This June 5, 2013 photo shows fourth-generation pipe maker Travis Erickson holding a piece of catlinite _ a sheet of stone _ that he will carve into a traditional Native American pipe at Pipestone ...
Indian pipes are neat little woodland plants. Ghostly white, they are members of a group of plants that don't use photosynthesis to make their own food but instead "prey" upon fungi, stealing ...
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brought out memories and sightings, but not much botanical information or mythical stories. I'm still hoping, though. One gardener, Geof Beasley of Bella Madrona garden, had an interesting tidbit: ...
MACKINAW CITY, MI - A collection of trade goods are the latest treasures to emerge from an archaeological dig at Colonial Michilimackinac. Several more artifacts were recently unearthed during the ...
” I just got back from checking on the rosy Indian pipes and they are up!” said an email from Theresa Augustin, Director of Environmental Engagement and Outreach at Norfolk Botanical Garden. And I ...
Native American traditions are once again celebrated in Sonoma Valley, long after indigenous Coast Miwok and Pomo tribes made their homes in the Valley of the Moon. Thanks to the hospitality of Sioux ...
PIPESTONE NATIONAL MONUMENT, Minn. — Like his uncles and grandfather before him, Travis Erickson takes great pride in the handmade pipes he creates using red stone he digs from the ground and carves ...
Indian pipes are a neat little woodland plant. Ghostly white, they are members of a group of plants that don't use photosynthesis to make their own food but instead "prey" upon fungi, stealing ...