Entry Type: Species
Species Name: Pyrus malus -L.-
Common Name: apple
Myaamia Name: mihšiimišaahkwa
Description:
Harvest Seasons: Undetermined
Harvest Comments:
Habitats: Undetermined
Uses: Food
Locations: Undetermined
Reference Type: Use - Food
Archival Data:
At the entrance of the River detroit . . . Grande Ile. The last is very beautiful, fertile, and large . . . This island has an extraordinary number of appletrees, those who have seen The apples on the ground say that they lie more than a half a foot thick, and the apples-trees are planted as if it had been done on purpose. These apples are as large as small sweet apples [pommes d'api, "bee-apples"].
Comments: N/A
Reference Type: Use - Food
Archival Data:
"micimizhaxkwaki, apple trees"
Comments: N/A
Reference Type: Use - Food
Archival Data:
"michiminja un pommier", an apple tree
Comments: N/A
Reference Type: Use - Food
Archival Data:
"mici'minjakwa, [apple] tree"
Comments: N/A
Reference Type: Use - Food
Archival Data:
Crab apples are used as a snack food when in the woods.
Comments: N/A
Reference Type: Use - Food
Archival Data:
In the traditional story of Young Thunder William Pecongah, he describes the crops he had growing on his land 160 acres of reserve in central Indiana. "There I planted corn, wheat, potatoes, peas, tobacco, beans, apple trees, pumpkins, watermelons, cucumbers, onions, hay, straw, gooseberries, raspberries, blackberries, currants, turnips, tomatoes, pawpaws, cherries, strawberries, plums, blackhaws, peaches, walnut trees, pecans, hickory nuts, barley and rye".
Comments: N/A
No sources entered.
Reference Type: Related Info
Archival Data:
Keller George Oneida described the creation of crabapple trees.
Comments: N/A