Author Topic: Sweetgrass  (Read 193 times)

Offline Zamurito

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Sweetgrass
« on: October 07, 2007, 02:40:28 AM »
NativeTech: Native American Technology & Art
Uses for Sweetgrass
Sweetgrass is the hair of our Mother;
separately, each strand is not as strong as the strands are when
braided together. - Mary Ritchie

About Sweetgrass
Sweetgrass (Hierochloe odorata) has a sweet, long-lasting aroma that
is even stronger when the grass has been harvested and dried and is
then moistened or burned. In the Great Lakes region, Sweetgrass was
historically referred to with the Latin name Torresia odorata
(Densmore 1974). There is also a western species of Sweetgrass
(Hierochloe occedentalis) that grows in redwood areas. Other common
names for Sweetgrass are Holy Grass (or Mary's Grass), Vanilla
Grass, Bluejoint, Buffalo Grass, and Zebrovka.

Sweetgrass is a circumboreal plant which is common above 40 degrees
north latitude in Asia, Europe, and North America (Walsh 1994). In
North America this fragrant grass grows regionally from Labrador to
Alaska, and south to New Jersy, Ohio, Illinois, Iowa, South Dakota,
Arizona and Washington (Larson 1993). Sweetgrass can be found
growing wild in wet meadows, low prairies, the edges of sloughs and
marshes, bogs, shaded streambanks, lakeshores, and cool mountain
canyons. Sweetgrass rhizomes and roots form a dense mat beneath the
soil surface (Walsh 1994).

Sweetgrass flowers from June through August and is easily identified
by the sweet vanilla-like fragrance of it's leaves, its 3-flowered
spikelets about 1/4 inch long, and its hairy lemmas. The stems of
the grass are upright and hollow, growing up to 2 feet tall, without
hairs. The leaves are elongated, narrow and flat (up to ΒΌ inch wide,
and are also hairless. The Sweetgrass flowers are borne in 3-
flowered spikelets, which are arranged in a panicle up to 4 inches
long. The spikelets themselves are about 1/4 inch long (the lower 2
flowers are male only, while the upper flower has both stamens and
pistils (USDA n.d.).

Sweetgrass usually grows among other grasses or shrubs; it is seldom
found in pure stands. Dried Sweetgrass foliage is fragrant because
of its coumarin content (Walsh 1994). Sweetgrass is traditionally
harvested in late June or early July. Sweetgrass harvested after
exposure to frost has little sent. Care should be taken to cut
Sweetgrass leaves and not to pull the grass up by its roots so it
can grow again the next year. Weeding Sweetgrass areas lessens
competition from other plants.



Uses for Sweetgrass in Medicine & Ceremony
Many Native tribes in North America use sweetgrass in prayer,
smudging or purifying ceremonies and consider it a sacred plant. It
is usually braided, dried, and burned. Sweetgrass braids smolder and
doesn't produce an open flame when burned. Just as the sweet scent
of this natural grass is attractive and pleasing to people, so is it
attractive to good spirits. Sweetgrass is often burned at the
beginning of a prayer or ceremony to attract positive energies.
Densmore (1974) describes that among the Chippewa (Ojibwa), "young
people, chiefly young men, carried a braid of sweet grass and cut
off 2 or 3 inches of it and burned it for perfume. Young men wore
two braids of sweet grass around their necks, the braids being
joined in the back and falling on either side of the neck like
braids of hair."
Sweetgrass is used to "smudge"; the smoke from burning sweetgrass is
fanned on people, objects or areas. Individuals smudge themselves
with the smoke, washing the eyes, ears, heart and body. Mi'kmaq have
long used sweetgrass as a smudging ingredient, often mixed with
other botanicals. Sweetgrass is one of the four medicines which
comprise a group of healing plants used by the people in Anishinabe,
Bode'wad mi, and Odawa societies. The other three are tobacco,
cedar, and sage (Mary Ritchie 1995).
Among the Chippewa wicko'bimucko'si (sweetgrass) is braided and used
in pipe-smoking mixtures along will red willow and bearberry, when
it is burned, prayers, thoughts and wishes rise with the smoke to
the creator who will hear them. Densmore (1974) describes the story
of "a hunting incident in which a party of men placed sweet grass on
the fire when the camp was in danger of starving and they were going
again to hunt. Medicine men kept sweet grass in the bag with their
medicinal roots and herbs".
A tea is brewed by Native Americans for coughs, sore throats,
chafing and venereal infections. It is also used by women to stop
vaginal bleeding and to expel afterbirth. It is warned that because
the roots contain coumarin, that sweetgrass tea may be considered a
carcinogenic. (Foster & Duke 1990)
Uses for Sweetgrass in Baskets & Crafts
Trudie Lamb Richmond, Schaghticoke, spoke to a Mohawk basket-maker
not long ago and asked her how she felt about weaving sweetgrass
into her baskets. Sweetgrass is used by her people in their
ceremonies and like tobacco is believed to have great power. It was
used long ago in the ceremonial baskets and continued to be
important even in those times when basket making became more
material and less spiritual. She told me she had thought about this
meaning and that was why she always talked to her baskets as she
made them. She said that she asked forgiveness for having to sell
the baskets, but that she needed the money to survive. Using the
sweetgrass would keep the baskets strong and alive, and she hoped
that the people who bought them would appreciate their significance.
The basket weaver explained that she never picked the grass without
making a tobacco offering. Her people believe that you have to give
something for everything you take; even a tobacco offering is an
acknowledgment. That is the old way, our way. (McMullen & Handsman
1987)

Ojibwe' on Manitoulin Island (among other places) make boxes from
white birch bark, which is bound on the edges with sweetgrass and
decorated with quills. My great grandfather, Chuhquat, made
sweetgrass baskets for his granddaughters (Mary Ritchie 1995).

Frances Densmore (1974) explains that Among the Chippewa
(Ojibwa), "strands of sweet grass were made into "coiled basketry"
by means of cotton thread. This took the form of bowls, oval and
round, and of flat mats. Birch bark was sometimes used as the center
of such articles, the coils of sweet grass being sewed around it."

Mi'kmaq tend to use sweetgrass as a decorative accent in basket-
work, very rarely will you find baskets made entirely of sweetgrass
and if you do, they are usually quite small (3-4" in diameter), have
a cover and are often used for small sewing notions such as buttons,
etc. (Capucine Plourde 1995).

All of the Waban'Aki or Dawnland People used sweetgrass in making
their baskets. The sweetgrass would be braided into small braids and
then woven into the ash baskets. The Waban-aki are made up of the
Abenaki, Mi'kmaq, Maliseet, Penobscot and Passamaquoddy, all of the
northeast. An Abenaki friend of mine living in Portland Maine has a
basket that his mother made probably 70 or 80 years ago that is made
completely of sweetgrass and holds a sewing thimble like a glove
(Louis Annance 1995).
"Discipline is, indeed, the supreme joy of feeling reverent awe; of watching, with your mouth open, whatever is behind those secret doors."

nichi

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Re: Sweetgrass
« Reply #1 on: October 07, 2007, 03:10:01 AM »
Mmmm,  love the smell of a sweetgrass smudge!
It's been a while too -- thanks for reminding me of it.

erismoksha

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Re: Sweetgrass
« Reply #2 on: October 07, 2007, 07:19:23 AM »
I like sweetgrass and sweetgrass/sage combinations for smudging too.

Offline Jennifer-

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Re: Sweetgrass
« Reply #3 on: October 11, 2007, 09:28:03 AM »
Good article!

I burn alot of sweetgrass.. love it! I also burn alot of cedar.. hmmm I burn alot of things..

Ive been wanting to harvest sweetgrass.. but I need to make a trip to the coast to do so.. and then Id have to find it. I need a sweetgrass guide.. ha!

Clover is close..
Without constant complete silence meditation - samadi - we lose ourselves in the game.  MM

Offline Zamurito

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Re: Sweetgrass
« Reply #4 on: October 11, 2007, 09:54:30 AM »
In the old times the first thing a young indian learned about tobacco
was that it had something to do with prayer and the spiritual, that
it was very powerful and that one day when he or she was older, they
would understand about tobacco.
Nowadays the first young Christian learned about Jesus was that he
had something to do with prayer and the spiritual, that he was very
powerful and that one day when he/she was older, they would
understand about prayer.
The alpha, the first thing.
If an elder medicine person had to go make a prayer for something and
could only take one thing, that one thing would be tobacco.  The
omega, the last thing you would want to leave behind.
In the old times the first thing a young indian was given when he was
ready to find his medicine path was tobacco.
He was told one thing.  "If you come across a dead animal on your
path, you must put a bit of tobacco on it to release its spirit.  If
you want to take a plant or a rock, you must put a little tobacco in
that place where you took it."
And they would have added, "You must always remember to do that, and
once you have become a tobacco carrir, you must never be without your
tobacco, for what if you come across a dead animal in your path."
Nowadays the pipe has jumped in front of tobacco learning.
In respect to the pipe, here's a pipe story I have heard in teepee's
in Arizona, in Northern California, on the side of Mount Shasta and
just about anywhere else I sat down to talk a bit with an elder. 
They love to tell this story, and they all tell it the same.
I hope I tell it as well.
"You know how the indians knew to send the women and children to
battle to help kill all those soldiers of Custer's?  You do know that
isn't the way that those indians went to battle, don't you?"
Well, by the second time I heard the story I simply nodded to the
second question, eager to hear a retelling of the whole story.
"Custer smoked that pipe to peace, and then he went against what he
had smoked to.  That's how they knew."
This is the story of that pipe.
That pipe had been around for generations, but that's not what its
power came from.
That pipe had been around for generations and had been used to pray
for many, many things over all those years.  Never had that pipe been
used to pray for one thing one day then used some other day or year
or generation to pray for something else.
Never.  Not once.
Over the years there had been people who had smoked to something on
that pipe then gone a different way.  Bad things had always happened
to them, and people knew it.  By the time Custer showed up on the
plains, that pipe ws pretty well known.  It had been a long time
since anyone had prayed to something on that pipe then gone a
different way, but everybody knew.
So when the scouts reported that Custer ws preparing for battle, the
indians all knew that bad things were going to happen to Custer.  And
they knew that with so many soldiers out there, why they would need
all the women and children who could carry a knife just to kill them
all before the sun went down.  So they brought along all the women
and chldren and that's just what they did.
But that's a pipe story, and I'm talking about tobacco here.
Tobacco is what gave that pipe its power.  Without tobacco that pipe
would be a hunk of stone on the end of a stick.
But do remember this.  It was not a peace pipe, it was a prayer pipe.
Prayer is something else again, another subject.
Let's return to tobacco itself.
Something happens when you carry tobacco.
Some invisible, something not requiring you to do a thing, unless of
course you come across a dead animal.
I'm talking about something else here.
Let's switch to New Age lingo for a bit.
When you carry tobacco on your person, you have tobacco in your aura.
If you picture that aura was a set of bubbles within which your
spirit is concentrated, so to speak, when there's tobacco there,
the "signal" you emit is stronger.
"Higher self" is another term I must use.
And that "silver cord" which some say connects a person to that
higher self.
The signal that silver cord carries to your higher self when you
carry tobacco has more juice in it when you carry tobacco.
Up there in that place where your higher self hangs out with all
those other higher selves, when you carry tobacco you energize your
higher self.
An energized higher self is better able to see, navigate, travel,
link up and manifest a life for you down here.
That's the first lesson on tobacco, although there are a few other
lessons in this telling of that first lesson.

Cris Youngeagle
"Discipline is, indeed, the supreme joy of feeling reverent awe; of watching, with your mouth open, whatever is behind those secret doors."

Offline Jennifer-

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Re: Sweetgrass
« Reply #5 on: October 11, 2007, 10:03:19 AM »
I also leave tobacco and/or other things as offerings...
Without constant complete silence meditation - samadi - we lose ourselves in the game.  MM

Offline daphne

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Re: Sweetgrass
« Reply #6 on: October 11, 2007, 10:22:20 AM »

...Up there in that place where your higher self hangs out with all
those other higher selves,

 :D
"The compulsion to possess and hold on to things is not unique. Everyone who wants to follow the warrior's path has to rid himself of this fixation in order not to focus our dreaming body on the weak face of the second attention." - The Eagle's Gift

Offline Zamurito

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Re: Sweetgrass
« Reply #7 on: October 11, 2007, 10:29:13 AM »
"Discipline is, indeed, the supreme joy of feeling reverent awe; of watching, with your mouth open, whatever is behind those secret doors."

 

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