Camas Flowers & Roots

Home ** Travel Adventures by Year ** Travel Adventures by State ** Plants ** Marine-Boats ** Geology ** Exciting Drives ** Cute Signs ** RV Subjects ** Miscellaneous Subjects

PLANTS ** MISCELLANEOUS SUBJECTS ** EXCITING DRIVES

   

     
   

 

Camas Flowers & Roots

 

Camas flowers, yes these are the plants the Camas Prairie is named for

Camas flowers, yes these are the plants the Camas Prairie is named for

 

 

 

 

Camas, the plant the Camas Prairie was named for are not nearly what they used to be. Camas bulbs, which grow about 4 to 6 inches beneath the ground, are harvested in a centuries-old tradition by Nez Perce women in August and early September. The bulbs are then painstakingly prepared and stored.

As you can imagine the once abundant camas fields have been destroyed by ranching and farming operations.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Sign welcoming you to the Camas Prairie of western Idaho

Sign welcoming you to the Camas Prairie of western Idaho

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Camas bulbs or roots that were a staple in the Nez Perce diet

Camas bulbs or roots that were a staple in the Nez Perce diet

The first contact white man had with camas bulbs or roots was from Lewis and Clark.

On the trip west the Corps of Discovery about starved to death crossing the Bitterroot Mountains. When they emerged from the Bitterroot Mountains they were near starvation. The Nez Perce fed them camas bulbs made into a bread.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Camas bulbs or roots that the Nez Perce used as a staple in their diet

Camas bulbs or roots that the Nez Perce used as a staple in their diet

 

 

Camas harvesting required planning because the bulbs reach maximum size and highest food value, and are best for storage, only at a specific time--after the flowers have withered.

 

Trips to distant meadows by the Nez Perce required careful timing to meet this condition.


Intimate knowledge of detailed plant features is another element of the Nez Perce system. In the case of camas, this is especially critical, because “death camas,” a relative of edible camas, can occur in the same habitat.

The two are easy to tell apart by flower color--edible camas is blue, the other creamy white.

But since harvest occurs after flowering is over, this color cue would not be present.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Camas bulbs or roots that the Nez Perce used as a staple in their diet

Camas bulbs or roots that the Nez Perce used as a staple in their diet

 

 

Possibly the Nez Perce scheduled trips to the meadows in the Camas Prairie and Weippe Prairie during flowering to dig out the toxic species; or perhaps gatherers were able to differentiate the plants by their bulbs.


Camas bulbs were cooked to improve taste and food value. A carbohydrate in camas called inulin is difficult to digest, but after cooking for up to two days in a carefully tended pit oven, the inulin converts to fructose, which is more easily digested and tastes sweet.


Baked camas can be eaten right away. For long-term storage, though, the cooked bulbs were sun-dried, mashed, shaped into a flat loaf, and baked again.

 

Now, back to Lewis & Clark and the Corps of Discovery.

Trudging out of the Bitterroot Mountains in September of 1805, the explorers entered the home of the Nez Perce. Recognizing the desperate state of the travelers, the Nez Perce offered food: berries, dried buffalo and salmon, and a bread prepared from camas root - all staples of the Nez Perce diet. Clark and the others gorged on the bread calling it “excellent”, “sweet”, “good and nourishing.” Not long after this meal, however, the explorers became quite ill. Perhaps, with empty stomachs and unaccustomed to this new food, the camas had disagreed with them.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Camas lily in bloom

Camas lily in bloom

 

 

 

More about the "camas lily" from the Corps of Discovery:

 

By the following summer, as they began their journey home, the men of the Expedition, like Lewis, could appreciate the beauty of the prairie that sat at the base of daunting mountains. Remembering his mission to document the plants and people of the west, Lewis took the time to write more than 1500 words about the Camas plant. He also described the Nez Perce technique for collecting and preparing the roots of the plant.

 

To the Nez Perce, or Nimiipuu, the camas plant has a deeper meaning. For thousands of years, the Nez Perce made their home near Weippe Prairie and relied on the plant that once grew in abundance there. Today, the descendents of the Nez Perce who helped Lewis and Clark still harvest and roast the camas plant. With much of the Nez Perce homeland now used for agriculture or encroached upon by forests the sea of blue described by Meriwether Lewis is increasingly difficult to find. Nonetheless, tribal members, in partnership with researchers and biologists, work to preserve and expand this historic landscape.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Field of camas lily flowers like described in the journals of the Corps of Discovery

Field of camas lily flowers like described in the journals of the Corps of Discovery

 

 

Fields like this where the camas lily used to flourish are now covered in peas and canola, both in the Wepi Prarie and Camas Prarie.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Camas lily bloom

Camas lily bloom

 

 

 

 

Each fall Nez Perce families traveled to the large camas meadows near present-day Weippe, Moscow or Grangeville in the Camas Prairie where the onion-shaped bulbs grew thickly. Women used digging tools and were able to harvest over 50 pounds a day. In a few days, enough could be gathered for a winter’s food supply. Women held rights to family camas patches, carried out the harvesting and baking, and gained the right to use surplus bulbs for trading.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Camas lilies in bloom

Camas lilies in bloom

More information from the Corps of Discovery Journals:


At Weippe that September, Clark wrote about the abundance of camas bulbs he saw: "emence quantity of the quawmash or Pas-shi-co root gathered & in piles about the plains." And the journals estimate that there were more than 4,500 Nez Perce. How could such large harvests of camas be sustained?


Early accounts of Native American subsistence apply terms like “hunter/gatherer.” But today ethnobotonists and anthropologists describe the cultivation and storage of important food plants as complex systems capable of sustaining dependable annual supplies for large populations. The Nez Perce system for camas is a good example.

To remain productive, camas meadows need to be open and sunny, free of encroaching tree growth. Fire was used as a tool to accomplish this. Camas bulbs themselves were tended, too. During harvest the bulbs were sorted by size: large ones were collected but smaller bulbs or bulblets were put back into the newly worked-up soil for next year.

 


The descriptions of native American practices in Lewis and Clark’s journals are famous for their details and new information. But as travelers on a schedule they may have missed important elements of the Nez Perce system for producing annual crops of big camas bulbs. And, because camas cultivation was carried out "in the wild" with neither row crops nor fences, it wouldn’t have matched the explorers' mental image of domestic food production. This was a system planned and carried out by women, whose horticultural skills were not investigated by Lewis and Clark.

From what has been written it is fairly obvious that the Nez Perce was much more evolved than would have been thought.

A relationship with the camas lily must have been in place, involving both the practice of ceremonies to mark and give thanks for this important food, and strict protocols about when to harvest and how much to take.

 

 

 

 

 

PLANTS INDEX

Miscellaneous Subjects** EXCITING DRIVES

 

 

Mike & Joyce Hendrix

Mike & Joyce Hendrix who we are

We hope you liked this page. If you do you might be interested in some of our other Travel Adventures:

Mike & Joyce Hendrix's home page

Travel Adventures by Year ** Travel Adventures by State ** Plants ** Marine-Boats ** Geology ** Exciting Drives ** Cute Signs ** RV Subjects ** Miscellaneous Subjects

We would love to hear from you......just put "info" in the place of "FAKE" in this address: FAKE@travellogs.us

Until next time remember how good life is.

 

   
    Passport America, Save 50% on Campsites

 

   

 

    Passport America, Save 50% on Campsites
   

 

 

 

Home ** Travel Adventures by Year ** Travel Adventures by State ** Plants ** Marine-Boats * * Geology ** Exciting Drives ** Cute Signs ** RV Subjects ** Miscellaneous Subjects