What did the first pioneers eat? Basically, whatever they could get their hands on! Fortunately, Yavapai County’s diverse ecosystem includes many fruits that grow in the wild. Here is a listing with pictures and the lore surrounding their medicinal uses:
Arizona Dewberry (Pictured above.)
Similar to a raspberry, dewberries are “sour-sweet (and a bit seedy).” They can be eaten raw, dried or jellied. They contains good amounts of Vitamin C, magnesium, and potassium. In days past, the leaves were used to make a tea that was supposedly helpful to the urinary tract. This tea was also used “internally and externally to generally reduce a woman's reproductive tissue irritability.”
Black Cherry
In the wild these tend to be small with a ”hint of bitter.” The pits, stems and leaves should not be consumed. However, in the past, small pieces of the bark were sucked upon to relieve a dry cough.
Blackberry
Smaller than blackberries found at the grocery store, Arizona’s wild blackberries turn dark purple to black. They are sweet and “mildly tart.” Pioneers were happy to make jams and jellies from them and some women would make tea from its leaves to drink during their time of the month. Tea made from the root was used to relieve diarrhea.
Elderberry
Hollygrape (shrub) or Creeping Hollygrape (vine)
Manzanita
New Mexico Raspberry
Serviceberry
Wild (Arizona) Grapes
There are several other wild, edible plants in Yavapai County and Arizona. For more information, please see “Wild Edible Plants of Arizona” by Charles W Kane. (ISBN #: 978-0-9982871-3-3); which was the source and inspiration for this article.
CLICK HERE for its availability on Amazon ($9.95).
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Also available at:
Western Heritage Center, 156.5 Montezuma (Whiskey Row)
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And everywhere Prescott history books are sold!
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