posted 2 years ago
Greetings! I wanna find out what a true ethnobotany garden looks like in term of need or other types of human use? Ethnobotany in general's about plants being used for food, medicine, cordage and stuff all peoples used for centuries on the earth. I'm concentrating on Native Americans and early European settlers of the Midwest beginning in my community and region. Any idea what the ethnobotany of the early settlers look like back then? Indigenous ethnobotany began with wild plants and then cultivated ones being introduced from one country to another. We've seen some medicine wheel gardens, veggie gardens and the rest of that, but do a true ethnobotany garden look like authentically nd culturally? I'm trying to make mine as authentic as it can be. If any of you have some classic examples, please let me know so this topic be more edifying to others who come to this forum. Thanks!