The number of bands within the Northern Wintu is debated among tribal members and anthropologists, but most recognize 8 to 11 bands: Daupom/Stillwater, El pom/Kewsick, Nomtipom/Upper Sacramento River, Winnemem/McCloud River, Nomsus/Upper Trinity River, Klabalpom/French Gulch, Daumuq/Cottonwood Creek, Norelmuq/Hayfork, Puimem/Lower Pit River, Daunom/Bald Hills, and Waymuq/Mt. Shasta. The Waymuq form a transitional group in culture, language, and society between Wintu-speaking peoples and Shastan-speakers. Some anthropologists and linguists have called the same group the Okwanuchu (from the Shasta word for "distant people"). The Waymuq lived north of Salt and Nosoni Creek, extending to the southern base of Mt. Shasta, with major villages in what is now Dunsmuir, Mt. Shasta City (formerly Sisson), and along Sulanharas Creek. The anthropologist C. Hart Merriam also noted a Northern Wintu group along the South Fork of the Trinity River under the Athabaskan name "Ni-i-che." This group was culturally and linguistically close to the Norelmuq, though it is unclear whether they were a separate band. The Wintu have close ties to the natural resources of their region. The Winnemem Wintu call themselves "Middle Water people" in their language. They say they were born from water, are the water, and fight to protect it. Hunting, fishing, and gathering remain central to their culture. They have their own customs, traditional art, and spiritual beliefs. When villages had extra food, they sometimes invited neighboring tribes to feast, dance, and play games. Dance served many purposes beyond entertainment—for example, the
suneh, or begging dance, was performed when one person transferred property to another. Wintu homes were small and semi-permanent, built along waterways. The River and Hill Patwin built dome‑shaped homes—the River Patwin using sticks, straw, and other local materials, the Hill Patwin using conical bark. Larger communities had an earth lodge used as a
sweat lodge for spiritual renewal, purification, and connection to nature; unmarried men without families also slept there. Fishing has always been central to Wintu life. Salmon from the McCloud and Sacramento rivers was the primary food source, along with Steelhead trout from the upper Trinity River. Men hunted individually or in groups, using traps for many kinds of animals. Women gathered plants for food and for making implements such as baskets. Basket weaving was a major part of Wintu culture: baskets for cooking, storing, sifting, and carrying, as well as woven hats that many women wore. ==Population==