Revegetation Panel
…The foothills that yielded hundreds of acres of sunflowers which produced quantities of rich seed, the grass also that grew so luxuriantly…the seed of which was gathered with little labor, and many other plants that produced food for the natives is all eat out [sic] by stock. Letter, Jacob Hamblin to John W. Powell, 1880
My grandmother used to gather . . . a little green plant, a little old bush, and she’d whip the seeds into a basket. That was good food….First she’d roast it…. And then she used to grind it and it used to make real good soup or stew or sometimes she made it into gravy. Oh, it was really tasty. Kaibab Paiute elder, 1995 Photo: John K. Hillers, 1872
Cattle at Pipe Spring ranch |
Did You Know?
The Kaibab Paiute Indians used cliffrose bark to make mats, skirts, leggings, etc. Learn more at the Pipe Spring National Monument - Kaibab Band of Paiute Indians Visitor Center and Museum. More...