Native Plant Books by Indigenous Knowledge-Keepers

For most of the 30 years that I’ve been writing books about native plant gardening, I’ve participated in the settler erasure of Indigenous knowledge by neither engaging with nor acknowledging the millennia of wisdom held by Inidgenous communities and knowledge keepers.

In the past few years, I’ve been learning from Indigenous writers’ books and from Indigenous earth-workers. The following are just a few of the books I’ve been learning from:

Braiding Sweetgrass, by Robin Wall Kimmerer

Braiding Sweetgrass, by Robin Wall Kimmerer

Braiding Sweetgrass by Robin Wall Kimmerer: I am always reading this book! I think I’m on my fourth session with it…The subtitle opens up so much: “Indigenous Wisdom, Scientific Knowledge, and the Teachings of Plants.” Weaving stories and science, grounded in love, this book celebrates reciprocity and deep, respectful relationship with the earth and all the beings with whom we share this home.

Plants Have So Much to Give Us, All We Have To Do is Ask, edited by Wendy Makoons Geniusz

Plants Have So Much to Give Us, All We Have To Do is Ask, edited by Wendy Makoons Geniusz

Plants Have So Much to Give Us, All We Have To Do is Ask, edited by Wendy Makoons Geniusz: Written by the editor’s late mother, this book shares Anishinaabe teachings about plants, not as individual “specimens” but as woven in a richy animate fabric. Full of stories, cultural teachings, information about medicines, and with a section of recipes, this is a book to return to over and over.

Medicines to Help Us: Traditional Métis Plant Use, by Christi Belcourt

Medicines to Help Us: Traditional Métis Plant Use, by Christi Belcourt

Medicines to Help Us: Traditional Métis Plant Use, by Christi Belcourt: Honouring the personality and spirit of each plant, in this gorgeous full-colour book artist Christ Belcourt explores the 27 plants in her painting Medicines to Help Us, sharing traditional Métis medicinal knowledge and the healing power of these wild plants. The book includes an essay by Elder Rose Richardson.

Tending to Place and Community

I was delighted this year when Kim Jackson, a wonderful person I got to know a bit through work they were involved with at the Humber 2-Spirit garden and at Our Space in High Park, invited me to join a very active Friends group at Watkinson Parkette in the Junction area of Toronto. Every two weeks, a group of us gathers in the parkette where, along with a Trans Youth group from a local community centre, we plant and tend to tobacco, sage, sweetgrass and native pollinator plants. Elders share teachings, 2-Spirit community members lead ceremony, we share food and stories, and we basically spend time with each other and with this space, caring. Harvesting of plant medicines, to distirbute to community, is a very special time. All time in this space is special medicine.

We added some grow-bags with native pollinator plants beside the park benches. The monarda and smooth ox-eye bloomed just a few weeks after planting.

We added some grow-bags with native pollinator plants beside the park benches. The monarda and smooth ox-eye bloomed just a few weeks after planting.

Harvesting sweetgrass for braiding.

Harvesting sweetgrass for braiding.

Harvesting sage.

Harvesting sage.

Harvesting tobacco.

Harvesting tobacco.

A small planting for pollinators in the parkette.

A small planting for pollinators in the parkette.