Sources of native crafts, books and videos:
Native Seeds/SEARCH, 526 N. 4th Ave., Tucson, AZ 85705, ph. 520-622-5591
Silverbell Trading, 7007 N. Oracle Rd. 797-6852. They’re great about special ordering anything they don’t have in their well stocked selection.
Dawn Southwest offers books and videos on natural building and permaculture
Buy local - you can also try Tucson’s other great local, independent bookstores such as Antigone’s, Readers’ Oasis, the Tucson Audubon Nature Shop, and others. They love special orders!
Reading list
Water Harvesting:
www.HarvestingRainwater.com. Water-harvesting resources that help you turn
water scarcity into water abundance.
Sourcebook for edible plants:
CORNUCOPIA II - A Source Book of Edible Plants. by Stephen Facciola. Published by Kampong Publications, 1998. Very comprehensive guide telling you what parts of 1000s of wild plants and rare cultivars are edible and where you can find nurseries that grow and sell them.
Edible flowers:
Creasy, Rosalind. THE EDIBLE FLOWER GARDEN. Boston: Periplus Editions, 1999. Learn what flowers you can eat to extend and diversify your harvest!
Native plant identification: Bowers, Janice Emily. SHRUBS AND TREES OF THE SOUTHWEST DESERTS. Tucson: Southwest Parks and Monuments Association, 1993. Great guide for the low desert with clear line drawings.
Elmore, Francis H.. SHRUBS AND TREES OF THE SOUTHWEST UPLANDS. Tucson:
Southwest Parks and Monuments Association, 1976. Another great guide for
higher elevations than the Tucson valley.
Elpel, Thomas. BOTANY IN A DAY - Herbal Guide to Plant Families 4th Edition.
Pony: HOPS Press, 2000. A guide for identifying native and exotic plants.
Rather than by teaching you the plants individually it teaches you to learn
patterns of plants so you can easily figure out the plant’s family and
potential uses.
Epple, Anne Orth. PLANTS OF ARIZONA. Helena: Falcon Press Publishing,
1995. Good guide with color photos of all the featured plants.
Kearney, Thomas H., Peebles, Robert H., and collaborators. ARIZONA FLORA.
Berkeley: University of California Press, 1951. A big fat academic book
that is as dry as it is informative.
Parker, Kittie. AN ILLUSTRATED GUIDE TO ARIZONA WEEDS. Tucson: University
of Arizona Press, 1972. Great illustrations. It seems this book was geared
to those keeping cattle, yet if you keep in mind that many of these plants
have many more uses and benefits than the book mentions, it works great for
identifying plants.
Books on wild plant propagation:
Young, James, Young, Cheryl. COLLECTING, PROCESSING AND GERMINATING SEEDS OF
WILDLAND PLANTS. Portland: Timber Press 1986.
Forest Service. SEEDS OF WOODY PLANTS IN THE UNITED STATES. Washington,
D.C.: Forest Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agriculture Handbook
No. 450, 1989.
Ethnobotanical uses of native plants including cooking, eating, medicinal
use, and more:
Cocannouer, Joseph. WEEDS - Guardians of the Soil. Old Greenwich:
Devin-Adair Company, 1950. Out of print book that informs us of the many
benefits of “weeds”. A good local used book store should be able to locate
it for you.
Curtin, L. S. M. HEALING HERBS of the Upper Rio Grande - Traditional
Medicine of the Southwest. Santa Fe: Western Edge Press, 1997.
Dahl, Kevin. WILD FOODS OF THE SONORAN DESERT. Tucson: Arizona-Sonora
Desert Museum, 1995. A brief and informative book on some of our local wild
foods.
Dunmire, William and Tierney, Gail. WILD PLANTS and NATIVE PEOPLES of the
FOUR CORNERS. Santa Fe: Museum of New Mexico Press, 1997.
Ebeling, Walter. HANDBOOK OF INDIAN FOODS AND FIBERS OF ARID AMERICA. Los
Angeles: University of California Press, 1986. Great out of print resource.
Felger, Richard Stephen and Moser, Mary Beck. PEOPLE OF THE DESERT AND SEA.
Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 1985. Very informative book on many
Seri uses of their local plants - many of which are found in southern
Arizona.
Hodgson, Wendy. FOOD PLANTS OF THE SONORAN DESERT. Tucson: University of
Arizona Press, 2001. Should be out any day. I saw an early manuscript and
it was amazing!
Kay, Margarita Artschwager. HEALING WITH PLANTS in the American and Mexican
West. Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 1996.
Moore, Michael. LOS REMEDIOS - Traditional Herbal Remedies of the Southwest.
Santa Fe: Red Crane Books, 1990.
Moore, Michael. MEDICINAL PLANTS OF THE DESERT AND CANYON WEST. Santa Fe:
Museum of New Mexico Press, 1989. One of the best for identification and use
of our native medicinal plants.
Nabhan, Gary Paul. GATHERING THE DESERT. Tucson: University of Arizona
Press, 1985.
Nabhan, Gary Paul. CULTURES OF HABITAT: On Nature, Culture, and Story
Counterpoint, 1997.
Niethammer, Carolyn J. AMERICAN INDIAN COOKING: RECIPES FROM THE SOUTHWEST.
New York: University of Nebraska Press, 1999. A great guide on how to
prepare foods from a number of native plants in our area. This book used to
be called “American Indian Food and Lore”.
Niethammer, Carolyn J. THE TUMBLEWEED GOURMET - COOKING WITH WILD
SOUTHWESTERN PLANTS. Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 1987. How to do
it all in your kitchen.
Nyerges, Christopher. GUIDE TO WILD FOODS AND USEFUL PLANTS. Chicago:
Chicago Review Press, 1999.
Rea, Amadeo. AT THE DESERT’S GREEN EDGE. Tucson: University of Arizona
Press, 1997. I can’t recommend this one enough ,wonderful stories in the
Gila Piman’s own words and great info!
Ethnobotanical uses of native and exotic plants with a bent on cooking and
eating:
Clayfield, Robin. YOU CAN HAVE YOUR PERMACULTURE AND EAT IT TOO. Crystal
Waters: Earthcare Education, 1996. A permaculture book for gardeners and
cooks.
English, Sandal. FRUITS OF THE DESERT. Tucson, The Arizona Daily Star,
1981. Many recipes for native plants and exotic edibles commonly found in
and around Tucson, AZ.
Henderson, Robert K. THE NEIGHBORHOOD FORAGER - A Guide for the Wild Food
Gourmet. White River: Chelsea Green Publishing, 2000. Most of the plants
in this book are not in our area, but the art of foraging in your
neighborhood is beautifully described.
Madison, Deborrh. VEGETARIAN COOKING FOR EVERYONE. New York: Broadway
Books, 1997.
A great resource from which Barbara Rose derives much inspiration. Barbara
substitutes many native foods for the ingredients many of these recipes.
Mollison, Bill. THE PERMACULTURE BOOK OF FERMENT AND HUMAN NUTRITION.
Tyalgum: Tagari Publications, 1993. An eclectic book teaching you to
process and store your own food and how to make your own ingredients.
Eating locally:
Nabhan, Gary Paul. “COMING HOME TO EAT”. Orion, Summer 2000. pp. 32-40.
Great article on how the author and his partner made sure at least 4 out of
every 5 of their meals for a year came from food produced within 250 miles of
their home. Their Sense of Place, awareness of the seasons, and connection
to our food distribution system were all enhanced.
Nabhan, Gary Paul. COMING HOME TO EAT – The Pleasures and Politics of Local
Foods W. W. Norton & Co. 2002. Wonderful book taking the above article much
further.
Great guide to eating insects found on or around plants:
Menzel, Peter and D’Aluisio, Faith. MAN EATING BUGS - The Art and Science of
Eating Insects. Berkeley: Ten Speed Press, 1998. I cannot recommend this
book enough. Great stories, recipes, and color photographs that will change
the way you interact with insects forever!
Dyeing with native plants:
Las Aranas Spinners and Weavers Guild, Inc. DYEING WITH NATURAL MATERIALS.
Albuquerque: Las Aranas Spinners and Weavers Guild, Inc., 1995. Dyeing with
plants common in the Southwest U.S.
Basketry:
Jensen, Elizabeth. BASKETS FROM NATURE’S BOUNTY. Loveland: Interweave
Press, 1991. An illustrated how-to guide on basketry.
Primitive skills:
Blankenship, Bart and Robin. EARTH KNACK - Stone Age Skills For the 21st
Century. Layton: Gibbs Smith, 1996.
Olsen, Larry Dean. OUTDOOR SURVIVAL SKILLS. Chicago, Chicago Review Press,
1997.
Wescott, David. PRIMITIVE TECHNOLOGY - A BOOK OF EARTH SKILLS. Layton:
Gibbs Smith, 1999.
Gardening (* means particularly good for our area):
Ashworth, Susan. SEED TO SEED - Seed Saving Techniques for the Vegetable
Gardener. Decorah: Seed Saver Publications, 1991.
*Cleveland, David A. and Soleri, Daniela. FOOD FROM DRYLAND GARDENS.
Tucson: Center for People, Food and Environment, 1991.
Mollison, Bill. PERMACULTURE - A Designer’s Manual. Tyalgum: Tagari
Publications, 1992.
*Murphy, Tim. “HACKBERRY / WALNUT GUILDSâ€. PERMACULTURE ACTIVIST Vol. V,
No. 2, May 1989: 1, 4
*Nyhuis, Jane. DESERT HARVEST - A Guide to Vegetable Gardening in Arid Lands
. Tucson: Growing Connections, 1982.
Rayner, Lisa and Rand Snyder. GROWING FOOD IN THE SOUTHWEST MOUNTAINS. 240
W. Saunders, #112, Flagstaff, AZ 86001, 1996.
Landscaping with native plants:
Mielke, Judy. NATIVE PLANTS FOR SOUTHWESTERN LANDSCAPES. Austin:
University of Texas Press, 1993. This book is very clear with color photos
and useful information. A number of plants are featured here that you won’t
find in other native landscaping books.
Water issues in the southwest U.S.
Bowden, Charles. KILLING THE HIDDEN WATERS - Slow Destruction of Water
Resources in the American Southwest. University of Texas Press, 1977.
Beautifully and powerfully describes our relationship with our most limited
and precious resource past and present.
Laney, Nancy. DESERT WATERS - From Ancient Aquifers to Modern Demands.
Tucson: Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum, 1998. Short, clear booklet.
Looking at our cities, towns, and landscapes as watersheds:
SECOND NATURE - Adapting LA’s Landscape For Sustainable Living. Edited by
Patrick Condon and Stacy Moriarty. Metropolitan Water District of Southern
California, 1999. A great resource of a group in Los Angeles creating
cross-jurisdicitional and cross-disciplinary connections between the people
and institutions responsible for the infrastructure, planning, and ecology
of Los Angeles in order to view the city as a living watershed . Concepts
such as passive rainwater harvesting and multiple-use landscaping are
presented that could help improve the sustainability of the City and the
watershed.
Contact the organization at TREEPEOPLE, 12601 Mulholland Drive, Beverly
Hills, CA 90210. www.treepeople.org/trees
Video list
THE GLOBAL GARDENER. 1991. A great four part video showing how
permaculture/sustainable strategies have been applied throughout the world.
The parts are called THE TROPICS, DRY LANDS, COOL CLIMATES, and URBAN.
NOVA: SECRETS OF LOST EMPIRES - INCA. South Burlington: WGBH video, 1997.
A great video in which you see how a small Peruvian community builds a
suspension bridge out of nothing more than grass.
WILD EDIBLE PLANTS OF SPRING. Tucson: Tucson Public Library, 1978. A poor
quality, but informative video on common native edible plants found in
spring. Tips on how to prepare them.
RUTH STOUT’S GARDEN. Santa Rosa: Arthur Mokin Productions, Inc.. A
wonderful video about Ruth Stout, and how at 100 years of age she can still
effortlessly and productively garden by MULCHING
issaquah, washington. www.gardenworks.cc - ruth stout’s garden is available in vhs and
> dvd.
425-430-2446, (email) info@gardenworks.cc
Audio
THE PETEY MESQUITEY SHOW ON KXCI 91.3FM. A great 5 minute show on Monday
mornings and Friday afternoons where wonderful and informative stories are
told or sung about our Sonoran Desert. Call KXCI at 623-1000 for more info.
THE BEST OF PETEY MESQUITEY. Tucson: KXCI community radio. A CD put out by KXCI community radio compiling some of Petey Mesquitey’s best rantings, songs, and stories celebrating the wonder of our Sonoran Desert.