New Brunswick

New field guide identifies wetland plants important to Indigenous people

People who visit the Lower Lincoln Wetland for outdoor learning or field trips have a new resource about many of the plants that grow there.

Identifies 50 plants found in Lower Lincoln Wetland, near Fredericton

The wetland behind Lincoln Elementary School is protected by the Nature Conservancy of Canada. The new field guide shows 50 plants that grow there and are important to Indigenous people. (Ducks Unlimited Canada)

People who visit the Lower Lincoln Wetland for outdoor learning or field trips have a new resource about many of the plants that grow there.

A field guide of 50 of the many plants in the protected area behind Lincoln Elementary Community School has been compiled by Wolastoqi plant experts Cecelia and Anthony Brooks.

The guide was published by Ducks Unlimited Canada and includes information about the plants' traditional and modern uses, as well as GPS points so they can be easily located.

Not every plant that grows in the wetland is included, said Cecelia Brooks, even though she considers all of them "culturally significant."

Cecelia Brooks of St. Mary's First Nation put the guide together with her son Anthony Brooks. (Shane Fowler/CBC News)

"We may not use it, but it all has an effect on the ecosystem."

Some have been left out on the instruction of elder medicine keepers, who have seen too many traditional Indigenous medicines appropriated or exploited, said Brooks.

"I get it," she said, "They are plants and they're everywhere, but the knowledge comes from our ancestors."

She gave the example of ground hemlock, which she said was used by the Wabanaki to treat cancer before it was developed into a chemotherapy drug a few decades ago.

A bunch of blueberries on a bush
A lot of people don’t know the leaves of blueberry plants are medicinal, said Brooks. You can make a tea of them to reduce blood sugar. That’s important, she said because of the high amounts of sugar and wheat-based carbohydrates that have been introduced to the diets of Indigenous people since colonization, leading to high rates of diabetes. (Ducks Unlimited Canada)

"I'm glad they're helping people," said Brooks, "but I wish they would credit the people that the knowledge comes from.

"Our communities are the poorest in the country and yet they continue to take our knowledge without credit or without sharing. And not even asking. They just do it."

The plants and uses in the booklet, she said, are "all in the public domain."

The red osier dogwood shrub has experienced a bit of a renaissance in use, said Brooks. Its bark is scraped and roasted as an ingredient in sacred pipe smoking blends. An alternative name is red willow because it bends like a willow and baskets can be made from it. (Ducks Unlimited Canada)

Some are boiled for decoctions, others are soaked overnight for infusions. Others are used as building materials.

Many of the medicinal uses have been backed up by modern science, she said.

"It's interesting how our ancestors knew so much," she said, "without laboratories."

They used much the same process as modern scientists, said Brooks — "make an observation, form a hypothesis, do an experiment and either accept or reject it."

Speckled alder is used by the Wabanaki, along with willow and birch, for building sweatlodges. The bark can be stripped and used to dye leather. (Ducks Unlimited Canada)

Key differences, she said, are that Indigenous science doesn't claim to be objective and it includes a "layer of spirituality."

Sometimes people ask how Indigenous people came by their knowledge of plant medicines, said Brooks.

And some medicine keepers reply that, "If you listen, the plants will talk to you."

The Wolastoqey word for plaintain translates roughly to Frenchman’s footsteps, said Brooks, because it was found growing everywhere French settlers had walked. Indigenous medicine keepers found uses for it, including as food, and bandages. The leaves are plastered over a wound with sticky, antiseptic fir sap. (Ducks Unlimited Canada)

"It sounds kind of odd to people, but it's really the way it works.

"The plants have spirits."

Brooks cautioned people not to attempt to use any plant or mushroom unless they have a positive identification.  

On a recent outing, she said, someone found something they thought looked like a carrot but was actually poison hemlock.

Turkey tail is probably the most studied medicinal mushroom, said Brooks. It grows on decaying trees and is used as an immune-system booster. A lot of research is going on into its potential use as an anti-cancer agent. (Ducks Unlimited Canada )

It's always best to check with an expert, she said, such as someone from the New Brunswick Museum or the UNB herbarium.

"There are many look-alikes," she said, and the entire plant — including the flower, leaves and root, is required to know for sure what something is, as well as information about the conditions in which it was growing and the surrounding plants.

There are also some ailments that are beyond the scope of herbal medicine, she said, recalling a recent call she got from someone interested in possible treatments for gangrene.

Jack-in-the-pulpit has a turnip-like root, Brooks said, and was popular for treating the flu during the 1918 pandemic, as well as tuberculosis, which was common in children who came home from residential schools. (Ducks Unlimited Canada)

Brooks's advice was to get to an emergency department as soon as possible.

Some plants that are culturally significant to the Wabanaki are absent from the Lower Lincoln Wetland, and Brooks would like to see them planted — namely muskrat root, which is used as an immune-system booster.

It's one of the few plants, she said, that are still being used, despite the separation of Indigenous people from the land through colonization.

"We need areas to collect that medicine," she said, "where people could harvest with peace of mind knowing it's not contaminated."

Blue vervain is 'really special,' said Brooks, because it can be used to treat anxiety, which is so widespread today. It’s also a really good digestive bitter, she said. (Ducks Unlimited Canada)

The Lincoln Wetland Natural Area would be a good place for it, she said.

It includes 21 acres, or 8.5 hectares, with a mix of marshes and old forest, including endangered butternut trees. It was donated to the Nature Conservancy of Canada in memory of Gwen Ferris. 

The Nature Conservancy has been developing the property in the last few years, in collaboration with the school, to make it more accessible, said Paula Noël, the group's program director in New Brunswick.

There's now a trail that starts behind the school. It includes a short loop through the woods, she said, and a trail that goes right out to the river.

When stinging nettle touches your skin, said Brooks, it injects formic acid that burns and hurts. If used to whip the skin over the source of arthritis pain, such as a wrist, it can give some relief from the underlying pain and swelling. She suspects this has to do with the release of endorphins. (Ducks Unlimited Canada)

It's a "spectacular spot," said Noël, with a variety of habitats and uncommon species.

Students at the school use the area as an outdoor classroom, she said, so the booklet prepared by Brooks may be useful to them.

"It sounds like it will be a great opportunity for them to learn about the plants that are there and maybe more importantly the traditional uses and knowledge of the Wolastoqi people."

"I think it will be fantastic for the students and maybe even for the public to learn a little bit more about the site."

Ground nuts are 'really important' to Wabanaki people, said Brooks. They planted fields of the edible tuber wherever they lived, including Sipekne'katik, or Shubenacadie, in Nova Scotia, whose name in Mi’kmaw means 'the area where the wild turnips or wild potatoes grow.' (Ducks Unlimited Canada)

The general public is allowed to visit the area as well, she said, though it's best to go outside of school hours for parking. 

Anyone who does go during school hours is asked to sign in at the school office.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Jennifer Sweet has been telling the stories of New Brunswickers for over 20 years. She is originally from Bathurst, got her journalism degree from Carleton University and is based in Fredericton. She can be reached at 451-4176 or jennifer.sweet@cbc.ca.