SKUNK CABBAGE
SKUNK CABBAGE SECRETS
The SKUNK CABBAGE SECRETS
by Mary McF Leister of the Baltimore Sun,
Sunday, February 2,
1975.
Out in the marsh and swamp
the pointed tips, teepees, of skunk cabbage is pushing through
the frozen earth, ice and snow, into February, gray and cold,
There they stand, or sit, like teepees, gray green, yellow green,
purple and red, onto the unready earth, with it's own self
generated life of radiance. It's teepee is 20 to 30 degree above
the winter air around it. Then there is the pungent heart,
it's secret.
All life, plants, animal,
generate heat. It is unknown generally why the cabbage
liberates greater amount
of heat than other plants, is it thermogenesis ? This is the
reason
for it's early arrival,
from purple cowl to wide spread tropical summer leaves. As a
matter
of fact, there are
relatives in Malaya jungles which were carried by glaciers
through Asia
to the seaboards. If
skunk cabbage made that trip through Asia it surely needed help
by
man on his migrations.
Even with its unpalatable taste and odor perhaps it was the only
food
available. In later
civilizations it became a medicinal herb and was used by them as
a
stimulant and narcotic.
If in late winter or early
spring you peer into the narrow slit doorway, of a 4 inch
leathery teepee you can
see the lone thick stem 'spandix', with the knobby head of the
blossom. Sometimes the
knobby head is covered with off color lavender blooms hidden
by straw color stamens
and pistils. You also find the carrion fly awaiting his dinner.
The skunk cabbage spadix
hold 15 flowers which produce one large dark seed which
lay on the ground long
after the plant has disappeared. These are hard to find during
the hot
months for overgrowth of
other vegetation. Then there is the second secret , it has been
discovered that it's spring growth begins long before mid
winter by just laying in the swamp.
Abstracts: Baltimore
Sun, Sunday February 2 1975 by Mary McF. Leister.
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