 The Moose Hide campaign started in 2011 when my daughter Raven and I were hunting along a place that they called the Highway of Tears Highway 16 between Prince George and Prince Rupert and we were blessed with a moose early in the morning and I was watching my daughter Raven who was preparing the moose and we had been talking about the number of women who had been murdered or gone missing along that highway and we really had a moment of inspiration to take that moose hide, tan it, cut it up into little squares and give it to men as an outward sign of our commitment to end violence against women and children in this country and as a promise never to do violence to the women or children in our life and that's really how the Moose Hide campaign was born. When my dad and I were along the Highway of Tears it was really an amazing experience being able to be in my traditional territory with my family and my dad and talking about something that's so important and really wanting to do something about violence towards women and children and deciding that day to create the Moose Hide campaign and share it with others was a really inspiring moment and I was really grateful to be there and for all of those things to just line up.