Useful Wild Plants
Useful Wild Plants
Useful Wild Plants
WILD PLANTS
OF THE
BY
ILLUSTRATED BY PHOTOGRAPHS,
AND BY NUMEROUS LINE DRAWINGS
BY LUCY HAMILTON ARING
NEW YORK
ROBERT M. MCBRIDE & CO.
1920
TABLE OF CONTENTS
CHAPTER
I NTRODUCTORY S TATEMENT .
I
II
WILD PLANTS
WITH
.
OR
PAGE
vii
ROOTS 1
17
III
IV
V
VI
VII
VIII
IX
X
XI
E DIBLE S TEMS
WITH
B E V E R A G E P L A N T S OF F I E L D
AND
AND
AND
B ERRIES . 83
L EAVES . . 114
OOD
. . . . . 141
W ILD P LANTS .
OF
A C A U T I O N A R Y C HAPTER
ON
R EGIONAL
PLANTS
G ENERAL
I NDEX
I NDEX
167
184
210
C ERTAIN P O I S O N O U S
. . . . . . . . 236
259
269
INTRODUCTORY STATEMENT
INTRODUCTORY STATEMENT
times, made use of many of these plants to advantage, though with the settlement of the country a
return to the more familiar fruits and products of
civilization has naturally followed. Man s tendency
to nurse a habit is nowhere more marked than in
his stubborn indisposition to take up with new
foods, if the first taste does not please, as frequently
it does not; witness the slowness with which the
tomato came into favor, and the Englishmans continued indifference to maize for human consumption.
Sometimes, however, the claims of necessity override taste, and there would seem to be a service in
presenting in a succinct way the known facts about at
least the more readily utilized of our wild plants.
The data herein given, the writer owes in part to
the published statements of travelers and investigators (to whom credit is given in the text), and in
part to his own first hand observations, particularly
in the West, where the Indian is not yet altogether
out of his blanket, and where some practices still
linger that antedate the white mans coming. The
essential worth of the plants discussed having been
proved by experience, it is hoped that to dwellers in
rural districts, to campers and vacationists in the
wild, as well as to nature students and naturalists
generally, the work may be practically suggestive.
The reader is referred to the following standard
INTRODUCTORY STATEMENT
works for complete scientific descriptions of the
plants discussed: Grays Manual of Botany of the
Northern United States (east of the Rockies) ; Britton and Browns Illustrated Flora of the United
States and Canada (the same territory as covered by
Gray); Smalls Flora of the Southeastern United
States; Watsons Botany of the Geological Survey of
California; Coulters New Manua1 of Botany of the
Central Rocky Mountains; Wootton and Standleys
Flora of New Mexico.
GROUNDNUT
(Apios tuberosa)
J ERUSALEM A R T I C H O K E
(Helianthus tuberosus)
U S E F U L WILD PLANTS
There they caught the popular taste a n d under the
name of pommes de Canada, batatas de Canada or
Canadiennes, their cultivation spread. In Italy they
were grown in the famous Farnese gardens and
called girasole articiocco, that is, Sunflower artichoke. A perverted pronunciation of the Italian by
the English (who became interested in the plant and
were growing it extensively as early as 1621) accounts for the otherwise unaccountable association
of Jerusalem with it. The tubers (borne at the tip
of horizontal rootstocks) are in the wild plant but
an inch or two in diameter, but in cultivation they
may be much larger, as well as better flavored.
They reach their maximum development in the autumn, when they may be taken up and stored in
pits for winter use; or, since frost does not injure
them, they may be left in the ground all winter, and
dug in the spring. In spite of the Jerusalem Artichokes popularity as a vegetable abroad, Americans
have so far been indifferent to it, except as feed for
cattle and hogs-another instance of the prophets
lack of honor in his own country.l
1 There are about 40 species of wild sunflowers growing within
the borders of the United States, and it is not always easy to
identify some given species. The Artichoke Sunflower is a perennial
with hairy, branching stems 6 to 12 feet tall, and rough, ovate leaves,
taper pointed, toothed at the edges, 4 to 8 inches long and 1 1/2
to 3 inches wide, narrowing at the base to a rather long footstalk.
INDIAN BREAD-ROOT
(Psoralea esculenta)
10
11
14
BITTERROOT
(Lewisia rediviva)
15
original spreads put before them in which spatlum, as the Oregon Indians called it, had a prominent
place. Boiling has the effect of dissipating the
bitterness; and the white heart of the root, which is
starchy and mucilaginous, is certainly nutritious,
though ideas as to its palatability differ. The Indian practice is to dig the roots in the spring, at
which time the brownish bark slips off more easily
than after the plant has flowered; and as the bitter
principle is mainly resident in the bark, it is desirable to reject this before cooking. A noteworthy
character of the root is its tenacity of life. Specimens that have been dipped in boiling water, dried
and laid away in an herbarium for over a year,
have been known to revive on being put in the
ground again, to grow and to produce flowers. An
Eastern cousin of the Bitterroot is the charming
woodland flower of early spring called Spring
Beauty (Claytonia Virginica, L.). It rises from a
small, deep-seated, round tuber of starchy composition and nutty flavor, which might serve at a pinch
to stave off starvation, and has indeed so served the
aborigines.
CHAPTER II
WILD PLANTS WITH EDIBLE TUBERS,
BULBS OR ROOTS (Continued)
WILD LEEK
(Allium tricoccum)
flower, the leaves few and grass-like. It is indigenous to an extensive territory ranging from
Dakota to Mexico and westward to the Pacific
Coast. It was, I believe, a common article of diet
among the first Mormons in Utah, under the
name Wild Sago, through a misunderstanding,
perhaps, of the word Sego, which is the Ute
Indian term for this plant. A California species
(C. venustus, Benth.) with white or lilac flowers
variously tinged or blotched with red, yellow or
brown, is also highly esteemed for its sweet corms.
The cooking may be done by the simple process
known to campers of roasting in hot ashes, or by
steaming in pits, a method that will be described
later on.
Brodiaea is a genus comprising numerous species,
of which the so-called California Hyacinth, Grassnut or Wild Onion (B. capitata, Benth.), common
throughout the State, is perhaps the best known.
Its clustered, pale blue flowers bunched at the tip of
a slender stem are a familiar sight in grassy places
in spring. The bulbs are about the size of marbles
and noticeably mucilaginous. Eaten raw they seem
rather flat at first, but the taste grows on one very
quickly. They are also very good if boiled slowly
for a half hour or so. The Harvest Brodiaea (B.
20
grandiflora, Smith), with clusters of blue, funnelshaped flowers like little blue lilies, is another
familiar s p e c i e s
common in fields
and grassy glades
from
f ornia northward to
Washington.
Its
bulbs are best cooked, as by slow roasting i n hot ashes.
CAMAS
(Camassia esculenta)
24
CHUFA
(Cyperus esculentus)
26
ing at the summit of the stem an umbel of inconspicuous, purplish-green florets. The dietetic interest in them centers in the rootstocks, which bear
small tubers of a pleasant, nutty flavor, and both
white men and Indians have approved them, as well
as the white mens pigs. The Chufas hard tubers,
especially, are sweet and tasty, and in some parts
of the South have been considered worthy of cultivation, though by reason of rapid increase and difficulty
to eradicate, the plant has a tendency to become a
bad weed. We get the name Chufa from Spain,
where the tubers are used in emulsion as a refreshment in the same class with almonds in the milk,
pasties, strawberries, azaroles, sugar icing and
sherbets, according to some lines of a Spanish poem
I ran across the other day.1
Of quite restricted occurrence in the United States,
but worthy of mention because of its importance, is
a member of a peculiar natural order of plants
called Cycads. They resemble the palms in some
respects and in others the ferns, their leaves, for
instance, having a fashion of unrolling from base to
apex in the manner of fern croziers. Many species
inhabit tropical America, and two reach the southern
1 Almendrucos y pasteles,
Chufas, fresas y acerolas,
Garapias y sorbetes.
27
FLORIDA ARROWROOT
(Zamia sp.)
ARROWHEAD
(Sagittaria variabilis)
32
- % --*
--
w--
-3
WATER CHINQUAPIN
(Nelumbo lutea)
JACK-IN-THE-PULPIT
(Arisaema triphyllum)
men and white alike. Mr. Carl Lumholtz in his interesting book New Trails in Mexico tells of an
Indian who lived almost entirely on Ammobroma,
being able to find it out of season-a remarkable
testimony to the nutritiousness of the plant and the
abstemiousness of the Indian !
The creeping rootstocks of the common Cat-tail
(Typha latifolia, L.) which covers great areas of our
swamp lands throughout the United States, hold a
nutritious secret, too, for they contain a core of almost solid starch. They were dug and dried in former times by Indians, who ground them into a meal.
A recent analysis of such meal by one of the Government chemists showed it to contain about the
same amount of protein as is in rice- and cornflours, but less fat. It may make a useful mixture
with the ordinary flours, and be substituted for cornstarch in puddings, as it seems entirely palatable.
40
CHAPTER III
WILD SEEDS OF FOOD VALUE, AND HOW
THEY HAVE BEEN UTILIZED
The bounteous housewife, nature, on each bush
Lays her full mess before you.
Shakespeare.
in the first couple of centuries of the Spanish domination always speak of Chia with respect. Later, when
upper California came in for settlement, the diarist
of Portolas expedition to the Bay of San Francisco
specifies it as among the gifts offered by the Indians
to their white visitors; and archeologists, grubbing
in prehistoric graves in Southern California, have
turned up deposits of the seed left as viaticum of
departed souls, which attest the antiquity of its use
within the limits of the United States. Even to-day,
shopkeepers in the Spanish quarters of our own
Southwestern cities as well as street venders in the
towns of Mexico include Chia as part of their stock
in trade.
One wonders what this all but forgotten food can
be .
It is the name applied to at least five or six distinct species of plants, of somewhat different aspects,
most of them belonging to the genus Salvia. The
seeds are flattish and more or less shining, suggesting small flaxseed, of whose character they somewhat partake, being oily and mucilaginous. For
human consumption they should be parched and
ground, when they may advantageously be added to
corn-meal, and this mixture made with water into
a mush was a favorite item in the old Mexican
42
44
45
47
USEFUL W I L D PLANTS
49
USEFUL
WILD PLANTS
50
52
53
30th Ann.
Report Bur.
meal made from these seeds has been used, like that
from Chenopodium, in admixture with corn meal.
Similarly useful to desert, Indians are the seeds of
species of Saltbush (Atriplex canescens, James, A.
lentiformis, Wats., A. Powellii Wats., A. confertifolia, Wats., etc.).
White Sage (Salvia apiana, Benth.), one
of the most famous of Pacific Coast honey plants,
produces slender, wandlike thyrses of pale blossoms
whose seeds, though small and husky, are exceedingly numerous and rich in oil. They are still
gathered by Southern California Indians, who bend
the plants over a large basket and beat the seeds into
it by striking with a seed-beater, as described before
when treating of Chia. The seeds, mixed with wheat,
are parched in a frying pan, and all is reduced to a
fine meal by pounding in a mortar. This stirred in
water with a sprinkling of salt is then ready to be
eaten, or drunk, according as the mixture is thick or
thin. It, too, is called pinole. The sage seeds have
much the taste of Chia, the botanical relationship being close, but they are not mucilaginous.
Several species of wild grasses are utilizable for
pinole. One of these is the Wild Oat (Avena fatua,
L.), suspeeted of being the progenitor of the cultivated oat, and abundant in certain parts of the West,
54
55
USEFUL W I L D PLANTS
59
H OG P E A N U T
(Amphicarpaea bracteata )
60
M ESQUIT
(Prosopis juliflora)
63
meal, and it is as cloyingly fragrant as so much molasses. Mr. Edward H. Davis, of M e s a Grande,
California, to whom I am indebted for the specimen,
writes concerning it :
The mesquit meal is used to-day by the desert
Indians the same as centuries ago. The pod is
pounded up in wooden mortars made from the
mesquit-tree trunk hollowed out by fire and set
firmly in the ground. A long, slender, stone pestle
is used to pound with. The beans are so brittle that
enough for dinner can be prepared in eight to ten
minutes. The meal is mixed with water and eaten
so, being sweet and nourishing. The edible part is
the pulp of the pods only; the seeds are not digestible by either man or beast, but will pass through
the digestive tract unchanged. However, by pouring warm water over the seeds a sweetish, rather
lemon-tasting drink is made and much relished by
the desert Coahuillas.
The Pima Indians of Southern Arizona formerly
used mesquit meal as a makeshift for sugar, mingling
it with their wheat or corn pinole to sweeten the
latter. 11 The raw beans picked from the tree may
be chewed with enjoyment and some nutritive profit,
11 John Russell Bartlett, Persona1 Narrative of Explorations in
Texas, New Mexico, California, etc. Vol. II: 217,
64
65
66
CHAPTER IV
THE ACORN AS HUMAN FOOD AND
SOME OTHER WILD NUTS
Happy age to which the ancients gave the name of golden. . .
None found it needful, in order to obtain sustenance, to resort to other labor than to stretch out his hand and take it from
the sturdy live-oak, which liberally invited him.
Don Quixote.
l
A Western mountain Indians storage baskets for preserving acorns and pine-nuts. They are elevated
to forestall the depredations of rodents.
the Kellogg or California Black oak (Quercus Californica, [Torr.] Cooper), the Coast Live oak (Q.
agrifolia, Nee), the Valparaiso or Canyon Live oak
(Q. chrysolepis, Lieb), and the colossal Valley White
oak (Q. lobata, Nee). An analysis of acorn meal
made from the last named species is quoted by
Chesnut as showing in percentage 5.7 protein, 18.6
fat, 65 carbohydrates (starch, sugar, etc.). Though
the Californians are regarded as among the lowest
of our North American aborigines in native culture,
their self-devised treatment of the acorn to make of
it a wholesome food staple is entitled to the greatest
respect. Stephen Powers, in his classic work on the
Tribes of California, finds in one use of acorn mush
an aboriginal discovery of the principle of the Prussian pea-sausage; and quotes the practice of a central
California tribe, who, upon starting a journey, would
pack in their burden baskets a quantity of the
mush. When stopping for refreshment, it was only
necessary to dilute a portion of this with water and
dinner was ready. A squaw, the traditional burdenbearer, could carry thirty pounds, enough to last
two persons perhaps a fortnight. Naturally so important an element as the acorn in the tribal life
became associated with religious ceremonial as well
as incorporated in native poetry; and the approach
73
These are associated with another sort of nut1 harvest, that of the Pion or Pine-nut, the plump, oily
seed of certain species of the Far Western pines.
The most esteemed nut-pines are the Two-leaved
Pine (Pinus edulis Engelm.), a low, round-topped
tree, generally known by its Spanish name pion and
common from Southern Colorado to Texas and westward to Arizona and Utah; the closely related Oneleaved Pine (P. monophylla, Torr.), the pion of the
Great Basin region and desert slopes of the California Sierras ; the Digger Pine (P. Sabiniana,
Dougl.), a widely distributed species of the California foothills and lower mountain slopes; and
the stately Sugar Pine (P. Lambertiana, Dougl.),
whose huge cones are frequently a foot and a
half long or more. The nuts of these species
vary from one-half to three-quarters of an inch in
length, with thin shells easy but rather tedious to
crack. The meat is delicious in flavor even to white
people, tender, sweet, and highly nutritious. They
are, moreover, of easiest digestibility, so that even
delicate stomachs are undisturbed by them. Under
the name of pions they are sold in towns throughout the Southwest as well as Mexico, where another
1 The word nut is used in this chapter in its popular sense
rather than with botanical accuracy.
75
species of nut-pine (Pinus cembroides, Zucc.) is indigenous. The Parry Pine (P. quadrifolia, Sudw.)
is another good nut-pine, abundant in some parts
of lower California, but only sparingly found on the
United States side of the border. John Muir, in his
picturesque way, characterizes the nut-pine forests
as the bountiful orchards of the red man.
Pine seeds are ripe in autumn, and the Indian
method of gathering them is to cut or knock the unopened cones from the trees and then roast them in
a camp fire. This serves to dry out the pitch and
open the cones, from which the nuts are then easily
extracted. The pion harvest among the Southwestern Indians is a joyous time, and what they do
not themselves consume is readily turned into money
at the traders. Dr. Edward Palmer, a veteran
botanical collector whose notes are enlivened by
many a human touch, describes a scene of this kind
which he witnessed among the Cocopahs of Lower
California. It was an interesting sight to see these
children of nature with their dirty, laughing faces,
parching and eating the pine nuts . . . by the handful . . . . At last we had the privilege of seeing primitive Americans gathering their uncultivated crop
from primeval groves. Though edible raw, the
nuts are preferably toasted, which may be done very
76
CHAPTER V
SOME LITTLE REGARDED WILD FRUITS
AND BERRIES
Greate store of forrest frute which hee
Had for his food late gathered from the tree.
The Faerie Queene
BUFFALO-BERRY
(Shepherdia argentea)
tioned than this. By the French voyageurs and engags it was called graisse de boeuf, that is, beef
fat, which seems in harmony with the story I have
read that the name Buffalo-berry is derived from the
84
prairie chickens.
85
87
89
SERVICE-BERRY
(Amelanchier canadensis)
A MERICAN H A W T H O R N
(Crataegus mollis)
95
96
OREGON GRAPE
(Berberis a quifolium)
O REGON G RAPE
(Berberis aquifolium)
SALAL
(Gaultheria Shallon)
103
106
Eaten raw, tunas of the better sort are refreshing and agreeable to most people, though the bony
seeds are an annoyance unless one swallows them
whole, after the Mexican fashion. The taste differs
somewhat with the species, those that I have eaten
possessing a flavor suggesting watermelon. The
sugar content is considerable, and a very good syrup
may be obtained by boiling the peeled fruits until
soft enough to strain out the seeds; after which the
juice may be boiled down further. No sugar need
be added, unless a very sweet syrup is needed. Care
should be exercised to select fruit that is really ripe;
in some sorts maturity is slow to follow coloration.
After all, though, it is Mexico where tuna raising and
art, and the tuna
consumption have become
market is an interesting feature in many Mexican
towns. During the time of the harvest whole
109
110
USEFUL W I L D PLANTS
making a fair substitute for molasses and correspondingly good on bread or corn cakes. It is set
away for winter consumption.7 The inner part of
the pitahaya may also be sun-dried, and will then
keep for a long time. Sahuaro seeds are quite oily,
and I am told by Mr. E. H. Davis that the Papagos
dry them and grind them into an oleaginous paste,
which they spread like butter on their tortillas. The
ribs of this most useful plant are also employed by
these same Indians as the basis of their stick-andmud houses-a practice doubtless inherited from the
ancients, as in many old cliff dwellings sahuaro ribs
are found reinforcing adobe.
A word about one more desert fruit, and this
chapter closes. On the Colorado Desert of Southeastern California, there is indigenous a stately palm
known as the California Fan Palm (Washingtonia
filifera, Wendl., var. robusta), which has been widely
introduced into cultivation in the Southwest. In the
caons of the San Jacinto Mountains opening to the
desert and in the desert foothills of the San Bernardino Mountains, as well as here and there in certain
alkaline oases of the desert itself, extensive groves
of this noble palm flourishthe remnant, it is
7 For an interesting and detailed account of the Arizona Sahuaro
harvest and uses, see Mr. Carl Lumholtzs New Trails in Mexico,
112
Cereus giganteusSahuaro-producing
a fruit that is used for wine,
syrup and butter.
as good as coc o n u t .
113
CHAPTER VI
WILD PLANTS WITH EDIBLE STEMS AND
LEAVES
I often gathered wholesome herbs, which I boiled, or eat as
salads with my bread.
Gulliver's Travels.
sight of spring days to see these new-fledged Americans dotting the fields and waste lots near our big
cities, armed with knives, snipping and transferring
to sack or basket the tender new leaves of the wellbeloved plant, which, like themselves, is a translated
European. The leaves are best when boiled in two
waters to remove the bitterness resident in them;
and then, served like spinach or beet-tops, they are
good enough for any table. Old Peter Kalm, who
has ever an eye watchful for the uses to which people
put the wild plants, tells us the French Canadians
in his day did not use the leaves of the Dandelion,
but the roots, digging these in the spring, cutting
them and preparing them as a bitter salad.
Then there is Chicory, which has run wild in
settled parts of the eastern United States and to
some extent on the Pacific coast, adorning the roadsides in summer with its charming blue flowers of
half a day. Its young leaves, if prepared in the
same way as those of the Dandelion, are relished
by some. Preferably, though, the leaves are
blanched and eaten raw as a salad. The blanching
may be done in several ways. The outer leaves may
be drawn up and tied so as to protect the inner foliage
from the light and thus whiten it, or flower-pots may
be capped over the plants. Another method is this:
117
(Cicorium Intybus)
128
129
131
132
USEFUL WILD P L A N T S
over with more hot ashes and heated stones from the
sides of the pit, and all is then buried beneath a
mound of earth. There the mescal is left to steam
until some time the next day, like the four-andtwenty blackbirds of the nursery rhyme in their
pie. When the pit is opened the mescal, still hot and
now charred on the outside, is drawn out, the burnt
exterior pared off, and the brown, sticky inside laid
bare, to be eaten on the spot or laid away to cool and
be transported home for future use. If the buds
have been cut young enough, mescal is tender and
sweet, the flavor suggesting a cross between pineapple and banana and pleasant to most white
palates. Indians are extravagantly fond of it, and
it is rare indeed that the stock carried home lasts
over the following summer. Should the buds be too
old when cooked, the result is unpleasantly fibrous,
though in such cases one need only chew until the
edible part is consumed, when the fibre may be spat
out. Mr. Coville, in his account of the Panamints
above quoted, speaks of finding at some forsaken
Indian camps along the Colorado River, dried and
weathered wads of chewed mescal fibre-visible reminders of forgotten feasts.
Denizens of the same region with the Agaves, and
136
139
140
CHAPTER VII
BEVERAGE PLANTS OF FIELD AND WOOD
And sip with nymphs their elemental tea.
Pope.
BEVERAGE PLANTS
much the same distribution is the common Spicewood, Wild Allspice, or Feverbush1 (Lindera Benzoin, Blume), a shrubby denizen of damp woods and
moist grounds, easily recognized in early spring by
the little bunches of honey-yellow flowers that stud
the branches before the leaves appear. The whole
bush is spicily fragrant, and a decoction of the twigs
makes another pleasant substitute for tea, at one
time particularly in vogue in the South. Dr.
Porcher states that during the Civil War soldiers
from the upper country in South Carolina serving
in the company of which he was surgeon, came into
camp fully supplied with Spicewood for making this
fragrant, aromatic beverage. Andre Michaux, a
French botanist who traveled afoot and horse-back
through much of the eastern United States when it
was still a wilderness, half starving by day and
sleeping on a deer-skin at night, has left in his journal the following record of the virtues of Spicewood
tea, served him at a pioneers cabin : I had
supped the previous evening [February 9, 1796] on
tea made from the shrub called Spicewood. A
handful of young twigs or branches is set to boil and
1 Also called Benjamin-bush, corrupted from benzoin, an aromatic
gum of the Orient which, however, is derived from quite another
family of plants. French-Canadians used to call the Spicewood,
poivrier, which means pepper plant.
145
BEVERAGE PLANTS
BEVERAGE PLANTS
Longs expedition to the Rocky Mountains in 1819-20
records that while in winter camp on the Missouri
River near Council Bluffs, the party substituted
these seeds for coffee and found the beverage both
palatable and wholesome. Thomas Nuttall, the
botanist, who botanized the following year around
the mouth of the Ohio River, testifies to the agreeableness of the parched seeds as an article of diet,
but thought that as a substitute for coffee they were
greatly inferior to cichorium.
Cichorium is the botanists way of saying Chicory,
the plant that has been referred to already as producing leaves useful as a salad. Its root has had a
rather bad name as an adulterant of coffee, in which
delusive form it has perhaps entered more human
stomachs than the human mind is aware of. As a
drink in itself, sailing under its own colors, Chicory
is not a bad drink, the root being first roasted and
ground. It is rather surprising, by the way, to
learn that a palatable beverage i s possible from
steeping the needles o f the Hemlock tree (Tsuga
Canadensis, Carr.)-which is not to be confused with
the poisonous herb that Socrates died of. Hemlock
tea is, or at least used to be, a favorite drink of the
eastern lumbermen, and I have myself drunk it
149
152
monly known as Lemonade-berry, and R. integrifolia is also sometimes called mahogany because
of its hard wood, dark red at the heart. The Spanish
people call it mangla, a name they give to some other
sumacs as well.
The berries of the Manzanita, a Pacific coast shrub
that was described in an earlier chapter, make an
exceptionally agreeable cider. This is one of the
harmless beverages of Indian invention, and I cannot, perhaps, do better than to quote the method that
Chesnut describes in his treatise on the Plants
Used by the Indians of Mendocino Co., California.
Ripe berries, carefully selected to exclude any that
are worm-eaten, are scalded for a few minutes or
until the seeds are soft, and then crushed with a
potato masher. To a quart of this pulp an equal
quantity of water is added, and the mass is then
poured over a layer of dry pine needles or straw
placed in a shallow sieve basket and allowed to drain
into a vessel beneath; or sometimes the mass is
allowed to stand an hour or so before straining.
When cool, the cider, which is both spicy and acid,
is ready for use without the addition of sugar. A
better quality of cider is said to result if the pulp
alone is used. The dried berries, in the latter case,
are pounded to a coarse powder, and then by clever
156
BEVERAGE PLANTS
BEVERAGE PLANTS
159
BEVERAGE PLANTS
tions of the United States is furnished by the reddishbrown, creeping rootstock of the Purple or Water
Avens (Geum rivale, L.), a perennial herb with
coarse, pinnate basal leaves and 5-petaled, purplish,
nodding flowers, borne on erect stems a couple of
feet high. The plant is frequent in low grounds and
swamps throughout much of the northern part of
the United States and in Canada, as well as in Europe and Asia. The rootstock is characterized by
a clove-like fragrance and a tonic, astringent property, and has been used by country people in
decoction as a beverage, with milk and sugar, under
the name of Indian Chocolate or Chocolate-root. It
is the color, however, rather than the taste that has
suggested the common name. Lucinda Haynes
Lombard, writing in The American Botanist for
November, 1918, mentions a curious popular superstition to the effect that friends provided with Avens
leaves are able to converse with one another though
many miles apart and speaking in whispers !
Readers of literature concerning old time explorations in America will perhaps recall passages in
the reports of various writers devoted to accounts
of a beverage called Yaupon, Cassena, or the Black
Drink, formerly in great vogue among the Indians
of the Southern Atlantic States and colonies. One
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BEVERAGE PLANTS
mat (Ilex Paraguayensis). The leaves were customarily toasted, thoroughly boiled in water, and
then cooled by pouring rapidly from one vessel to
another and back again, which also developed frothiness. The liquid is, as the name indicates, of a black
color, and is quite bitter. Dr. E. M. Hale, who made
a special study of the subject and had the results
published by the United States Department of Agriculture 3 a number of years ago, pronounced it a not
unpleasant beverage, for which a liking might readily be acquired as for mat, tea or coffee-in fact
somewhat suggesting in taste an inferior grade of
black tea. When very strong from long boiling, it
will act as an emetic-a consummation lightly regarded by the Indians, who merely drank again.
Two other species of Ilex growing wild throughout
a greater part of the length of our Atlantic seaboard
possess leaves that have been similarly used as substitutes for Chinese tea. One is I. glabra, Gray,
popularly known as Inkberry, a rather low-growing
shrub of sandy soils near the coast, with shiny,
wedge-shaped, evergreen leaves, and ink-black berries; the other, I. verticillata, Gray, a much taller
shrub, with deciduous foliage, and bright red berries
clustered around the stems and persisting in winter.
3 Bulletin 14, Division of Botany.
164
BEVERAGE PLANTS
166
CHAPTER VIII
VEGETABLE SUBSTITUTES FOR SOAP
To soothe and cleanse, not madden and pollute.
Wordsworth.
MONG the pleasant pictures of my mental gallery is one of an autumn evening at a Pueblo
Indian village in New Mexico, where I chanced to be
a few years ago. The sun was near setting, seeking
his nightly lodging in the home of his mother, who,
according to the ancient Indian idea, lives in the
hidden regions of the west; on the house-tops the
corn huskers were gathering into baskets the multicolored ears that represented the days labor; along
the trail from the well some laughing girls were
filing, with dripping jars of water on their heads;
the village flocks, home from the plain, were crowding bleating into corrals; and from open doors came
the steady hum of metates, the fragrance of grinding
corn, and the shrill music of the womens mealing
songs. Then up the street came pattering a couple
of burros loaded with fire-wood and driven by an
167
174
A P a c i f i c C o a s t s o a p p l a n t (Chlorogalum p o m e r i d i a n u m ) .
The bulb, stripped of its fibrous covering, is highly saponaceous.
The fiber is useful for making coarse brushes and mattresses.
T u n a s , f r u i t o f a S o u t h w e s t e r n c a c t u s - S h o w i n g h o w it is
opened to secure the meaty pulp. (See page 109.)
175
177
its virtue as a capital cleansing agent was well understood, and they employed it for scouring cloth
and removing stains. They gave it, in monkish
fashion, a Latin name, herba fullonum, which in
English translation, Fullers herb, is sometimes still
assigned it in books ; but in every-day speech the
rustic English name, Soapwort, is more usual. In
our Southern States a pretty local name that has
come to my notice is My Ladys Wash-bowl. It
was in a Saponaria, I believe, that the glucoside
saponin-the detergent principle of the soap plants
-was first discovered and given its name. That
was about a century
and since then chemists
have identified the same substance existing in varying degrees in several hundred species throughout
the world.3 In most plants, however, the quantity
is too small to make a serviceable lather.
3 N. Kruskal. Soaps o f t h e V e g e t a b l e K i n g d o m , i n T h e
Pharmaceutical Era, Vol. XXXI, Nos. 13, 14.
183
CHAPTER IX
SOME MEDICINAL WILDINGS WORTH
KNOWING
ROMEO. Your plantain leaf is excellent for that.
BENVOLIO. For what, I pray thee?
ROMEO. For your broken shin.
Romeo and Juliet.
WILD SENNA
(Cassia Marylandica)
BONESET
(Eupatorium perfoliatum)
W ILD C H E R R Y
(Prunus serotina)
198
CREOSOTE-BUSH
(Larrea Mexicana)
204
_.
206
209
CHAPTER X
MISCELLANEOUS USES OF WILD PLANTS
O mickle is the powerful grace that lies
In plants, herbs, stones, and their true qualities;
For nought so vile that on the earth doth live
But to the earth some special good doth give.
Romeo and Juliet.
MISCELLANEOUS USES
MISCELLANEOUS USES
215
of the Pacific Coast (A. eriocarpa, Benth.), characterized by cream-colored flowers and foliage
clothed with a hoary hairiness. The commonest
Milkweed of eastern fields and waste places, A.
Syriaca, L., yields a fiber that has been used to some
extent in paper making, and for weaving into
muslins. In fact, the white mans interest in all
our wild fibers has been largely directed in latter
times to their adaptability to adulterating and
cheapening fabrics.2
The most important of all our native fiber plants
are the Yuccas and Agaves. It is from Mexican
species of the latter genus-and possibly of both
genera-that the valuable Sisal-hemp, imported from
Mexico, is made, with which our United States
species have never successfully competed. Fiber
from the Yucca (probably Y. baccata, Torr.) was in
extensive use by the prehistoric people who built the
cliff dwellings of the Southwest, as is proved by
sandals, rope and cloth found in these remarkable
ruins. According to the Zui tradition it was from
Yucca fibers that men made the first clothing for
2 For many interesting details touching the general subject of
wild fibers, reference is made to Reports 5 and 6, Office of Fiber Investigation, U. S. Dept. of Agriculture, entitled respectively Leaf
Fiber of the United States, and Uncultivated Bast Fibers of the
United States, by C. H. Dodge.
216
MISCELLANEOUS USES
217
A Southwestern desert hillside, which, in spite of its desolate look, bears plants yielding food, soap
textile fiber and drinking water. The man in the foreground is cutting mescal.
MISCELLANEOUS USES
219
MISCELLANEOUS USES
221
leaves and showy panicles of fragrant, white, pealike blossoms, pendent in June from the branch ends.
It, too, has yellow wood, as the common name implies, and from it a clear saffron dye may be had.
Better known is the Quercitron or Dyers Oak
(Bartrams Quercus tinctoria), which has played a
part in international commerce. The inner bark,
which is orange-colored, yields a fine yellow dye, and
was once an important article of export to Europe,
where it was employed in the printing of calicos.
The tree is indigenous in poor soil throughout a large
part of the eastern United States, and by some botanists is regarded as but a variety of the Scarlet Oak
(Quercus coccinea, Wang.), whose foliage is a fiery
contributor to the autumn coloring of our forests.
Natures fondness for yellow is manifested in her
gift of many dyes of this cheerful color, utilized by
her red children. The common Wild Sunflower
(Helianthus annuus, L.) and the flower heads of the
rank-smelling Rabbit-brush (Chrysothamnus nauseosus [Pursh.] Britt.)-this latter one the commonest
shrubs of the Far Western plains and deserts, with
rayless flat-topped clusters of yellow flowers and
with linear leaves-have long yielded a yellow stain
to the Indians, who transmute the gold of the blossoms into liquidity by the process of boiling. An222
MISCELLANEOUS USES
other mine of color is Shrub-yellow-root (Xanthorrhiza apiifolia, L.Her.), a low, shrubby plant of the
Buttercup family, with pinnate leaves clustered at
the top of a short stem, and small, brownish-yellow
flowers in drooping, slender racemes appearing in
April or May, in woods and on shady banks of
mountain streams from New York to Florida. The
bark and roots are richly yellow, and from the latter
the dye was customarily extracted. The bark and
roots, too, of some of the Barberries (notably the
western Berberis Fremontii, Torr.) yield a yellow
dye, of which the Navajos used to be fond as a color
for their buckskins. Equally in aboriginal favor
as a source of yellow was the nearly related Golden
Seal (Hydrastis Canadensis, L.) , the thick, orangecolored rootstock being used. It occurs in rich
woods from the Canadian border to Arkansas and
Georgia-a low herb, with a hairy stem two-leaved
near the summit which bears a single, greenish-white
flower. It is sometimes called Yellow Puccoon.6
Puccoon is a word of Indian origin, and has been
applied to other plants as well. One of these, the
Red Puccoon, is more commonly known as Bloodroot (Sanguinaria Canadensis, L.), whose hand6 The root is also the source of the official drug Golden seal,
and its collection on this account has caused the plant to become
exterminated in many localities where it was once common,
223
MISCELLANEOUS USES
several from the same root. This, I believe, was
the most famous of the Puccoons as an Indian colorsource, a good red dye being extractable from the
large red roots. The plant sometimes went among
the whites by the name of Alkanet, bestowed, doubtless, because of its cousinship with the plant yielding the famous Old World dye so entitled. The
Borage family, indeed, are rather rich in color juices,
and some will stain the fingers even as one gathers
the flowers. A red dye was also got, according to
Percher, from the fibrous roots of the Flowering
Dogwood and the kindred Silky Cornel ( C o r n u s
sericea, L.) sometimes called Kinnikinnik. Of Kinnikinnik, more in a page or two. Another red may
be extracted from the roots of the Wild Madder
(Galium tinctorium, L.), a smooth-stemmed, perennial Bedstraw, with square stems and rather upright
branches, narrow leaves in verticels usually of four,
and small, 4-parted, white flowers, found in damp
shade and in swampy land from Canada southward
throughout much of the eastern United States.
This was one of the dyes used by the northern
Indians to color red the porcupine quills, which entered so largely into their decorations; and FrenchCanadian women, according to Kalk, employed it
under the name of tisavo jaune-rouge, to dye cloth.
225
KINNIKINNIK
(Cornus sericea)
MISCELLANEOUS USES
228
MISCELLANEOUS USES
MISCELLANEOUS USES
231
CHAPTER XI
A CAUTIONARY CHAPTER ON CERTAIN
POISONOUS PLANTS
Within the infant rind of this weak flower
Poison hath residence.
236
is that common toadstool appropriately called Deathcup (Amanita phalloides), whose resemblance to the
edible Agaric or Field Mushroom (Agaricus campestris) causes it to be mistaken for the latter by the
D EATH CUP
(Amanita phalloides)
ignorant. Any one who has not had practical instruction in differentiating edible fungi from poisonous,
would best leave the fungus order religiously alone.
Mushroom gathering is a business for experts.
237
240
242
astringent fruit) . The most dreaded of cattlepoisons, however, particularly on the Western
ranges, is probably the so-called Loco-weed, a term
applied to several species of Astragalus-especially
A. mollissimus, Torr., distinguished by purple flowers and densely hairy foliage. The genus is of the
LOCO-WEED
(Astragalus mollissimus.)
246
247
JIMSON-WEED
(Datura Stramonium)
249
250
252
The cactus is indigenous to the arid regions bordering on the lower Rio Grande both in the United
States and Mexico. It
resembles a carrot in
shape, and the entire
plant, except about an
inch at the top, grows
underground. This top
is flat and round, two to
three inches across, and
wrinkled with radiating
ribs. There are no
s p i n e s but numerous
tufts of silky hairs, amid
which pink blossoms are
borne in season. The
chemical properties embrace three alkaloids
whose effect is powerfully narcotic and deliriant, in some respects resembling opium. Lumholtz, in his Unknown
(Lophophora Williamsii)
Mexico, gives an interthe Ancient Americans, in Ann. Rept. Smithsonian Institution,
1916.
253
esting account of the superstitious reverence accorded by the Tarahumar Indians of Chihuahua towards this plant, which in their language is called
hikula. They treat it as a divinity and Lumholtz
was required to lift his hat in the presence of the
dried buttons. Catholicized Tarahumares make
the sign of the cross before it ; and it is regarded
as a safeguard against witches and ill fortune. It
is claimed that its use takes away the craving for
alcohol, which may be true; but it substitutes another, and, between Scylla and Charybdis, what is
the choice?
The poisonous effect of a few native species of
Rhus upon the skin of many persons is well known.
On the Atlantic slope the species whose caustic
juices possess this property are the Swamp Sumac
(Rhus venenata, DC.) and the Poison Ivy (R. Toxicodendron, L.). The former is a graceful shrub or
small tree of swampy situations, the smooth leaves
compound with leaflets abruptly pointed and with
entire margins. They turn in the autumn a brilliant
red, very seductive to the gatherers of autumn foliage. The panicles of greenish flowers, produced
from the axils of the leaves, are followed by grayish
white berries. The plant is also called Poison
Sumac and, less correctly, Poison Elder, The
POISON IVY
(Rhus Toxicodendron)
256