Monday, December 28, 2020
Medicinal Monday - Wild Mint - Refreshing and Healthy!
Monday, December 21, 2020
Medicinal Monday - Peppermint
Peppermint is a strongly aromatic herb that has been used medicinally for centuries. Although the plant is indigenous to Europe and the Middle East, it is now widely spread and cultivated in many regions of the world. Native Americans used peppermint in a variety of ways from flavoring food to treating a number of ailments.
About Peppermint
Peppermint is part of the Mentha family and its' Latin name is Mentha x Piperita. Peppermint is a fast-growing perennial plant that spreads by rhizomes that are wide-spreading, fleshy and have fibrous roots. The dark green leaves with reddish veins are long and broad and grow on slightly fuzzy stems. The flowers are purple and produced in whorls around the stem forming thick blunt spikes. The flowers bloom from mid.-to- late summer. Peppermint can be found growing in moist habitats including stream sides.
Medicinal Uses
Many Native Americans used peppermint to flavor medicines and food. The Cherokee, the Iroquois, and Menominee use an infusion of the entire plant to treat a cold and fever. They would also make a poultice and apply it to the chest to treat pneumonia. The Iroquois, Oklahoma, Quileute, and Hoh make a tonic of the leaves and use it as a smelling and rubbing medicine for sore muscles. This compound is used as a wash on injuries and is called "Little Water Medicine." The Iroquois used an infusion of this plant to throw off witchcraft. The Mohegans give babies an infusion of this plant to treat worms.
Did You Know...
The reason why Peppermint is associated with Christmas probably lies with peppermint candy canes. According to The Oxford Companion to Sugar and Sweets, a local choirmaster in Cologne, Germany, sometime around 1670, was looking for a way to keep rowdy young people quiet while they were watching the live Nativity and asked a local confectioner to create a special hard candy for the kids to keep busy on for a while. It was shaped like a cane—or, more to the point, a shepherd's staff.
Peppermint is considered invasive in Australia, New Zealand, the Galapagos Islands, and in the Great Lakes Region of the United States.
The world cultivation of peppermint is lead by Morocco with 92% of the world total.
In the United States, Oregon and Washington produce the most peppermint.
Peppermint is known to repel some insects and rodents.
Peppermint is used in flavoring of ice cream, candy, fruit preserves, and alcoholic beverages.
Monday, December 14, 2020
Medicinal Monday - Festive Holly and More!
Ilex vomitoria, commonly known as yaupon holly is part of the holly family and is native to southeastern North America from the Eastern Shore of Virginia, south to Florida, and west to Texas. This slow-growing attractive shrub with its leathery leaves and bright red berries is not only festive looking it also offers Native Americans some interesting medicinal options.
About Ilex vomitoria
Yaupon is considered to be a small evergreen tree or large shrub that can grow up to 30 feet in the wild. Small, densely packed ovate gray-green leaves with a leather-like texture have rounded serrated edges and grow on rigid grey branches. This evergreen is adaptable to both dry and wet soil and can easily grow in either sun or shade. It is most commonly found in coastal areas with well-drained sandy soils like sand dunes, as well as on the edges of brackish marshes, in maritime forests, and in non-tidal forested wetlands. Yaupon has a vase-like shaped form when mature and will grow more berries if planted in the sun. The flowers bloom in April and are highly fragrant. If a male plant is nearby, the female flowers will evolve into red berries that continue to be red well into the winter months. The berries contain four pits that are dispersed by birds eating the fruit.
Medicinal Uses
This is one of the few plants in North America that contains caffeine, it actually has more caffeine in it than any other plant found here. Native Americans brewed the leaves and stems of this plant to make a tea thought to be called asi or black drink that was used in male-only purification ceremonies. This ceremony included vomiting and the Europeans thought that this plant induced it and named this plant Ilex vomitoria. It is thought that drinking large quantities and fasting caused vomiting. Ilex vomitoria contain caffeine, theobromine (a bitter alkaloid found in cacao), and theophylline. The Cherokee, Creek, Natchez, and Alabama, among other Native American communities, make an infusion of toasted leaves or a decoction of the entire plant and use it as a laxative. The Seminole used yaupon as a psychological aid. They made a decoction of bark to treat dance sickness and nightmarish dreams in old people.
Did You Know
Yaupon is a popular landscape plant often trimmed into an evergreen hedge.
The red berry branches are popular at Christmas for holiday decorations.
The flowers attract bees.
The berries are an important food for many birds including the American duck, Florida duck, morning doves, ruffed grouse, eastern bluebird, wild turkey, American robin, gray catbird, bobwhite quail among others.
Mammals that eat the fruit include the nine-banded armadillo, American black bear, gray fox, raccoon, skunks, and whitetail deer.
Monday, December 7, 2020
Medicinal Monday - The Beauty of Desert Lavender
The scent of lavender often evokes a sunny morning in the lavender fields of Provence, France where it is cultivated for making perfumes, cosmetics, and aromatherapy products. In the southwestern desert of the U.S., a type of lavender can also be found that has a scent similar to the fragrant lavender found in France. Native Americans were attracted to this plant for its scent and for its unique medicinal purposes.
About Desert Lavender
Hyptis emoryi or desert lavender is a frost-sensitive perennial shrub in the mint family that can grow up to eight feet tall and three feet wide. It typically grows on rocky slopes, in canyons, and in dry washes. This shrub can be found in Arizona, Nevada, California, northwest New Mexico, and in Sonora and Baja California. It has grey foliage and blue-lavender flowers. This shrub has oval whitish grey-green leaves with serrated margins and white hairy stems. Small violet flowers in short clusters that are bilaterally symmetrical blossom at the tips of the branches beginning in winter. They can bloom several times through spring. The flower is distinguished by four fertile stamens located on the pouched lower lip of the blossom.
Medicinal & Culinary Uses
The Cahuilla make an infusion of blossoms and leaves and take it for hemorrhages. It is also used to treat female inflammatory conditions, reproductive complaints, and to treat heavy menstruation and bleeding hemorrhoids. A decoction was made and used as a wound wash. Desert Lavender has long been prized by Native American communities living in this plant range for its edible seeds, as a flavoring, and as a component of a herbal tea. It is well respected and in regular use among the Comcaac of coastal Sonora near Tiburon Island. It is used as a smudge to clear the air of impurities, to prevent sickness from befalling someone, and to call forth all the beauty and healing that one seeks.
Did You Know...
Desert Lavender is one of the honey bees' favorite plants in the desert.
Desert Lavender attracts hummingbirds and butterflies.
Desert Lavender tea is said not only to taste good but also to ease nausea, anxiety, and stomach flu.
Today it is used for smudging, skin inflammation, rashes, and bee stings.
Friday, December 4, 2020
Bid and Buy @ Institute for American Indian Studies Online Auction Through December 16, 2020
Tuesday, December 1, 2020
Two Ways to Shop this Holiday Season @ Institute for American Indian Studies
Dawn Spears |
Vera Longtoe Sheehan |
If you plan to shop at the museum, get in the mood by visiting the Institute’s exhibitions that take visitors on a Native American journey through time with displays of astounding artifacts and exhibits that present information from prehistoric to contemporary time. A highlight is a special exhibit on Trading Posts and Native art. The Holiday Arts and Crafts Market at the Institute is open Saturday, December 5 and Sunday, December 6, and Saturday, December 12 and Sunday, December 13. If you plan on shopping in person at the Institute, give them a call in advance at 860-868-0518 or email them at events@isismuseum.org to reserve a spot. In addition to the Holiday Arts and Crafts Market, the Gift Shop at the Institute of American Indian Studies is open and chock full of a variety of items to fit every budget.
Jeanne “Morningstar” Kent |
The Gift Shop offers an excellent selection of Native American jewelry, crafts, artwork, tea, smudge, and books. The Museum and Gift Shop is open Friday - Saturday from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. and Sunday from 12 noon to 4 p.m. and will be closed on December 24 and 25 and 31 and January 1.
Sarah Sockbeson |
If you can't get to the Institute in person, visit the Virtual Holiday Market that opens November 27 and runs through January 3, 2021, on the Institute's website. Here you will find a curated webpage of the bios and contact information of Native American Artists that you can purchase from directly. Several of the featured artists including Dawn Spears (Narragansett – wearable art, corn husk dolls, and paintings), Vera Longtoe Sheehan (Elnu Abenaki – hand-woven textiles, baskets, and accessories), Brenda Hill (Tuscarora – pottery), Jeanne “Morningstar” Kent (Abenaki – gourd artwork), Sarah Sockbeson (Penobscot - baskets) and Annawon Weeden (Mashpee Wampanoag - jewelry) will do Zoom-based presentations and submit videos demonstrating their work and explaining how they incorporate cultural elements. These programs will be listed on the Institute's website and will add meaning to the gift items that they are offering for sale.