Shoshone Bannock Tribes Put on a Show
Loading
 
Saturday, September 20, 2025
 

STORY AND PHOTOS BY KAREN BOSSICK


Visitors to this year’s Wagon Days Parade sadly missed out on a performance by the Shoshone-Bannock Tribes due to a scheduling snafu.


But those attending the annual Sawtooth Salmon Festival in Stanley got to watch a colorful performance displaying their beautiful dress of beadwork, feathers and ribbons.


The Shoshone tribe, sometimes known as Snake Indians, number about 10,000 members in Idaho, Nevada and Wyoming with the largest reservation in Idaho being the Fort Hall Reservation in southeastern Idaho.


 
Loading
 

They keep their culture and religion alive through dance with different dances for different occasions.


The most popular are the Jingle, Grass and Fancy dances, which are usually performed by young men, who get low to the ground as they perform fast footwork.


 
Loading
 

 
Loading
 

 
Loading
 
 

~  Today's Topics ~


Tony Award Winner Hopes to Pen Another Award Winner in Ketchum

Lake Creek Fire Efforts Aided by Rain

Hispanic Heritage Festival Colors Bellevue