Showing posts with label Wildflowers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wildflowers. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

The Chicory Coffee Capitol of America

Take a drive through the Michigan countryside in August and you're likely to see pretty blue flowers in full bloom growing in the gravel alonside the road. As you might imagine, this "weed" was first brought to the U.S. on purpose, like many other common flowers we now find in our yards, fields and ditches (i.e. dandelion, mullein, purple loosestrife, etc.)

This lovely lavender blossom is of a plant known as Chicory, originally a native of Europe, which was brought to the United States as a coffee substitute and medicinal potherb. Chicory coffee? Down at the local coffee shop today, you'll have to choose between coffee beans grown in Columbia or Costa Rica, Kenya or Guatamala, Mexico or Peru. Ask for a cup of chicory root and you'll probably have a pretty confused waiter!

But once Midland, Michigan was known as the "Center of America's Chicory Field." Roasted and ground chicory roots were first used as a coffee substitute in Germany in the 1770s, though it has been grown as a medicinal herb for roughly 5,000 years. The Coffee Book, by Dawn Campbell and Judith Smith states: "Kaffee Ersatz was much in use during WWI and II when coffee was hard to come by and not affordable. Chicory's ability to blend well with coffee, tea leaves, or herbs has long been known."

In 1926, a local newspaper bragged about Midland County's place in the chicory-growing industry in its book, The Midland Sun, Second Development Edition. It said: "Few people, even in Midland, realize that all the chicory used in the entire United States is raised in Michigan, in fact, in Midland county and tributary territory. Formerly vast quantities of this root, which is used so extensively...as an addition to coffee, was not grown profitably anywhere in the United States, and practically all imported from Europe. Then somebody discovered that the soil in Midland and nearby counties was peculiarly adapted to the raising of this root. In fact, nowhere else in the whole country are conditions so favorable..."

Chicory coffee was grown, processed and sold in Midland by the Franck Chicory Company, who owned kilns to roast the root in Bay City, Pinconning, Midland and Kawkawlin. In fact, a 1922 edition of The Midland Sun, stated that it wasn't unusual for area farmers to earn $100 per acre when growing chicory in their fields. The root was harvested in a similar fashion to sugar beets.

In spite of its success, producing chicory coffee in mid-Michigan came to an end after World War II as affordable coffee beans were shipped from Central and South America. Today, most cultivated chicory is grown in France and South Africa. In the United States, the French culture of New Orleans and rural Louisiana stubbornly stuck with the tradition and it lives on with companies such as the Orleans Coffee Exchange.

So as you fill up your morning cup of coffee, pause for a moment to consider where it comes from. What environmental price do we pay for those beans that are grown in the tropics and shipped halfway across the world? What other habits do we cling to that may have more sustainable, home-grown alternatives? As you drive those country roads, take a moment to consider those pretty blue flowers and the amazing story they have to tell.

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

Summer Photo Feature

Summer is here! Walk the woods, fields or wetlands at Chippewa Nature Center and you'll discover abundant life whichever way you turn. Be sure to watch your step, as slow-moving critters such as snails might be using the path. Bees are buzzing, flowers are blooming and green leaves are coming into their prime. Be sure to check our program calendar for our next guided hike or paddling trip, and also enjoy our trails on your own from dawn to dark every day of the year. Check us out on Facebook to let us know what you find and post your own favorite pictures from your adventures at CNC!

Snail Eyes

Young American Basswood leaves

Spiderwort
Widow Skimmer Dragonfly (immature male)
Green Frog (female)

Michigan Lily



Monday, May 24, 2010

May Photo Show

Enjoy these photos from Chippewa Nature Center taken in the "Merry Merry Month of May."What a colorful and beautiful time of the year!

Mourning Dove

Dutchman's Breeches

Redbud Blossoms


Large-flowered Trillium

 Young Woodchuck

Young Bracken Fern Leaf

Monday, May 10, 2010

Plant Pot Recycling


Join East Jordan Plastics in their efforts to recycle leftover plant pots, flats, tags, etc. (any horticultural related items made from plastic) this season. You can drop off your rinsed pots other items at Meijer’s or Home Depot throughout the Midwest during the spring and summer months or you can arrange a pick-up for larger quantities. Last year, they collected more than 300,000 pounds of materials! Check out EJP website on how you can help make a difference.

Thanks to Abbey at Midland's Dow Gardens for passing this news along! If you are feeling left out and don't have plant pots to recycle, join Chippewa Nature Center for our annual Native Plant Sale on May 27 (CNC members only), May 28 and May 29. Just click here for more details or give us a call at 989-631-0830.

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

The Garlic Mustard Blues

The middle of April marks the beginning of the woodland wildflower season. Soon, native flowers such as Large-flowered Trillium, Dutchman's Breeches, Bloodroot and Lady's Slipper will grace the forest floor. High above, trees are just starting to leaf out and the world is turning green again. If you look closely, you'll find that much of the spring green we see nowadays wasn't there twenty years ago. In recent decades, Garlic Mustard, an invasive exotic species from Europe, has swept like wildfire through America's woodland habitats. In some areas (such as large portions of CNC), a dense blanket of garlic mustard grows so thick and tall it chokes out most other native species, including tree seedlings. The problem has gotten so bad, in fact, that some land managers are calling Garlic Mustard one of the most harmful and difficult to control invasive plants in our region. The plants reproduce very rapidly and actually emit chemicals into the soil to prevent other species from growing near them. Garlic Mustard control on Nature Center property consists of pulling the plant in target areas, such as in the Oxbow Woods, in order to prevent it from spreading. What can you do? First, get to know this prolific plant and make sure it doesn't grow in your yard at home! Next, consider joining the Stewardship Network's Garlic Mustard Challenge 2009. Last year, the challenge sponsored events which recorded a whopping 128,470 pounds of garlic mustard pulled! This year there are many places to volunteer to help reach their new goal of 200,000 pounds! Learn more about the garlic mustard problem by watching this great video. After you do, head outside and pull! Garlic Mustard Identification and Control from Barbara Lucas on Vimeo.