Showing posts with label Hopi Tea. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hopi Tea. Show all posts

Sunday, June 03, 2012

Cream Tips


Weather: Temperatures higher; last rain 5/13/12; 14:27 hours of daylight today.

Morning temperatures have been running at least five degrees higher than usual, suggesting some kind of dust or fumes in the air are holding in the day’s heat. Suspect some combination of debris from the southern fires and car exhausts coming down from places like Santa Fe.

What’s blooming in the area: Dr. Huey and other hybrid roses, Japanese honeysuckle, silver lace vine, Spanish broom, red hot poker, datura, sweet pea, alfalfa, blue perennial salvia, yellow flowered yarrow, brome grass; buds on daylily, hollyhock. Onion heads visible from road. First hay cuts in alfalfa and brome grass fields.

Beyond the walls and fences: Apache plume peaked, tamarix, yellow flowered prickly pear, showy milkweed, fernleaf globemallow, cheese mallow, alfilerillo, tumble mustard, purple mat flower, gypsum phacelia browning, stick leaf, tufted white evening primrose, scarlet bee blossom, pale blue trumpets, blue gilia, white and pink bindweeds, nits and lice, oxalis, wild licorice, scurf peas, loco, silver leaf nightshade, buffalo gourd, horse tail, amaranth, plain’s paper flower, goat’s beard, cream tips, strap leaf and golden hairy asters, native dandelion; needle, rice and three awn grasses; buds on Virginia creeper.

In my yard, looking east: Bath pinks, snow-in-summer, small leaved soapwort, Jupiter’s beard, Maltese cross, sea pink, coral bells, pink evening primrose, oriental poppy, winecup mallow, Rose Queen salvia, purple clover; buds on bouncing Bess, baby’s breath.

Looking south: Rugosa, floribunda and miniature roses, Dutch clover; buds on tomatillo.

Looking west: Chives, blue flax, Siberian and Seven Hills Giant catmints, Rumanian sage, baptisia, Johnson’s Blue geranium, Husker and purple beardtongues; buds on sea lavender.

Looking north: Catalpa fragrant, golden spur columbine, hartweig evening primrose, chocolate flower, coreopsis, blanket flower; buds on coral beardtongues, anthemis, Mexican hat.

Bedding plants: Pansies, sweet alyssum, petunia, nicotiana, moss rose, snapdragons.

What’s blooming inside: Zonal geraniums, aptenia.

Animal sightings: Rabbit, hummingbirds, other small brown birds, geckos, sulphur butterflies, ladybugs, bumble bees and other small bees, hornets, harvester and small black ants.


Weekly update: You simply cannot, with a straight face, tell someone about the wonderful hymenopappus you saw driving home. You can try leading in with adjectives like fine leaf or woolly white, but halfway through hymenopappus your smuttier minded friends will still be snickering.

Telling them that pappus is the Latin term for the hairs that turn the composite’s seeds into parachutes and hymen simply refers to their membranous quality won’t help.


Joe Guennel calls them cream tips in his Guide to Colorado Wildflowers. It was his photograph and accompanying watercolor that allowed me to first identify the taprooted perennial, and so I assumed his was the standard name.

Hymenopappus filifolius is a bit of a shape shifter. When you see it in winter, the basal rosettes of grey leaves look like carrot tops.


By the time the plant's producing flower buds, the leaves have added green and yellow pigments to become lime green.


The clusters of florets barely meet the definition of a flower: they’re much reduced to the minimum reproductive functions. The head may contain 20 to 50 narrow tubes with extended stigmas that bend backwards to nearly touch the style. The corolla tips have small lobes and there may be fine hairs of the outside of the receptacle.


Some flowers don’t even bother with pigment. I saw a white one growing by the side of the road near Jaconita earlier this year.


When the rayless flowers are fully open, the leaves are darker. Those leaves tend to disappear by mid-summer when the more common Hopi tea comes into bloom. In areas where the two overlap, it disappears into the crowd.


The species ranges through the Great Plains and intermontane region from Alberta and Saskatchewan down into México where it’s evolved into 13 subspecies. The local variety, cinereus, was first identified as Hymenopappus arenosus by Emily Gertrude Heller, née Halbach, and her husband, Amos Arthur Haller, when they were collecting in the Española area on 17 May 1897.

Cinereus is found in New Mexico and the bordering states of Arizona, Utah, Colorado, Oklahoma and Texas. The cultural center for the species seems to be the rio abaja where the root’s been used by the Ramah Navajo to treat coughs and was recognized by the Acoma and Laguna.


The Hopi used the lugens subspecies as a ceremonial emetic, the Kenyata Navajo used it for illnesses caused by lunar eclipses and the Ramah Navajo for arrow or bullet wounds. The Hopi used the pauciflorus variety as a beverage and the Hopi used it for a dye. The newberryi subspecies has been used by Isleta for stomach aches. The Jemez used an unspecified variety as tea, the Hopi baked one into bread, and the Zuñi used one with mutton lard on swellings.

According to Matilda Coxe Stevenson, ha’uheyaew was used by all the Zuñi fraternities which each had its own mystery medicines and who recruited the men, women and children it cured. The plant was gathered in summer by men. During a dance ceremony, the fraternity director gave pieces of the root to each man. It could also be requested at any time during the year by someone who needed it.

For something that sounds fairly well known early in the twentieth century, the plant wasn’t found when Scott Camazine and Robert Bye were surveying the medical plants of the Zuñi in 1977 and 1978. Whether the distribution of the plant had changed with the environment, had been obsoleted by modern medicine or wasn’t recognized is unknown.

All tribal identifications depend on the ability of ethnobotanists to identify plants and Dan Moerman to standardize their names. With short season flowers and sparse vegetation, it’s hard to evaluate the absence of information.

Smithsonian researchers reported local Tewa speakers were using Hopi tea as a beverage, but made no comment on cream tips, in the same years Elmer Wooton and Paul Standley were saying the plant grew on the “dry plains and hills” around Española, Ojo Caliente, Santa Fé and along the Chama river.


Notes:
Camazine, Scott and Robert A. Bye. “A Study of the Medical Ethnobotany of the Zuni Indians of New Mexico,” Journal of Ethnopharmacology 2:365-388:1980.

Guennel, G. K. Guide to Colorado Wildflowers, volume 1, 1995.

Moerman, Dan. Native American Ethnobotany, 1998, summarizes data from a number of ethnographies including George R. Swank, The Ethnobotany of the Acoma and Laguna Indians, 1932; Alfred E. Whiting, Ethnobotany of the Hopi, 1939; Leland C. Wyman and Stuart K. Harris, The Ethnobotany of the Kayenta Navaho, 1951; Harold S. Colton, “Hopi History And Ethnobotany” in A. Horr’s Hopi Indians, 1974; Volney H. Jones, The Ethnobotany of the Isleta Indians, 1931; Sarah Louise Cook, The Ethnobotany of Jemez Indians, 1930 and Edward F. Castetter, Uncultivated Native Plants Used as Sources of Food, 1935.

Robbins, William Wilfred, John Peabody Harrington, and Barbara Friere-Marreco. Ethnobotany of the Tewa Indians, 1916.

Schneider, Al. “Hymenopappus filifolius,” Southwest Colorado Wildflowers website.

Stevenson, Matilda Coxe. The Zuni Indians, 1904, reprinted by The Rio Grande Press, Inc., 1985.

_____. Ethnobotany of the Zuni Indians, 1915.

Vestal, Paul A. The Ethnobotany of the Ramah Navaho, 1952.

Wooton, Elmer O. and Paul C. Standley. Flora of New Mexico, 1915, reprinted by J. Cramer, 1972.

Photographs:
1. Cream tips on prairie land with what looks like a bee, 20 June 2010.

2. Cream tips growing along the ranch road this week, 31 May 2012.

3. Partial cream tips seed head, 12 June 2011.

4. Cream tips near the far arroyo this past winter, 4 March 2012.

5. Cream tips a year ago near the far arroyo, when drought persisted and temperatures were more normal, 30 May 2011.

6. Cream tips near the far arroyo a week later, 6 June 2011.

7. White cream tips growing along the highway near Jaconita, 2 May 2012.

8. Hopi tea growing along the local road, 19 June 2011.

9. Cream tips root exposed by strong waters moving through the far arroyo last summer, 28 August 2011; the plant survived and later winds recovered it with fresh sand.

10. Cream tips with what looks like a bee on prairie land, 4 July 2010.

Sunday, August 24, 2008

Hopi Tea

What’s blooming in the area: Tea and miniature roses, winterfat, datura, Heavenly Blue and ivy-leaf morning glories, bindweed, trumpet creeper, honeysuckle, silver lace vine, purple phlox, bouncing Bess, bigleaf globemallow, blue vervain, mullein, white sweet clover, sweet pea, velvetweed, yellow and white evening primrose, scarlet beeblossom, silverleaf nightshade, alfilerillo, goats head, toothed spurge, stickleaf, pigweed, amaranth, ragweed, goldenrod, wild lettuce, horseweed, goats beard, African marigold from seed, áñil del muerto, Hopi tea, gumweed, spiny and hairy golden aster, tahokia daisy, farmers, garden, plains and native sunflowers, cocklebur, sand bur, corn, redtop, barn and muhly ring grass; milkweed pods formed; buds on skunkbush; sweet corn for sale; both alfalfa and smooth brome hay being cut with whatever else was growing in the fields.
What’s blooming in my garden, looking north: Golden spur columbine, coral beardtongue, hartweig, squash, chocolate flower, fern-leaf yarrow, blanket flower, coreopsis, anthemis, black-eyed Susan, Mexican hat, perky Sue, chrysanthemum, yellow cosmos.
Looking east: Floribunda rose, hosta, crimson climber morning glory, large-leaf soapwort, coral bells, ipomopsis, California poppy, garlic chives, hollyhock, winecup, sidalcea, pink salvia, pink evening primrose, Jupiter’s beard, sweet alyssum from seed, sedum, Maximilian sunflower, cutleaf coneflower, zinnias from seed.
Looking south: Rose of Sharon, rugosa and Blaze roses, tamarix, Illinois bundle flower, Sensation cosmos.
Looking west: Caryopteris, buddleia, Russian and Rumanian sage, catmint, perennial four o’clock, flax, David phlox, leadplant, purple ice plant, white spurge, sea lavender, purple coneflower, Mönch aster; yucca seed pods splitting open.
Bedding plants: Snapdragon, sweet alyssum, moss rose, Dahlberg daisy, French marigold, gazania, tomato.
Inside: Aptenia, zonal geranium, bougainvillea.
Animal sightings: Gecko, hummingbirds in trees, monarch butterflies, bees, ladybug, brick red grasshopper, 50 some small black ant hills appeared outside my gate.
Weather: Rained several times last Sunday, near arroyo was running; morning temperatures since have fallen into upper 50's, but afternoons still reached upper 80's with wind. 13:48 hours of daylight today.
Weekly update: My need to know what’s growing around me began with a woody vine exploiting the area between neighbors’ fences in Michigan. I cut it back on my side with no harm, then touched the arm of a friend and left a rash. It turned out to be poison ivy, not in the "three leaves with red stems sprawling on the ground" phase, but something more akin to wild grapes.
Now when I walk along the roadside, it’s not simply because I’m curious about what’s blooming. I want to know the barbarians at the gates in all their stages, so if an undesirable volunteers, I’ll recognize it before its roots get too deep to remove.
Luckily, Hopi tea wouldn’t be a nuisance, because its young definitely would be difficult to detect. The composite has stripped itself to the barest essentials, produces only disk flowers and the scantiest of curling, blue-grey leaves on wiry, one to two foot stems. The yellow flowers are closed by mid-morning, unless it’s cloudy. Most of the time, all I see are tightened petals darkened by rust-colored veins, empty brown sepals, and reddish seed capsules.
Thelesperma megapotamicum grows in the intermontane west and arid great plains as far north as Montana in this country and down through Chihuahua and Coahuila to Zacatecas. A tea made from dried plants is one of the few foods common to nearly every pueblo, from the Hopi in the west to the nearby Tewa-speaking Santa Clara, and many Keres speakers between, including the Cochiti, Santo Domingo, Laguna, and Acoma..
The mild, slightly astringent drink spread to the invading Navajo and Apache, where the first also used ch’il awhéhé root to dye wool a yellowish-orange. The Hopi used ho hoysi flowers to stain yucca fibers a reddish brown for baskets, and it’s been used as a colorante in northern Mexico.
When the Spanish arrived several centuries later they adopted cota, usually with sugar. In 1997, 91-year-old curanderismo Gabrielito Pino was still gathering the herb after August 12 in the Mora valley for stomach, kidney, and urinary problems because that day was "consecrated to the Blessed Virgin." In older eastern church traditions, Dormition, when Mary’s body was removed to heaven, followed her death on the 12th by three days and this midpoint between mid-summer and the fall equinox was marked by ceremonies blessing the herbs in Europe. The 15th, Assumption Day, is still a Laguna and Zia feast day.
Somehow this close relative of coreopsis found its way to Argentina, perhaps with the Spanish. There té indio is used for gonorrhea, kidney and nerve problems. Zoncho Tso has been told by relatives that some of their fellow Navajo have used it for the venereal disease. His mother also told him he should say a prayer when he gathered this, or any herb, explain why he was taking the plant from its home, and always leave some behind.
I think the only people who don’t appreciate greenthread live in Los Alamos where the national lab doesn’t want any vegetation over its landfills which could disturb what lies below. The Earth and Environmental Sciences Division found Hopi tea to be one of the first plants to colonize a conventional cover.
Here it stays to the shoulder, where its taproot can reach the water shed by the pavement and it co-exists with gumweed and pigweed. This year, the visible plants don’t grow in dense colonies, but are scattered. So far, the perennial has shown no interest in my land or any inland fields, clinging instead to the moister edges of civilization.
Notes:
Arellano, Anselm. "New Mexico’s Healing Tradition: Curanderismo Survives 400 Years," Herbs for Health 46-52:March/April 1997. Pius XII formalized the chronology in 1950 when he set Assumption day as August 15. Since the Roman Catholic Church repudiates the more corporal aspects of Mary’s life, her physical death is not recognized like it is in eastern and older folk traditions.
Breshears, David D., John W. Nyhan, and David W. Davenport. "Ecohydrology Monitoring and Excavation of Semiarid Landfill Covers a Decade after Installation," Vadose Zone Journal 4:798-810:2005.Davicino, Roberto, María Aída Mattar, Yolanda Angelina Casali, Silvia Graciela Correa, Elisa Margarita Pettenati, and Blas Micalizzi. "Actividad Antifungica de Extractos de Plantas Usadas en Medicina Popular en Argentina," Revista Peruana Biología 14:247-251:2007.
Moerman, Dan. Native American Ethnobotany, 1998, and on-line database.

Tso, Zoncho. "Thelesperma megapotamicum" website.

Photograph: Hopi Tea growing beside the road between storms last Sunday, 17 August 2008.