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Fieldtrips
Indian Rock
Spring
2003
Hidden Meadows
Fall
2003
The Glens
Fall 2003
Legend Rock
Fall
2003
Camp Pendleton
Spring
2002
Gathering Juncus
Spring 2002
Field Tripping
Spring
2002
PDF version: fast connection
Waterfall
Fall 2003
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Waterfall
Text by Deborah Small
As we gather the juncus, the juncus gathers
us . . .
It’s a beautiful spring day. Abe Sanchez, Diania Caudell and
Marian Walkingstick are Native American basket weavers, and we’re
hiking in the San Diego back country to gather Juncus textilis,
one of the most important traditional basketry plants. The dirt
road to the site is deeply eroded, almost impassable by a 4-wheel
drive, so we walk from the main road.
To reach the creek where the juncus grows, we first must walk by
an area where people have dumped their derelict appliances, unstuffed
couches, a smashed satellite dish, an outdated computer monitor,
disintegrating cardboard boxes, non-disintegrating plastic bags,
and crushed Miller-Lite cans. There’s even a dismembered Camero
with glass from its shattered windshield scattered everywhere. Beyond
the Camero a stand of canyon sunflowers, rare to find in the wild
anymore.
The stench from a rotting carcass overwhelms the normally fragrant
aroma of sage scrub. In the larger scheme of things, this dump is
a minor transgression, but it’s also emblematic of a profound
disconnection from the land, an utter indifference to its wild beauty.
Beyond the dump, the path to the creek bed is lined with black sage,
sycamore and live oak trees. Rampant wild grape vines crawl up the
trees and wild blackberry vines carpet the ground and streambanks.
We spot a rogue non-native calla lily escaped from someone’s
backyard. From the enormous sycamores, last season’s leaves
are strewn everywhere. We hear the intermittent croak of an invisible
frog and birdsong above the sound of the water flowing in the creek.
We opt to walk upstream in the creekbed. It’s more stable
in the shallow water than on the slippery rocks. We can also more
easily sidestep the ever-present and prolific poison oak. We note
a rogue non-native geranium growing on the streambank as we climb
over boulders and fallen sycamore limbs that block our path.
In the May heat, it’s surprisingly cool. Everything thrives
in this freshwater riparian ecosystem with its lush canopy of oaks,
sycamores, and willows shading the creek. We’re dressed head-to-toe
to protect ourselves from poison oak. Marian wears her goofy aviator
hat.
I stop to photograph a lizard sitting above the stream on old juncus
needles and sycamore leaves.
Dark green juncus overhangs the stream bank in great profusion.
We’re like explorers in tropical jungles, hacking our way
through the dense overgrowth.
This is AWESOME!. This is SO SWEET!
Abe, Diania, and Marian are ecstatic. This is incredible juncus.
Two hundred twenty-five species of juncus are found worldwide, but
the Juncus textilis we’re harvesting grows only in
California. Juncus is from Latin meaning to join or bind, referring
to the indigenous use of the plant.
It’s difficult to pick up the voices of Abe, Diania, or Marian
on video over the sound of the stream. It’s a first for me—shooting
video footage while standing ankle-deep in water on a shifting and
unstable surface. I’m careful not drop the video camera as
I climb over the boulders and under the downed sycamore branches
in the streambed.
After walking about a quarter of a mile, we come to a beautiful
seasonal waterfall where we scramble up the rocks and sit down.
We’re totally enveloped in the lush green sound of water cascading
down the rocks.
Diania speculates that this area might be a traditional gathering
site for juncus, a critically important plant that profoundly helped
shape Luiseño culture. In Southern California, it’s
very difficult to find undisturbed stands of juncus. Loss of habitat
from development and the invasion of non-native species have greatly
diminished the riparian ecosystems that support thickets of juncus.
It’s also extremely difficult to find areas where juncus is
not subjected to the spraying of pesticides and herbicides by government
agencies and private landowners. This is, of course, a serious threat
to the continuance of this vitally important cultural tradition.
Our particular juncus stand is completely hidden from view. There
are no signs that it was harvested in years.
“This is like HEAVEN!” Marian tells us. It’s hard
to hear each other over the sound of the stream, so we just listen
to the very welcome sound of water flowing after the worst drought
year recorded in Southern California history.
Abe climbs the rocks above the waterfall. “Careful Abe,”
we tell him. The rocks are slippery from the water and lichen, and
they’re steep as well. Abe wears his signature field trip
hat that he wove with juncus and deergrass. His bold and intricate
basketry designs are inspired from Chumash baskets. Deer alternate
with mountain sheep as they circle his hat, and he’s woven
a fret-like design on the rim.
In the streambed, the water’s surface collects in ponds animated
by tiny black skater bugs that ripple the surface of the still water.
Abe wove five of these exuberant skater bugs in a circular pattern
on the top of his hat. A master basket weaver, Abe teaches basketry
to indigenous people of many different tribal affiliations throughout
California.
Our pants are now wet to our knees as we carefully make our way
back downstream. Abe doesn’t want to stop harvesting yet,
so Diania and Marian join him. They try to avoid the poison oak
intertwined everywhere in the stalks of juncus. “Leaves of
three. Let it be.” Marian and Abe wear gloves to protect themselves.
Diania isn’t wearing gloves. She’s busying taking photographs.
So am I. I can’t seem to frame a photograph of juncus without
poison oak showing up in my viewfinder.
Here, the juncus is thinner and stronger than others we’ve
harvested in the area. “Good for string,” Abe tells
us. He speaks of the value of gathering from different areas, how
each kind of juncus is by basket weavers for a different purpose.
Abe is impressed with the rich brown color at the lower end of the
juncus stalk. It’s this segment that he’ll use to create
the intricate designs woven into his baskets.
After harvesting enough juncus for future baskets, Abe places the
collective bundle on his shoulder to walk downstream.
Abe, Diania and Marian are all members of CIBA, the California Indian
Basket weavers Association whose mission is to preserve, promote
and perpetuate California Indian basket weaving traditions. In their
commitment to the indigenous cultural tradition of basket weaving,
Abe, Diania and Marian are vital to the on-going California Native
basket weaving revival.
This revival is of critical importance. Until recently, traditional
California basket weaving was an endangered art. Yet basketry touched
indigenous people’s lives completely and were critical to
their survival—baskets were considered the most important
tool in Native Californians’ technological repertoire. They
used baskets for cooking, sifting acorn meal and serving food, storing
water and household goods. They wove harvesting baskets, seed beaters,
winnowing baskets, granaries, burden baskets, fish-trapping and
fish-netting baskets, cradle-board baskets, intricately woven gift
and ceremonial baskets. Some of their houses and ramadas were essentially
large woven baskets.
In Southern California, Juncus textilis, along with deergrass
(Muhlenbergi rigens), yucca (Yucca whipplei),
sumac (Rhus trilobata) and willow (Salix exigua),
were used to weave these different kinds of baskets.
As basket weavers, Abe, Diania, and Marian’s are intimately
woven into the land. Gathering juncus is part of a sacramental cycle,
the renewal of a cultural practice hundreds of years old. Gathering
juncus not only honors the ancestors, but it also involves cultivating
a profound respect for species other than our own. For Abe, Diania,
and Marian, basket weaving is a luminous thread that connects them
to the larger struggles for indigenous environmental, cultural,
and linguistic restoration.
Before we hike back to the car at the end of our collecting trip,
we give thanks for the wild tenacity of this remnant stand of juncus
and the generosity of the natural world. We give thanks to the ancestors,
and to each other.
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