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Plant Medicine: Grow Your Own Chia

29/11/2016

Chia blossom | Photo: Teresa Alexander-Arab, some rights reserved

This article includes discussion of Native Californian peoples traditional use of plants as medicine. It is intended for cultural and environmental education purposes only, and should not be taken as medical advice.

Back in the day, the fields of California were so full of chia that in some places nothing else was able to grow. Growing each year from seed, the one-and-a-half-foot-tall plants produced nutritious seeds that served as a staple food for native Californians for millennia. Using seedbeaters, specialized tools woven from willow and other materials, Native people literally beat the dried flower heads of chia plants back and forth above burden baskets; the seeds in those flower heads fell into the basket. Or most of them did, anyway. The process usually scattered enough seeds to ensure an abundant crop of chia in the same spot the next spring.

Indigenous cooks cleaned the chia seeds, then roasted them by heating rocks and placing them in baskets with the seeds. Sometimes the chia seeds were mixed with seeds of other plants such as red maids and purple needlegrass and cooked into a thin porridge the Spaniards called pinole. Sometimes they were simply ground and eaten dry by hand, a food surprisingly rich in complex carbohydrates, oil and protein.

That culinary use of chia is increasingly familiar to modern Americans, because a similar seed is for sale at more and more stores throughout the U.S. But what many people still don't realize is that chia was an important plant medicine used in a variety of applications by Native Californians.

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The seeds were often used, mixed with water and mashed, to help keep wounds from getting infected. Some healers would remove foreign objects from eyes by putting chia seeds under the affected person's eyelids: the seeds, exposed to tears, would develop a gelatinous coating that adhered to the foreign object, which would then be flushed out with the chia.

According to anthropologist TC Blackburn, some historical Chumash people referred to chia as a plant that could wake the dead. In 2005, intrigued by this description and suspecting that the death referred to may actually have been severe illness due to heart disease or stroke, a pharmacologist, and botanist, and a Chumash traditional healer explored the pharmacological constituents of chia roots and found substances - tanshiniones - that are known to inhibit clotting, and might thus prove useful in the treatment of strokes.

Chia - Salvia columbariae - still grows throughout California, but 250 years of livestock grazing and competition from introduced plants such as mustard and wild oats have reduced the state's wild chia crop significantly. It's still locally abundant in some areas, and it's not by any stretch of the imagination a rare plant, though one of the two varieties native to California, Ziegler's chia, was considered for inclusion in the California Native Plant Society's Rare Plant List. It wasn't rare enough to make the cut.

Despite the fact that chia won't be making the Endangered Species List anytime soon, its relative scarcity compared to the good old days before settlers got here means that Native people have a hard time gathering enough chia to make traditional foods. And people aren't the only species that benefits from chia seeds' offering of all those handy nutrients. Chia seeds feed a whole food chain by feeding small birds and rodents, who then feed the animals that eat them. These days, it's best practice for most of us, especially non-Native people, to leave chia seeds on the plant.

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Unless, that is, you grow them yourself.

As chia plants are surpassingly unlikely to be found in the annual flowers section of your local nursery, that means you're pretty much going to need to grow them from seed.

That's one of those good news, bad news situations. The good news is that growing chia from seed is pretty easy. The bad news? Chia seed is harder to find than you think.

Yes, yes, the convenience store on the corner will sell you a half pound of chia seeds for $4.95 these days. And you can plant them in your garden, and they will grow. But they're not the same kind of chia that grows native in California. They're Salvia hispanica, a species from South and Central America that isn't particularly closely related to California's chia. It's a perfectly nice plant, far taller than Salvia columbariae (more than five feet in good conditions) and as important to Native people in its own native range as California chia is to California Indians.

But if your intent is to grow California's native chia, the stuff at Whole Foods isn't it.

It's harder to find Salvia columbariae seeds, but not impossible. Larner Seeds, Seedhunt, and Stover Seeds are a few examples of California seed companies that carry native chia seed. Consider ordering seeds from the nursery nearest the spot where you plan to grow them, and ask the nursery where they got their chia stock: otherwise, you run the risk of bringing Nevada County chia genes into the wildlands of San Diego, or wherever you happen to be gardening. Local is better, because you're less likely to muck up the state's wild chia genome.

Once you've got the seed, you need to figure out where to put it. Chia needs sun, so any spot where you'd plant tomatoes will probably suffice. Broadcast the seed in the spot where you want your chia in October or November, and either rake the seeds in to
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