Common Name(s): | Leather Root |
Scientific Name: | Hoita macrostachya |
Family: | Fabaceae (Legume) |
Plant Type: | Perennial |
Size: | up to 15 feet |
Habitat: | Chaparral, wetland riparian |
Blooms: | June to September |
Fire Response: | Germinate from Seed |
Leather root - Hoita macrostachya is a Native, Perennial Herb that you will find only at the edge of a creek or stream. Tall (up to 2.5 meters - taller than most people) and sprawling (appears like a shrub), with a head of cone-shaped purple pea flowers. With leaves of three, folding towards the central vein, rounded on one end and pointed at the other, this plant is fairly easy to identify. Each time I came across this plant it was as I crossed a creek and found myself being lured in by the beautiful flowers. There are not that many plants that fit all of these clues!
Leather Root has hollow stems emerging from a large woody caudex (woody part of the plant that survives year to year) and an extensive root system that has as its primary mission the ability to find water and tap into it. This plant dies back to the ground after the dispersal of seeds. Blooming in the Summer months produces a legume like pod with one kidney shaped seed.
Leather root can and was used for a variety of reasons: eating, as a textile, creating a dye and making a poultice. Cordage is made from the inner bark of the stem that can be used like sewing thread. A tough fibre can be made from the root. Strong and durable, it is used to make ropes and bags - the plant is known as Leather Root or California Hemp for a reason! A Yellow dye can be made from the roots. The leaves were eaten as “greens”. Pulverizing the roots yielded a topical ointment (salve or poultice) for wounds. A perfume can also made.
Link to Calflora.net - the best source of this fascinating information
Name Origin: Hoita is a name for "Psoralea" in the ConCow (or KonKow) Maidu language spoken by a Native American people of the Feather River region (Butte County, California)
macrosta'chya: from macro, "large," and stachys, "an ear of grain," referring to the spikes of the inflorescence
Contributed by George Sherman