants helped articulate the concepts and healing benefits behind land-based healing, which are similar to those provided in other studies across Canada (Dobson & Brazzoni, 2016;Gesink et al, 2019;Hansen, 2018;Radu et al, 2014;Tobias & Richmond, 2014;Walsh et al, 2018). The land as healer wisdom held by knowledge keepers is now recognized in the literature demonstrating a myriad of scientifically validated health and wellness outcomes stemming from spending time connecting with natural areas (Barton et al, 2016;Barton & Pretty, 2010;Berman et al, 2008;Bratman et al, 2012;Bratman et al, 2015;James et al, 2015;Li, 2010;Maller et al, 2006).…”