Archive for October, 2011

Growing At-Risk Medicinal Plants – by Juliet Blankespoor

Monday, October 24th, 2011

Growing At-Risk Medicinal Plants

Photos and Text by Juliet Blankespoor

Growing our own medicine creates an intimate connection with healing plants as we watch them emerge from the ground, and grow leaves, flowers, and fruits. I tend to be more curious about the plants around me, as I see, smell and feel them throughout the seasons. My curiosity inspires research, experimentation, medicine making, and therapeutic usage. Deep, long- lasting plant friendships are born from these interactions.

There are some important environmental reasons for cultivating rare native medicinals as well. We lose vast populations of our native flora, many of which are important medicinal plants, as our wild lands are converted to roads, development, lawns and agriculture. Cultivating shade-loving healing plants in existing woodlands takes the pressure off their small populations elsewhere, and reduces the demand for overharvested wild herbs. One of the biggest issues with habitat loss is the fragmentation of plant populations. Many of our native woodland plants produce ant-dispersed seeds: bloodroot, hepatica, trillium, bleeding heart, wild ginger, trout lily, and dutchman’s breeches are a few examples. As you can imagine, ants do not carry seeds as far as a bird or mammal can in its gastro-intestinal tract. Despite ants’ super-hero strength, ants cannot carry seeds across highways either. Thus, isolated populations of plants producing ant-dispersed seeds can remain isolated in the absence of a continuous forest. We are increasing local populations by planting native woodland herbs, which might otherwise have a hard time naturally expanding into our area.

The intact forest, with all of its useful gifts of lumber, food, fiber, bio-diversity, beauty, water retention, carbon- sequestering, hammock hanging, and wildlife habitat, is an additional advantage to woodland cultivation of native medicinal flora. None of these advantages are present in the current large-scale cultivation practices of growing shade-loving herbs in cleared farms in full sun, necessitating shade-cloth and a multitude of unsustainable inputs.

Finally, many of the woodland herbal medicines are easy to cultivate, as compared to our garden herbs. If sited correctly, they can generally fend for themselves after the first year or two and require little to no inputs. Following are some of the more common techniques employed in plant propagation; after a few times of practicing these skills, they become second nature and quite intuitive.

Germination Specifics

Germinating medicinal herb plants and natives requires more skill, attention, and patience than germinating vegetable plants. Following are some special treatments that herb seeds may need before they will germinate. Many of the following resources, especially Horizon Herbs and Prairie Moon, list the necessary seed treatments for each plant.


Stratification or Cold Conditioning
– Many seeds have a built-in alarm clock that lets them know winter has passed and it is now spring, and safe to begin life. Stratification tricks seeds into thinking winter has passed by exposing them to an extended period of cold and moist conditions. My preference is to do this in a controlled manner in the safety of my own home inside a Ziploc bag (that’s a Virgo for you). Here’s how you trick those innocent seeds: Wet sand slightly so it’s visibly wet but no water comes out when squeezed. I recommend using “play sand” as it is fine, clean of organic matter (which may harbor fungal spores and seed-eating bacteria) and generally light in color (the better to see little seeds with, my dear). Place a very small amount of the wet sand (2-3 tablespoons) in a small Ziploc bag with the seeds. Label well, place in a paper bag to keep out the light, and store in the refrigerator for 3 weeks to 3 months depending on the species. If you’re not sure, try one month. You can plant the sand with the seed so there’s no need to pick out the individual seeds unless they are exceptionally large. Boneset, ginseng, blue vervain, butterfly weed, blue cohosh, black cohosh, bloodroot, goldenseal, trillium, wild yam, wild ginger, false unicorn root, culver’s root, mullein, skullcap, wormwood and Echinacea spp. are just a few of the herbs that need stratification to germinate well.

Light – Dependent Germination – Many seeds have formidable patience and can lay in the soil for decades, or even centuries, waiting for their break. Sunlight is the big break, and in a natural setting, it is brought about by wildfire, storm, or tree fall. The canopy opens up and the seed has a chance to find its own personal spot in paradise. You may sow these seeds directly onto the surface of the soil and very gently press them so they make contact with the soil. They then should be watered very gently by misting or bottom watering so they will not be washed off the surface of the soil. Many very small seeds are treated in the same manner, as they do not have the reserves to grow above a thick layer of soil. Angelica, bee balm, catnip, lobelia, lovage, mullein, Saint John’s wort and violet are just a few of the herbs that need sunlight to germinate.

Scarification – Many seeds have a thick impervious seed coat that must be nicked or cracked before the seed can germinate. You can rub the seeds between two pieces of sand paper until you see a little bit of the endosperm (embryo nutrient reserves, usually a lighter color and different texture than the seed coat). Sometimes this is done before stratifying seeds and sometimes at the time of sowing. Astragalus, wild indigo, hollyhock, licorice, marshmallow, passionflower, red root, and rue are some of the herbs that will germinate better with scarification.

Vegetative Forms of Propagation

Creating identical clones from parent plants by division, layering, and cuttings has several advantages and is often easier than germinating the seed. For starters, this is the primary way that cultivars (cultivated varieties) are propagated, as their unique qualities are not usually expressed in their seed-grown offspring. I can attest to this personally after trying to grow peppermint from seed and ending up with a mint mutt, which smelled more like pennyroyal than peppermint. Many herbs such as mints, specialty thymes, lavenders, white sage, goldenseal, blue cohosh, partridgeberry, and lemon verbena are generally propagated by the methods outlined below. Growing from cuttings often gives a bigger plant in a shorter amount of time than growing from seed. One disadvantage with vegetative propagation is that genetically identical plants do not have the resiliency found in the larger gene pool of sexually reproducing plants.

Division is the easiest form of vegetative propagation. It involves digging up and severing a portion of the root system of a plant, and replanting it. Depending on the plant species and age, one to twenty divisions may be made from one plant. In running plants, such as the mints, partridgeberry, gotu kola, jiaogulan (Gynostemma pentaphyllum), Mondarda spp., and Arnica chamissonis, one digs up the runners (stolons and rhizomes) and plants them in a new site or container. In clumping plants, such as elecampagne, valerian, Echinacea spp., motherwort, meadowsweet, boneset, comfrey, and culver’s root, one can thrust a shovel into the center of the clump and pry free the divisionling. I generally don’t have the heart for this method and prefer digging up the whole plant and getting a good look at its root system. I then divide the roots with a garden knife (hori-hori), shovel or pruners and replant each section in it’s new garden spot. Each section contains either buds (when the plant is dormant) or leaves and shoots if the plant is actively growing and green. Take care to plant your divisionlings with the buds pointing up. Depending on the season, species, size of division, expertise, loving care in the transition to plant independence (watering, soil, etc.) you might have 70-100% survival.

Root Cuttings involve digging up a rhizome and cutting off two to three inch sections with pruners. Ideally the rhizome section should include the rootlets (smaller, secondary roots) and a large bud or shoot. However, many plants will grow without a visible bud present on the cutting, comfrey being a prime example. Place the root cutting directly in the ground with the bud pointing upward, or in a container and keep well watered until you see the emerging shoot. Root cuttings have the advantage of growing faster than seed germinated plants, which sometimes take two to three years to germinate. Many woodland medicinals are cultivated commercially from root cuttings, rather than seed, for this reason. Some examples of plants propagated from root cuttings are calamus, blue cohosh, black cohosh, false uncorn, trillium, wild ginger, sweet fern, wild yam, Iris spp., bloodroot, sumac, sweet shrub, comfrey, spikenard, wild geranium, and goldenseal.

Stem Cuttings involve cutting the tips of growing twigs, either woody or tender new growth, and placing the stem into various types of growing media. The cuttings are then kept well watered, preferably in a high humidity environment, until roots form. The rooted cutting is then placed directly in the garden, or preferably grown on in a container until it is larger. Some plants readily root from cuttings; a few examples are lemon verbena, rosemary, lavender, white sage, pineapple sage, elderberry, figs, and most succulents. Many others are harder to prod into root growth, and it’s a race against time before rot or desiccation takes the cutting. Most commercial nurseries and home gardeners use synthetic rooting hormone dips or powders, which greatly enhance the success of cuttings “taking”. Willow bark extract is a natural alternative (see recipe below), as is seaweed extract, but I have to say in honesty that they are less effective than the synthetics. To make a softwood cutting, take the top two to four nodes (area where the stem and leaf join) of green growth, which is still pliable but not flimsy. Softwood cuttings are usually made in late spring/early summer. Remove the lower nodes’ leaves and if the remaining upper leaves are large, cut them in half. To make a hardwood cutting, take the upper three to four nodes of the currents years’ growth in late fall/early winter, after the first frost. Keep the hardwood cuttings in soil protected from freezing, and place in the shade. The choice of cutting type depends on the species; you will need to research the preferred method for the plant you want to propagate.

Place your cuttings in their growing medium very soon after preparing them. The cuttings can be placed in their medium in an open tray or wide pot in part sunlight. The sunlight encourages rooting but also contributes to water loss, which is often the demise of the cutting. The growing medium should be low in nitrogen, as nitrogen encourages green growth over root production. Wet sand, fine compacted perlite, and vermiculite are some common choices. For acid-loving plants, try one part peat moss and one part coarse perlite. For hardwood cuttings, mix together equal parts of peat, sand, and aged pine bark fines. Keep your cuttings moist and create extra humidity by frequent misting and placing a plastic bag or clear plastic container over the cuttings to keep in the moisture. When you tug gently on the cutting and you feel some resistance, check to see if roots have formed. If roots are present, transplant directly into the ground, or preferably into a good quality soil mix, where the cutting can grow bigger and stronger before it has to fend for itself.

Layering involves bending down the longer, flexible lateral branches of woody plants into the soil three inches deep. The branches are then staked in place, with the top of the stem above ground. Secure the stem in place with a piece of bent wire, rock or notched piece of wood. The aboveground part of the stem may need staking to keep it erect. The semi-buried stem is left in place for a couple of months to two years, depending on the species. Once roots have grown from the buried section of stem, the side-plant may be severed from the parent plant and moved to a new garden site. Layering is usually performed in the spring or summer. Some examples of plants propagated by layering are rosemary, sage, thyme, bay, Vitex, and cramp bark.

Willow Bark Extract contains a natural plant hormone called willow-rooting substance, which is a type of auxin. It can be used as a free natural substitute for commercial rooting powders, and is especially helpful for rooting softwood cuttings. Cut ten 2-3 ft. willow branches, preferably in the fall after the leaves have fallen and cut the branches into 2 in. lengths. Pour a gallon of water over them and let sit for 24 to 48 hours. Strain the willow soak water. Soak the lower stem portion of cuttings in this solution for 24 hours and then place them in their rooting medium. Any unused liquid can be stored in the refrigerator for up to a year. Some people use willow in a less exact fashion by soaking willow branches in water and using the soak water to water-in cuttings.

Resources:

Horizon Herbs: Largest collection of organically grown medicinal herb seeds and plants, with growers manual germination specifics.
Medicinal Herbs and Non-timber Forest Products
Prairie Moon Nursery: Seeds and plants of natives to the prairie and eastern states. Loads of germination info.
Richters: Huge selection of herb seeds and plants. Rare or hard to find herbs.
United Plant Savers: Plant enthusiasts committed to raising public awareness of the plight of our wild medicinal plants and to protecting these plants through organic cultivation, sustainable agricultural practices, and the replanting back into their natural habitats.

Juliet Blankespoor is the director and primary instructor at the Chestnut School of Herbal Medicine, where she teaches botany, plant identification, human anatomy and physiology, and bioregional roots herbalism. Enraptured by the diversity and intricacies of the green world, Juliet received her B.S. in Botany and furthered her studies by completing over 1200 hours of herbal education. Being obsessed with plants, she has spent much of her adult life botanizing and wildcrafting in diverse settings throughout North America. She is also an avid edible and medicinal mushroom hunter. Her previous herbal business endeavors include an herbal tincture line, natural body care products and prepared wild foods. Her love of plants is also expressed through writing herbal articles and botanical photography. She believes that growing and gathering food and medicine is empowering, revolutionary, and highly entertaining.

(Excerpted from Plant Healer Magazine – Repost and Forward Freely)

Now Available: Art of Plant Healer & Plant Healer Annual Books

Wednesday, October 19th, 2011

Now Ready To Ship – For Yourself or a Gift:
THE ART OF PLANT HEALER (BOOK)

After its introduction at the Traditions In Western Herbalism Conference, the full color Art of Plant Healer is now ready for shipping to anyone interested, whether you’re a magazine subscriber or not… a full color soft cover book containing some of the best original artwork and inspiring posters for herbalists and plant lovers from the pages of Plant Healer Magazine.

Featuring over 60 full page sized color illustrations including paintings, drawings and sculptures by such artists as Joanna Powell Colbert, Madeline von Foerster, Lauren Raine, Rebecca Altman, Holly Sierra and Jesse Wolf Hardin.  The 8.5×11” pages can be carefully removed for framing and hanging, so you may want 2 copies… one for removal and display, and the other to keep whole.  The Art of Plant Healer could make an appealing gift as well.

$25 ea. to Plant Healer Subscribers  (plus $6 Shipping)
$35 ea. to NonSubscribers  (plus $6 Shipping)
Order Now At:
www.PlantHealerMagazine.com


“Plant Healer is the most beautiful I’ve ever seen, bar none. It’s right up there with National Geographic in its use of color and natural landscapes and plants. A true feast for the eyes!” -Phyllis Light

And Also Presenting:
THE PLANT HEALER ANNUAL BOOK

“The first publication I’ve seen in my 38-year career that captures the wild diversity of herbalism in North America while still reflecting excellence and high-level practice… for the practicing herbalist from entry level to advanced, inclusively.” -Paul Bergner

After its introduction at the Traditions In Western Herbalism Conference, the new 700 page long Plant Healer Annual is now available for general distribution… an 8.5×11” softcover book in affordable Black & White, featuring a complete year’s worth of articles from the tree-free, color digital Plant Healer Magazine for herbal students, practitioners and plant lovers.

Plant Healer Annual features in-depth and highly personal columns and articles on subjects of interest to folks at all stages of learning, students and practitioners alike, including plant profiles, therapeutics, foraging, medicine making, botany, herbs in midwifery, articles for and by kids, marketing, whole foods cooking, herbalist art and culture, philosophies of practice and pertinent issues, exclusive book excerpts and interviews.

“I had a chance to skim through a hard copy Plant Healer Annual recently, and I LOVE IT ♥ I can honestly say if you’re not a subscriber, you are missing out on MAJORLY delicious, practical, inspiring, and downright historical work of art. I am truly honored to be a part.”
- Ananda Wilson

Contributors to Plant Healer Annual include many of the leading voices in folk herbalism and wildcrafting, such as Paul Bergner, Matthew Wood, Aviva Romm, Kiva Rose, Phyllis Light, Samuel Thayer, 7Song, Rosemary Gladstar, Susun Weed, Jim McDonald, Kristine Brown, Virginia Adi, Todd Caldecott, Sean Donahue, John Gallagher, Rosalee de la Forêt, Robin Rose Bennett, Ananda Wilson, Christa Sinadinos, Margi Flint, Katja Swift, Dale Bellisfield, Susan Belsinger, Jane Valencia and Henriette Kress.

$39 ea. (plus $15 Shipping) to Plant Healer Subscribers
If you’re not already a Subscriber, you can pre-order both the Annual ($39) and a 1 year’s Subscription with bonuses ($57) at the combined discount price of only $77 (plus $15 Shipping)
To Order, Go To:
www.PlantHealerMagazine.com

“It is a huge honor to be a part of the Plant Healer Magazine, and I absolutely treasure the book. The magazine is an absolute treasure for the herbalist world. The breadth of articles is so diverse and the contemporary nature of the publication creates a unique snapshot in time.”
-Rosalee de la Forêt

(Please RePost and Forward)

Dates & Location for Traditions In Western Herbalism Conference

Friday, October 7th, 2011

2012 Traditions In Western Herbalism Conference
New Dates & Location

Search & Criteria

It seemed we would never find the “right” place, and yet we just couldn’t give up!  Weeks we spent on our site search in 2010, to no avail.  And weeks again since we got home from the 2011 conference, filled with long days that stretched late into our river canyon nights.  Like plant minded and rewilded Goldilockses, we kept coming upon places that were too small or too large, too hippie-dippy New Age or else fancy-pants conservative, too urban or too remote, too short on facilities or way too damn many buildings.  Sedona was too prissy, the Chiracahua Mountains too hot and sparse.  Some too high of elevation, others too dry.  Some possible venues would clearly be too noisy and distracting, others like Oak Creek wouldn’t let us have live music over a certain decibel.  The way cool town of Telluride kept bringing their prices down until we actually could have afforded it there, but the your flights to Montrose would have made it cost prohibitive for many of you. The attractive Shambhala Center, too, proved to be almost affordable for us, but they wanted a guarantee that 80% of our attendees would rent pricey lodging from them… when, in fact, close to 50% of those attracted to this decidedly folk herbalism conference need free or inexpensive camping, often being either impoverished students, poorly paid community practitioners or free clinic volunteers who struggle to get enough money together to come.

And folk herbalists are nature lovers, even if you happen to live and work in a city, so any celebration of plants and practice would surely have to be in a natural location, not in a hotel with potted ferns being the only green.  Indeed, it would have to be within walking distance of nature trails or national forest swelling with plant life, and also have 5 or more classrooms clustered close to one another.  Sufficient tables and chairs would be needed, and this time there would have to be food tons better than the pitiful Ghost Ranch fare.  As kind as the responses were that we were getting from various entities, nothing seemed to meet all our needs.  And as much as anything, we were distressed to think about hosting TWHC anywhere besides the wild and magical Southwest.  Unfortunately, there just wasn’t anything.  Our teachers have long needed to know where and when, so they can schedule their year of classes and appearances.  Others are pleading to know, because their jobs require they put in for vacation time a year in advance.  The stress of indecision and numerous dead ends begins to effect our sleep and health, and for Kiva’s sake, if not my own, I reluctantly ask that she stop the incessant googling and help me pick from among the best of the known alternatives.

But that Kiva, she just wouldn’t give up.  And at last, an ideal place came into sight!  A 2 day trip with the rest of the family to see it, and it’s settled.  only a couple hundred miles over the hill from our Anima School and Sanctuary, the incredibly beautiful…


Our New Site: Coconino, Arizona

Our new site nests amidst the vast Coconino conifer forest, with absolutely incredible local plant diversity and forested mountains reflected in the surface of what’s called Mormon Lake, an alternately spreading and retracting marsh we found fairly ablaze with wildflower color.

A short walk away, the leaves of white barked Aspen clap like tiny castanets in what tastes like the freshest of breezes, and not too many miles distant are protected wilderness areas, Oak Creek’s natural rock-slide, dramatic volcanic formations, lush meadows inhabited by countless grazing elk, and hiking trails leading both higher or lower to the adjacent desert and alpine ecosystems.

And yet for all that, our site in the Coconino is still only a 3 hour drive from the Phoenix airport, the very cheapest of our regional airports to fly into, and serviced by shuttles!  Only 12 hours from Denver, for those choosing to drive from there.  And just 30 minutes south of the old fashioned town of Flagstaff.

It includes  every building we need for classes, without feeling either too Hyatt Regency or too bingo hall.  Clean and comfortable log cabins, with lower prices that nearly everyone can afford!  Both inexpensive camping with electrical outlets, and totally free camping sites!  A giant outdoor festival tent that we’ll use as a group dining area in the day, and as a dance hall when its time for our 2 exciting evening concerts.  And voluminous Town Hall built in the 1920’s, that will hold our Registration area and Healer’s Market tables, with a section of benches or couches for folks to use as a meeting and greeting area.

Believe it or not, unlike our last conference location, this new base for TWHC has a fully stocked country store right there, selling supplies and even fair-trade coffee.  It’s handicapped accessible.  Pets are allowed in its campgrounds and RV sites.  In addition, there are canoe rentals there, active land restoration projects, roaming buffalo, pony rides and even a petting zoo for the kids!

Kiva and Loba took Rhiannon with them on this search trip and she got to have her very first ever horse ride.

As if that’s not enough, on your way there you’ll go right past the world class Arboretum that we’re considering arranging a field trip to, abundant with examples of native and medicinal plant species.

All this, mind you, at prices that help keep TWHC – the signature folk herbalism event – potentially affordable to the majority of our diverse folk community.

The gentle lapping of the lake whispers, but in an enchanting voice we can’t help but hear.

A Natural Wonder

The Coconino is a 1.856-million acre (7,511 km2) national forest located in northern Arizona in the vicinity of Flagstaff. Originally established in 1898 as the “San Francisco Mountains National Forest Reserve”, the Coconino features diverse landscapes including deserts, pine forests, flatlands, mesas, alpine tundra and ancient volcanic fields and peaks. The forest contains all or parts of 10 designated Wilderness Areas. Its elevation ranges from 2,600’ (800 m) in the southern part of the forest near the Verde River, to 12,633’ (3,851 m) at the summit of Humphreys Peak, the highest point in the state of Arizona. Much of the forest is a high altitude plateau located in the midst of the largest contiguous ponderosa pine forest in North America. The southern border of this plateau is the volcanically created Mogollon Rim, a nearly 400 mile (640 km) long escarpment running across central Arizona to the Anima Sanctuary in New Mexico, and also marks the southern boundary of what’s known as the Colorado Plateau.

The Coconino encompasses the largest portion of a great volcanic field, and in places is dotted with tree-covered cinder cones, lava flows, and underground lava tubes such as Lava River Cave. The Flagstaff District surrounds two national monuments, Walnut Canyon National Monument and Sunset Crater Volcano National Monument the latter of which preserves the youngest cinder cone in the San Francisco Volcanic Field, Sunset Crater. Located in the southern portion of the Flagstaff District is Mormon Lake at 7,000’ elevation, the new site for the Traditions In Western Herbalism Conference.

Mormon Lake itself is a shallow, intermittent lake with an average depth of only 10 ft (3.0 m), the surface area of the lake is extremely volatile and fluctuates seasonally. When full, the lake has a surface area of about 12 square miles (31 million square meters), making it the largest natural lake in Arizona.  The name of the lake commemorates Mormon settlers who arrived here in the 1870s and founded several dairy farms in the area, before eventually picking up stakes and moving on. (With thanks to Wikipedia)


Old West Heritage


You can almost hear the soundtrack as you step closer to the Mormon Lake Lodge and its scattering of old log and clapboard buildings tucked against the trees, perhaps a minor chord instrumental with sparse but powerful guitar lines, a whistling of wind punctuated by a horse’s whinny or the distant crack of a wagon master’s whip a’la Rawhide, in what could be a psychedelic spaghetti western composition by the tweaked Spindrift or Ry Cooder.

Here you find authentic Wild West flavor, oddly tinged with evident ecological emphasis and an earthy tone befitting the working class more than the world traveler.  Antique fishing rods and frontiersman’s accouterments decorate walls branded by the very cowboys who built it, and once fiercely alive creatures stand mounted and stuffed with reflections of a transformed land in their glass eyes.  These animals, like so much of the main Lodge decor, are a legacy of man who loved these mountains, the writer who most helped establish the Western novel as what was then a new literary genre: Zane Grey, 1875-1935.

In his 60+ books, he presented the West as a moral battle ground featuring game changing choices, with characters facing great personal and regional changes.  A bundle of contradictions like the West itself, Grey was not only the killer of the inglorious mounts but also a proponent of animal and habitat conservation.  His outlawish heroes not only bucked convention, but the notion of civilization itself.  From his 1918 novel  The Roaring U.P. Trail, 1918:

“Slingerland hated the railroad, and he could not see as any of the engineers or builders did.  This old trapper had the vision of the Indian – that far-seeing eye cleared by distance and silence, and the force of the great, lonely hills. Progress was great, but nature unspoiled was greater.  If a race could not breed all stronger men, through its great movements, it might better not breed any, for the bad over-multiplied the good, and so their needs magnified into greed.  Slingerland saw many shining bands of steel across the plains and mountains, many stations and hamlets and cities, a growing and marvelous prosperity from timber, mines, farms, and in the distant end – a gutted West.”

To champion and perpetuate that West and its wild nature, was Grey’s personal as well as literary aim.  And the owners of the Lodge at Mormon Lake – Grey’s all time favorite hangout – make an effort to honor that legacy with ongoing conservation efforts.

An Ecological Ethos

Ecological work at the Lodge property include environmental education programs and hikes, and a regular community effort to clean up around the lake and improve Osprey habitat.  The parent company of Mormon Lake Lodge, Forever Resorts, runs Forever Earth which sends donations to environmental groups, engages in community partnership, land restoration projects, environmental education, and proactive initiatives to make their various operations more compatible with the local ecologies.  They’ve won literally hundreds of environmental stewardship awards across the country, as well as being a member of the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA’s) National Environmental Performance Track Program, the Green Hotel and Green Restaurant Associations and on and on.

It’s interesting to note that the Coconino, back when it was called the San Francisco Forest Preserve, was the first posting for the forester who would later become known as the father of the modern land ethic, Aldo Leopold.


Coconino Plant Diversity

Examples you might encounter include Wild Rose, Redroot, Ponderosa Pine, Aspen, Dandelion, Mallow, Goldenrod, Evening Primrose, Geranium, Plantain, Usnea, Yarrow, Wild Buckwheat, Iris, Blackberry, Douglas Fir, Arnica, Yellow Dock, False Solomon’s Seal, Wild Oats, Butterflyweed/Pleurisy Root, Gumweed, Wild Tarragon, Sagebrush, Seepwillow, and Yerba del Lobo/Owl’s Claws to name a few!

TWHC guests are encouraged to hike one of the many picturesque trails such as the Lyle/Mormon Lakes Trail, a 3.3 mile rise from 10,700’ to a full 12,000’winding through multiple kinds of habitat, esteemed by botanists and plant lovers far and wide.

300 of even the most sensitive herbalists could have a major impact on local populations of sensitive plants, so we ask that you do little or no harvesting in the region of the event.

Before coming, check out the annotated list of Northern Arizona Vascular Plants.

2012 TWHC Dates!: September 13th-16th

…are the dates for the next Traditions In Western Herbalism Conference, late enough to beat the heat and avoid overlapping other events, early enough to still boast a plethora or blossoming plants, after when the monsoons have usually stopped and prior to the usual first frost.

Spread The Word

Early-Sprout Discount Registration will open December 1st.  Posters will shortly be available free for distribution and hanging in your schools and stores, and it is hugely helpful when you forward the announcements, blog about the conference and tell encourage your friends.

The Tribe’s Alive!

(Please do re-post, forward and share this announcement)

Close
E-mail It