Saik'uz, translated as "on the sand", formerly known as Stoney Creek, is a Dakelh nation whose main community is on a reserve 9 km (6 mi) southwest of Vanderhoof, British Columbia along Kenney Dam Road.
The Saik'uz First Nation has a number of amenities, including a Band Administration Office where the Chief and Council make decisions on issues like housing, education, and forestry.
It has a gas bar (Which is closed for the time being) It sold canned goods, pizza, snack foods, and fresh milk as well as locally produced native crafts.
One of the nation's most famous elders was Mary John, Sr., whose 1989 memoir "Stoney Creek Woman" won the Lieutenant Governor's Medal for Historical Writing.
The Saik'uz potlatch house was built by the Stoney Creek Elders' Society on the shore of Nulki Lake.
The potlatch house is a large log building that can hold 200–250 people, big enough for weddings, dances, meetings, and education courses.
Other sources of revenue are the campgrounds and boat launch, which hold an annual fishing derby on May Long Weekend.