virginia gail smith

INDIGENOUS MEDICINAL & SACRED PLANTS

Tobacco

Medicine Wheel: East-Waabinong, Yellow, Spring, Sunrise,New Beginnings, Planting seeds, Air, Mind, Infancy, Innocence

Native variety: Height:

Bloom period: Propagation:

Companion:

Resilient

Herb

Sun requirements:

Pearl Sage

Medicine Wheel: South - Zhaawanong, Red, Summer, Sun, Fire,Summer Plants, Growth, Blossoming, Adolescence, Trust

Native variety: 

Height:

Bloom period: Propagation:

Companion:

Resilient

Herb Sun requirements:

White Cedar

Medicine Wheel: West - Espangishmok, Black, Fall, Harvest, Completion, Water, Heart, Introspection, Ancestors,

Native variety: Thuja occidentails

Height: 46-80 ft.

Lifespan: 300 years

Oldest in Ontario: 1,000 years

Propagation: small male and female cone lets on tips of separate  branches

Companion: Fir, white spruce, tamarack, white birch, poplar, ferns, raspberries, wild lily-of-the-valley

Resilient: to drought & rot

Oil is traditionally used as a deodorizer and insect repellent. Tea is traditionally used for headaches, congestion and scurvy as it is higher in Vitamin C than oranges.

Sun requirements:

Sweetgrass

Wiingashk (win-gosh)

(Anishinabemowin)

Medicine Wheel: North - kiiwedinong, White, Winter, Nighttime, Earth, Physical, Power, Regenerative, Wisdom

Native variety: Anthoxanthum hirtum

Height: 1-3 ft

Propagation: spreads via rhizomes, fast-spreading grass in moist areas

Companion: Canada Anemone or Golden Alexanders

It is traditionally used in basketweaving & braided in bundles of seven strands

Not edible, seeds are poisonous.

Yellow flowers can make a dye.

Sun requirements: sun, partial shade

Cited Works

Bennet, Doug, and Tim Tiner.1993. UPNORTH: A Guide to Ontario's Wilderness from Balckflies to the Northern Lights. Reed Books Canada.

Pitawanakwat,Lillian. 2006. Diagram for Ojibwe Curriculum.Accessed October 27, 2023. https://www.fourdirectionsteachings.com/transcripts/ojibwe.pdf.

Sherry Dion, The Circle of Turtle Lodge, Pembroke.

Images from inourgarden.ca

Sumac

Native variety: Rhus typhina

Height: 3-25 ft

Lifespan:

Propagation:

Companion:

Resilient:

Medicinal Properties: traditionally used for summerrefreshments as lemon-aid

Sun requirements: sunto light shade

Winter food for grouse, crows, Bluejays and forRobins in the spring.

Moss

Native variety:

Height:

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Resilient:

Medicinal Properties:

Sun requirements:

Evening Primrose

Native variety: Oenothera biennis

Native to the Americas and used by the Indigenous peoples.

Height: 2-4 ft

Blooms: summer & fall

Propagation: seeds in the fall and can easily take over your garden, biennial

Resilient: moist well-drained soil

Medicinal Properties: common herb traditionally used for menstrual cramps or hot flashes. Seeds contain omega-6 fatty acids, including gamma-linolenic acid (GLA).

Sun requirements: full or partial sun

White Birch

Native variety: Betula papyrifera

Height: 25 m (82 ft)

Trunk: 30-60 cm (1-2 ft)

Lifespan: 60-70 yrs (max 150 yrs)

Leaves: 9cm ( 3.5 in), light green serrated spade-shaped turning yellow or amber in the fall

Bark: white bark running horizontally was used by Indigenous peoples, (Anishinaabe) for canoes, wigwams (homes), containers, and fire starters, as it resists water and decomposition. Spruce, cedar and tamarack roots were used to sew ribs of cedar and spruce and seams sealed with conifer resin.

Propagation: 

Companion: red maple, white spruce, balsam fir, balsam poplar, dogwood, strawberry, violets, bracken fern

Resilient: sandy soil

Sun requirements: sun

Cited Works

Bennet, Doug, and Tim Tiner.1993. UPNORTH: A Guide to Ontario's Wilderness from Balckflies to the Northern Lights. Reed Books Canada.

The Three Sisters

Corn

Companion: planting together provides the perfect relationship, produces healthy soil, shadows weeds, attracts pollinators, and supports biodiversity, and water conservation requiring only rainwater.

Traditionally grown together, the corn supports the vines of the beans, both giving shade to the squash.

Squash

Beans

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