My interest in ethnobotany stems from an academic love of anthropology and a personal love of plants. While I love studying any cultural or utilitarian aspects of plants, I have a special place in my heart for wild food plants and believe that revitalizing traditional knowledge of these species is crucial for any sort of sustainable future. I have helped teach classes on foraging and basketry and I hope that pursuing an education in ethnobotany will allow me to contribute in some way to preserving human relationships with wild plants.
I currently live in central New England, on the traditional homelands of the Nipmuc, Pocomtuc, and Nashaway peoples. Ecologically, this region is dominated by oak-hickory and white pine forests, transitioning into northern hardwoods and boreal forest in the north (home of Pennacook and Wabanaki cultures) and into scrub oak and pitch pine forests along the Atlantic coast (home of the Massachusett, Pequot, Wampanoag, Montauk, Narragansett, and Nauset peoples). We also have an abundance of freshwater wetlands and coastal habitats favoring their own interesting mix of utilitarian plant species.
The landscape here is also heavily shaped by a history of intensive agriculture and urbanization, which means that very little intact forest remains outside of mountainous areas. Ethnobotanical investigation here is influenced by New England's history of colonization -- the speed and intensity of European colonization in this region resulted in a significant loss of cultural knowledge of native plants long before ethnographers began to seriously document traditional plant uses.
Great job Ian, nice use of ThingLink, and very good descriptions of the plant morphology using botanical terminology. Below my collage of St. John’s Wort from your ThingLink post.
Great job Ian, nice use of ThingLink, and very good descriptions of the plant morphology using botanical terminology. Below my collage of St. John’s Wort from your ThingLink post.