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Consultants
Greg Rubin
Paul Price
Steve
Freers |
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Greg Rubin
Text by Deborah Small
The Indian Rock Native Garden (IRNG) Project is a 3-way collaboration
between the San Luis Rey Band and art and anthropology students and
faculty at the University, but it is really much more than that. Mentors
for the project, such as native plant landscape designer Greg Rubin,
are repositories of knowledge of relationships vital to the cultural
survival of the Luiseño community. Greg is the primary plant
consultant assisting in every aspect of the Indian Rock Native Garden,
in the field as well as the classroom.
A former aerospace engineer, Greg has shapeshifted into a passionate
advocate for the establishment of native plant communities. A large
part of Greg's mission, and now ours, is the removal of invasive exotic
plants destroying chaparral, coastal sage scrub, and oak woodland
habitats, all part of the IRNG site.
The Indian Rock site is full of exotic plants. Greg points out a particularly
nasty Brazilian pepper, a deep-rooted philodendron, as well as a dense
stand of South African jade that we must remove. He points out a South
African bird of paradise, an Australian melaleuca, a stand of South
American agave attenuata, and a Brazilian jacaranda trees, The non-native
jacaranda is, ironically, San Diego’s official tree.
Greg points to a particularly beautiful Australian bottlebrush growing
next to Indian Rock. We talk of other plants, the invasive ones, and
how our ideas of beauty change. How we once thought Argentinian pampas
grass or Mediterranean tamarisk trees were beautiful. How the introduction
of exotic species can completely shut down the immune systems of native
plants, and diminish the ecological integrity of the region.
exotic
adj. 1. from another part of the world; not indigenous;foreign. 2.
Having the charm of the unfamiliar; strikingly and intriguely unusual
or beautiful . . . —n. One that is exotic.
native
n. 2. (a) an original or indigenous inhabitant of a region, as distinguished
from an invader, explorer, colonist, etc.; (b) an indigenous plant
or animal.
A student photographs a South African bougainvillea before it is extricated.
We all must learn to identify exotic as well as native plants, so
we know which ones to pull out and which ones to leave.
Exotic species are so pervasive at the site that Greg recommends pulling
out all the stops. In his war against weeds, Greg's assualt weapons
of choice are the herbicides Round-Up and a pre-emergent. His other
weapons are more conventional, weed whackers and plain hard work to
root out the exotics that have spread everywhere. His enemies are
the profligate European mustard, oatgrass, and filaree , all invasive
exotic species that will outcompete the natives at the site.
Next, Greg takes us on a tour of the native plants still growing at
the site. He points out three different kinds of lupines and tells
us the importance of each one to the ecology of native plant communities.
He points out the prolific matilaja poppy, also known as the fried
egg plant, whose huge white flowers are 8 to 10 inches across.
We examine the tangled growth of the enwish_wild cucumber, a pioneer
plant that helps reestablish the ecology of a disturbed site. The
wild cucumber's large brown seeds were pulverized and used as a vehicle
for the paint for the rock pictographs.
Greg points out the native mulefat, buckwheat, coyote brush, and laurel
sumac still growing on the site.
We observe the old katput_elderberry tree growing in an outcrop of
rocks. Elderberries, Greg tells us, are the most important food source
for native birds in summmer months. The elderberry is also considered
one of the most sacred Luiseño plants. Its leaves were used
in blessing ceremonies. Its prolific flower blossoms were brewed as
a tea to break a fever. Elderberries were prized as a delicious food.
New branches were used for arrow shafts. After removing the pith from
larger branches, men made flutes and clapper sticks. The roots of
the elderberry were used as an emetic to induce vomiting, and the
pith on the inside of branches as a gum to clean teeth. Women stripped
the bark from the elderberry bark to make skirts or aprons.
Greg is teaching all of us to read the landscape. When he looks at
the remnant elderberry, for instance, he knows that the area was once
oak woodland, that beneath Indian Rock itself is an ancient aquifer
that sustained the native plants and the people who used them.
Greg also enumerates for us many of the components of the site that
are missing-plants once part of coastal sage scrub and chaparral plant
communties-toyons, gooseberries, currants, heart-leaved penstemon,
black and white sage, chia, manzanita, summer holly, wild lilacs,
sagebrush, sugarbush, golden yarrow, California everlasting, deerweed,
chokecherry, sycamores and oaks. Even poison oak, that constant companion
of plants in riparian and oak woodland communities, is missing at
Indian Rock.
By restoring native plants, we are restoring the integrity of the
relationships between the plants and the many other species that depend
on them, including ourselves.
Greg's own elation is palpable when he reminds us how privileged we
are to be a part of the IRNG project, how we have the opportunity
to recreate native California, one native plant, or rather one plant
community, at a time. |
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