Showing posts with label native plants. Show all posts
Showing posts with label native plants. Show all posts

Saturday, October 27, 2018

Thankful for the Bounty


Autumn is Harvest Time, 
                Thankful for the Bounty


Juana shakes the oak tree with her sisters until acorns drop from the branches. In this way, the Tongva Women harvest acorns together. It is Autumn, and the acorns are plentiful. Once collected, the acorns are laid out in the sun to dry. Later Juana and her sisters will store them in a large grain basket, taking care to place it on a platform raised above the earth and out of reach of rodents.


                                   Photo Credit: laspilitas.com
                                           
When Juana prepares acorns for eating, she cracks them out of their shells and peels the kernels out of their paper-like skin. Using a stone mortar, she grinds them to flour. The next and very important step is to leach out the bitter tasting tannins by pouring water over them in a leaching basin made of layers of fine and coarse sand. She knows this could take most the morning, but it is very important to be done completely, and so she is patient. When done, the bitter taste will have been removed from the flour. The Tongva Women can then prepare the acorns as a mush, soup or “bread.”

Acorns have been a staple of Native Californians’ diet for 4,000 years or more.    They were the most important plant food for many tribes, as they are very nutritious. In this case, Juana and her Tongva sisters would have been collecting  acorns from the Coast Live Oak (Quercus agrifolia) in Topanga Canyon Santa Monica Mtns, where the Tongva people  lived. (Their territory abutted that of the Chumash tribe of Malibu. Tongva were also known as Gabrieleños.)  Besides the Coast Live Oak, the acorns from many other oak tree species, such as Black Oak and Valley Oak, can be harvested.

                                  Hollyleaf Cherry (Prunus_ilicifolia) 
                                       Photo Credit: laspilitas.com

Besides making flour from acorns, Native Californians would also make flour from the pit of the Hollyleaf Cherry fruit. After removing the pit’s poisonous outer layer, the kernels were crushed and then leached, like the acorns, before being turned into flour meal.  Though the flesh of the fruit can also be eaten straight off the tree, or fermented into an intoxicating drink, the Native Californians’ main use for the Hollyleaf Cherry was making flour.

When it came to foraging for wild edible plants, the Native Californian people knew what to eat and what not to eat. They had extensive knowledge about the resources that were available in the land in which they lived, and they passed this knowledge down to their children. They were also aware of medicinal values of the plants around them. Most of this information has been lost to us, which makes it difficult to know what is safe to pick or eat of the wild bounty that grows around us.


The Prickly Pear Cactus (Opuntia littoralis) would have provided sustenance to the Tongva people of the Santa Monica Mtns. Meaty and nutritious, Juana and her sisters would have harvested the fleshy pads called “nopales” of Prickly Pear Cactus. The fruit that forms at the very ends of the pads is called “Tuna.” When ripe (deep red color), they make a delicious jelly or a sweet raw dessert.

One of the nice things about Prickly Pear is that you can harvest both the pads and the fruit without destroying the plant. That way there is always more Prickly Pear for tomorrow! You can gently pull the fruit (Tuna) off. Pads can be removed by snapping a pad at the joint. It is wise to pick young tender pads, but not the youngest, as they have more spines. But what about those spines? Native Californians mastered a good system for removing them, and you could, too.  Some people recommend wearing heavy work gloves. But my trick works better: use a paper bag. Seriously! Put a paper bag on your hand like a glove when touching prickly pear and the spines cannot get to you! Next, to prepare for cooking, you can remove the spines by scraping with a knife.

Pads of Nopales are high in iron, beta carotene, vitamin C, and calcium. The deep red color of the fruit (tuna) means it is high in antioxidants. Nopales and Tuna would have been a very nutritious choice for the Tongva people, as it is for us. Today, Prickly Pear Cactus has many uses: raw cut up in salads, sautéed, breaded and then fried, boiled, tossed in soup, or pickled.  I myself have harvested Prickly Pear often from my chaparral garden, and especially enjoy making Nopales Tacos, a completely meatless dish.



Lamb’s Quarters (Chenopodium californiacum or album) are one of the best-known wild edible greens, with a taste like spinach.  Archeological evidence suggests it has been foraged for some 9000 years and cultivated for 4000 years. Before the Europeans came, this was another one of the many plants that would have sustained the indigenous peoples of California.  Lamb’s Quarters are high in protein, iron and vitamins A & C. The wild plant makes prolific seeds, which can also be ground into a dark flour for making bread, “mush” or tortillas.

Long before the arrival of Europeans, Native Americans lived well off California’s edible flora, which was bountiful. They lived in a balanced way, maintaining the land. Edible landscapes were everywhere!

Autumn is harvest time, and at Thanksgiving we are thankful for the bounty of food on our table. But, I also want to take a moment to be thankful for the bounty of knowledge about edible native plants left to us by the Native Americans who came before us. In California edible native plants still thrive in wild places. Nature gave them to us, free for the taking. Each of us can add edible native plants to our native plant gardens, and enjoy the Autumn harvest season, sharing our bounty with our wildlife friends.

~Check the local native nurseries in your area and see what they have for your edible native garden~
 

Thursday, May 17, 2018

April is the Month for Garden Tours


The Manzanita bush off to the right is my favorite native plant in this grouping.

April is the month for garden tours. All across North America spring has sprung, and the excitement over new blooms is evident by the number of garden tours and walks that can be found.  Here on the West Coast there certainly have been a plentiful group of gardens to visit.   Some tours charge an entrance fee and the fees vary widely, but others are FREE. I attended one such FREE garden tour on April 28th in Southern California, the 2018 Mar Vista Green Garden Showcase.

This year the focus of the 2018 Mar Vista Green Garden Showcase was on sustainability.  The garden tour in Mar Vista was a self-guided tour and included gardens that were made up of native plants and other drought tolerant plants.  Visitors were given a map of homes that are practicing water-wise techniques. On this user-friendly tour day, homeowners or their landscapers were available to answer questions at each garden.

Raised beds are a water wise way to grow vegetables after a lawn removal.

Besides native plant gardens, there were also vegetable gardens and succulent gardens to visit. Again, with the focus being on sustainability, some of the things folks wanted to know were: How can we reduce our water consumption, and in the case of a vegetable garden, how can we still create viable food gardens during a drought year? With the DWP offering incentives for water-guzzling lawn removals, homeowners must decide what they want to plant.  (This popular DWP program is being renewed in July.)  Raised beds in front yards are one answer to the lawn removal debate. 

Most gardens on the Native Plant Garden Tour seemed to make use of succulents for their drought-tolerance.  But succulents are NOT California natives.  Most come from places like Africa, Australia or China.  As a native plant enthusiast, I wish the tour organizers would have done more to inform visitors of the difference.  Yes, succulents will save water and so are applauded by the DWP.  But going a step further by planting things that BELONG here, that are native/local to Southern California, not the desert, would have been applauded by me.

Succulents are not native plants but are drought tolerant and create a distinctive look.


Most people would ask: What’s the difference between natives and succulents? If both are drought tolerant, who cares?  For an answer to that, I would urge people to pick up a book like Douglas Tallamy’s “Bringing Nature Home.  In it he describes the intricate connection between the microbes in the soil, the insects, and the birds who eat the insects.  They are all part of an ecosystem, a food network that existed long before Los Angeles was developed and covered over in green lawns and gray asphalt.  Succulents, while adding a distinctive look, do not contribute to the healthy network of native wildlife like native plants do. 

Yet and still, the 2018 Mar Vista Green Garden Showcase offered a wonderful opportunity for folks to get out and enjoy the April sunshine, meet like-minded folks, and learn water-wise tips.  I only wish April came around more often.

Sunday, October 2, 2016

Is It Time to Ditch Your Lawn?



iDeer Running through Wildlife Corridor in Toopanga State Park, CAPhoto by: venturacountytrails

It is so dry that deer have appeared on the Pepperdine lawn.  Anyone who has spent any time in Malibu or has just driven up the Pacific Coast Highway has seen that huge expanse of green-covered hillside that is the front lawn of Pepperdine University.  I try not to think about how much water it takes to keep it green throughout the summer!  Now, it seems that the Santa Monica Mountains are so dry that deer are bringing their families down to the Pepperdine lawn to drink the freshly watered lawn, even in January!

California's Drought Emergency

Back in 2014, California Governor Jerry Brown officially declared a drought emergency in California. 2014 had been the state’s driest year on record, with reservoir levels dropping and no rain in sight. It was the third dry winter in a row, and the Dept. of Agriculture declared a natural disaster for 27 California Counties, largely because of the impact on agriculture throughout the State.

Now, fast forward to 2016. We have had 5 years of drought, and this year for the first time ever the Governor had to implement statewide water rationing. He urged us to take a moment to think about how we are all connected to each other in a time of water crisis, as well as being connected to the plants and animals that live here.

It is time to be a sustainable gardener in California. What better time to ditch that lawn? 


More than 50 percent of water use goes to landscaping, in particular lawns. Besides being waterhogs, lawns are unhealthy (to us, to our pets, and to butterflies) because of the high amount of pesticides used to keep them up.

Why not let your lawn go brown?  There are plenty of websites and videos that can show you how to lose your lawn, incl. what grass removal method would work best for you, such as the easy and popular lasagna style.

What will replace my lawn?


1. You can remove entire lawns and replace them with Zen gardens of big boulders and tiny rocks that are raked into designs.

2. Or, you can plant meadow seed mixes. Theodore Payne’s Nursery is an excellent source for California native wildflower seeds and grasses.

3. Make your lawn smaller and your borders deeper. Plant drought-tolerant native plants in your borders. I love Salvias for their drought-tolerance and variety.

4. Make a center island design for a native plant or pollinator garden in the center of your lawn.  

Other water saving measures without losing the lawn include:


5. Reduce your water use in the garden by keeping your topsoil from drying out using mulch in flower beds and small stones in garden paths.

6. Capturing gray water from laundry and showers to reuse in watering the garden. This made a huge difference in my Topanga Canyon garden!

California Gardens Don't Rest in Winter:


In most of the country, where snow falls and covers the lawns for months, the ground gets to rest, and the gardener gets to rest, too.  Out West, we try to keep things green all year long even in dry summers.  Now it seems we can’t rely on all that imported water from places like the Colorado River to keep our manicured lawns looking their best year round.  Instead, we need to make the best use of our precious resources: We need to be more sustainable gardeners.

Being a Sustainable Gardener:


What does that mean? To be a sustainable gardener means to use as little of nature’s resources as possible, and to create gardens that will take care of themselves for years to come. There is no better proven way to do this than to landscape with native plants.  Native plants are naturally adapted to the conditions in which they live. While some are more drought-tolerant than others, most native plants only require extra water when they are first planted and are getting acclimated.

If we Southern Californians are serious about living lightly on the land, we have to remember that the water piped in here is imported, every drop taking away from the water tables of other places.

Luckily, our mild autumn weather gives native gardeners an opportunity to still get out there and make some big changes right now.

Not sure where to start?


Look for native plants that do not need a lot of rainfall (drought tolerant).  There are nurseries that specialize in natives in your area  that would be happy to help you with ideas. Note: Plants called Xeriscape plants are drought tolerant, but are not necessarily native plants.  So if you want to bring a balance to the ecosystem of your garden, you want to opt for adding drought-tolerant California natives instead of plants from elsewhere.

Contact the CA Native Plant Society http://www.cnps.org/ for suggestions on choosing native plants in your region, where to find them, and where to see them.

Some of my all-time favorite native plants that are drought tolerant and also beneficial to pollinators include all of the Sages (Salvia): White Sage, Purple Sage, Black Sage. These are all bee, hummingbird and butterfly magnets, plus they stay green all year long, creating a nice backdrop for many other natives.

Have you ditched or reduced your lawn? Do you have any water conserving tips? If so, we’d love to hear from you~

© 2014, Kathy Vilim. All rights reserved.