Planning a trip to Oz? You won't find a better way to get there, then a hike up to the top of Inspiration Point at Edgewood Nature Preserve Click on the illustration above for an enhanced view of this Oz portal. |
Edgewood is a compact, wildly diverse nature preserve in California's San Francisco Bay Area. You'll find it midway down the peninsula, just off the 280 Freeway in San Carlos.
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Saturday, January 26, 2013
Last Stop Before Oz (Hiking Edgewood)
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Saturday, January 5, 2013
Bay Laurel, Umbellularia californica, in Bloom (HIking Edgewood)
California Bay Laurel Umbellularia californica is in bloom now at Edgewood Nature Preserve |
Below are some historical human uses I gleaned about this noble plant, when I prepared a field trip report for the California Native Plants class at Cañada College last year.
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I’ve met several people who substitute California Bay Laurel leaves for the Mediterranean Bay Laurel (Laurus nobilis) . Kozloff (p. 248) agrees with this practice saying “They (the leaves) can be used for seasoning but have a stronger flavor than L.Nobilis.”
However, in 1976 then UCSC Environmental Studies professor Ray Collett[1]told his students, of which I was then one, that the leaves of the California Bay Laurel were poisonous and should not be used to flavor food. Toni Corelli[2]takes a middle ground saying that “Leaf oils may be toxic to some people.”
Corelli also says that native people used the leaves “medicinally to cure headache and as a tea for stomach ailments. Oils from the leaves were rubbed on the body to ease rheumatism. Leaves were also spread on floors to repel fleas; boughs were buned to fumigate lodgings and to fight colds. The nuts were roasted, cracked and eaten.”
The Ohlone weren’t the last people to use the leaves against bugs. At UCSC in the mid 1970’s my college roommate used the leaves to attempt to rid our room of fleas. Ray Collett also suggested that students who suffered from bedbugs try the leaves.
Modern use, other than firewood, includes woodworking. Woodworkers, include environmentally contentious landscape refuse salvagers, use the wood for a variety of wood craft, including these lovely little Dryad flutes.[3] The makers of the Dryad Flute says, “It is valued by woodworkers for its beauty and the variety of figure and coloring in its wood. It is considered a tonewood by luthiers (luthiers make guitars as well as other lute-related instruments) for its ability to reflect the sound wave without deadening the tone. “
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Tuesday, January 1, 2013
New Bloom for a New Year: Dirca Occidentalis (Hiking Edgewood)
Please Click on the Illustration Above For More Beautiful Detail |
What better way than an afternoon's Bloomin' Hike at Edgewood Nature Preserve?
Can you believe the Leatherwood is already in bloom?
A good omen for 2013, if ever I saw one.
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