It is the proper destiny of every
considerable stream in the west to become an irrigating
ditch. It would seem the streams are willing.
They go as far as they can, or dare, toward the tillable
lands in their own boulder fenced gullies—but
how much farther in the man-made waterways. It
is difficult to come into intimate relations with appropriated
waters; like very busy people they have no time to
reveal themselves. One needs to have known an
irrigating ditch when it was a brook, and to have
lived by it, to mark the morning and evening tone of
its crooning, rising and falling to the excess of
snow water; to have watched far across the valley,
south to the Eclipse and north to the Twisted Dyke,
the shining wall of the village water gate; to see
still blue herons stalking the little glinting weirs
across the field.
Perhaps to get into the mood of the
waterways one needs to have seen old Amos Judson asquat
on the headgate with his gun, guarding his water-right
toward the end of a dry summer. Amos owned the
half of Tule Creek and the other half pertained to
the neighboring Greenfields ranch. Years of a
“short water crop,” that is, when too little
snow fell on the high pine ridges, or, falling, melted
too early, Amos held that it took all the water that
came down to make his half, and maintained it with
a Winchester and a deadly aim. Jesus Montaña,
first proprietor of Greenfields,—you can
see at once that Judson had the racial advantage,—contesting
the right with him, walked into five of Judson’s
bullets and his eternal possessions on the same occasion.
That was the Homeric age of settlement and passed
into tradition. Twelve years later one of the
Clarks, holding Greenfields, not so very green by now,
shot one of the Judsons. Perhaps he hoped that
also might become classic, but the jury found for
manslaughter. It had the effect of discouraging
the Greenfields claim, but Amos used to sit on the
headgate just the same, as quaint and lone a figure
as the sandhill crane watching for water toads below
the Tule drop. Every subsequent owner of Greenfields
bought it with Amos in full view. The last of
these was Diedrick. Along in August of that year
came a week of low water. Judson’s ditch
failed and he went out with his rifle to learn why.
There on the headgate sat Diedrick’s frau with
a long-handled shovel across her lap and all the water
turned into Diedrick’s ditch; there she sat knitting
through the long sun, and the children brought out
her dinner. It was all up with Amos; he was too
much of a gentleman to fight a lady—that
was the way he expressed it. She was a very large
lady, and a long-handled shovel is no mean weapon.
The next year Judson and Diedrick put in a modern water
gauge and took the summer ebb in equal inches.
Some of the water-right difficulties are more squalid
than this, some more tragic; but unless you have known
them you cannot very well know what the water thinks
as it slips past the gardens and in the long slow
sweeps of the canal. You get that sense of brooding
from the confined and sober floods, not all at once
but by degrees, as one might become aware of a middle-aged
and serious neighbor who has had that in his life
to make him so. It is the repose of the completely
accepted instinct.
With the water runs a certain following
of thirsty herbs and shrubs. The willows go as
far as the stream goes, and a bit farther on the slightest
provocation. They will strike root in the leak
of a flume, or the dribble of an overfull bank, coaxing
the water beyond its appointed bounds. Given
a new waterway in a barren land, and in three years
the willows have fringed all its miles of banks; three
years more and they will touch tops across it.
It is perhaps due to the early usurpation of the willows
that so little else finds growing-room along the large
canals. The birch beginning far back in the cañon
tangles is more conservative; it is shy of man haunts
and needs to have the permanence of its drink assured.
It stops far short of the summer limit of waters,
and I have never known it to take up a position on
the banks beyond the ploughed lands. There is
something almost like premeditation in the avoidance
of cultivated tracts by certain plants of water borders.
The clematis, mingling its foliage secretly with its
host, comes down with the stream tangles to the village
fences, skips over to corners of little used pasture
lands and the plantations that spring up about waste
water pools; but never ventures a footing in the trail
of spade or plough; will not be persuaded to grow
in any garden plot. On the other hand, the horehound,
the common European species imported with the colonies,
hankers after hedgerows and snug little borders.
It is more widely distributed than many native species,
and may be always found along the ditches in the village
corners, where it is not appreciated.
The irrigating ditch is an impartial
distributer. It gathers all the alien weeds that
come west in garden and grass seeds and affords them
harbor in its banks. There one finds the European
mallow (Malva rotundifolia) spreading out to
the streets with the summer overflow, and every spring
a dandelion or two, brought in with the blue grass
seed, uncurls in the swardy soil. Farther than
either of these have come the lilies that the Chinese
coolies cultivate in adjacent mud holes for their
foodful bulbs. The seegoo establishes itself
very readily in swampy borders, and the white blossom
spikes among the arrow-pointed leaves are quite as
acceptable to the eye as any native species.
In the neighborhood of towns founded
by the Spanish Californians, whether this plant is
native to the locality or not, one can always find
aromatic clumps of yerba buena, the “good
herb” (Micromeria Douglassii). The
virtue of it as a febrifuge was taught to the mission
fathers by the neophytes, and wise old dames of my
acquaintance have worked astonishing cures with it
and the succulent yerba mansa. This last
is native to wet meadows and distinguished enough to
have a family all to itself.
Where the irrigating ditches are shallow
and a little neglected, they choke quickly with watercress
that multiplies about the lowest Sierra springs.
It is characteristic of the frequenters of water borders
near man haunts, that they are chiefly of the sorts
that are useful to man, as if they made their services
an excuse for the intrusion. The joint-grass
of soggy pastures produces edible, nut-flavored tubers,
called by the Indians taboose. The common
reed of the ultramontane marshes (here Phragmites
vulgaris), a very stately, whispering reed, light
and strong for shafts or arrows, affords sweet sap
and pith which makes a passable sugar.
It seems the secrets of plant powers
and influences yield themselves most readily to primitive
peoples, at least one never hears of the knowledge
coming from any other source. The Indian never
concerns himself, as the botanist and the poet, with
the plant’s appearances and relations, but with
what it can do for him. It can do much, but how
do you suppose he finds it out; what instincts or
accidents guide him? How does a cat know when
to eat catnip? Why do western bred cattle avoid
loco weed, and strangers eat it and go mad? One
might suppose that in a time of famine the Paiutes
digged wild parsnip in meadow corners and died from
eating it, and so learned to produce death swiftly
and at will. But how did they learn, repenting
in the last agony, that animal fat is the best antidote
for its virulence; and who taught them that the essence
of joint pine (Ephedra nevadensis), which looks
to have no juice in it of any sort, is efficacious
in stomachic disorders. But they so understand
and so use. One believes it to be a sort of instinct
atrophied by disuse in a complexer civilization.
I remember very well when I came first upon a wet
meadow of yerba mansa, not knowing its name
or use. It looked potent; the cool, shiny
leaves, the succulent, pink stems and fruity bloom.
A little touch, a hint, a word, and I should have
known what use to put them to. So I felt, unwilling
to leave it until we had come to an understanding.
So a musician might have felt in the presence of an
instrument known to be within his province, but beyond
his power. It was with the relieved sense of having
shaped a long surmise that I watched the Senora Romero
make a poultice of it for my burned hand.
On, down from the lower lakes to the
village weirs, the brown and golden disks of helenum
have beauty as a sufficient excuse for being.
The plants anchor out on tiny capes, or mid-stream
islets, with the nearly sessile radicle leaves submerged.
The flowers keep up a constant trepidation in time
with the hasty water beating at their stems, a quivering,
instinct with life, that seems always at the point
of breaking into flight; just as the babble of the
watercourses always approaches articulation but never
quite achieves it. Although of wide range the
helenum never makes itself common through profusion,
and may be looked for in the same places from year
to year. Another lake dweller that comes down
to the ploughed lands is the red columbine (C.
truncata). It requires no encouragement other
than shade, but grows too rank in the summer heats
and loses its wildwood grace. A common enough
orchid in these parts is the false lady’s slipper
(Epipactis gigantea), one that springs up by
any water where there is sufficient growth of other
sorts to give it countenance. It seems to thrive
best in an atmosphere of suffocation.
The middle Sierras fall off abruptly
eastward toward the high valleys. Peaks of the
fourteen thousand class, belted with sombre swathes
of pine, rise almost directly from the bench lands
with no foothill approaches. At the lower edge
of the bench or mesa the land falls away, often by
a fault, to the river hollows, and along the drop one
looks for springs or intermittent swampy swales.
Here the plant world resembles a little the lake gardens,
modified by altitude and the use the town folk put
it to for pasture. Here are cress, blue violets,
potentilla, and, in the damp of the willow fence-rows,
white false asphodels. I am sure we make too
free use of this word false in naming plants—false
mallow, false lupine, and the like. The asphodel
is at least no falsifier, but a true lily by all the
heaven-set marks, though small of flower and run mostly
to leaves, and should have a name that gives it credit
for growing up in such celestial semblance. Native
to the mesa meadows is a pale iris, gardens of it
acres wide, that in the spring season of full bloom
make an airy fluttering as of azure wings. Single
flowers are too thin and sketchy of outline to affect
the imagination, but the full fields have the misty
blue of mirage waters rolled across desert sand, and
quicken the senses to the anticipation of things ethereal.
A very poet’s flower, I thought; not fit for
gathering up, and proving a nuisance in the pastures,
therefore needing to be the more loved. And one
day I caught Winnenap’ drawing out from mid leaf
a fine strong fibre for making snares. The borders
of the iris fields are pure gold, nearly sessile buttercups
and a creeping-stemmed composite of a redder hue.
I am convinced that English-speaking children will
always have buttercups. If they do not light
upon the original companion of little frogs they will
take the next best and cherish it accordingly.
I find five unrelated species loved by that name,
and as many more and as inappropriately called cowslips.
By every mesa spring one may expect
to find a single shrub of the buckthorn, called of
old time Cascara sagrada—the sacred
bark. Up in the cañons, within the limit of the
rains, it seeks rather a stony slope, but in the dry
valleys is not found away from water borders.
In all the valleys and along the desert
edges of the west are considerable areas of soil sickly
with alkali-collecting pools, black and evil-smelling
like old blood. Very little grows hereabout but
thick-leaved pickle weed. Curiously enough, in
this stiff mud, along roadways where there is frequently
a little leakage from canals, grows the only western
representative of the true heliotropes (Heliotropium
curassavicum). It has flowers of faded white,
foliage of faded green, resembling the “live-for-ever”
of old gardens and graveyards, but even less attractive.
After so much schooling in the virtues of water-seeking
plants, one is not surprised to learn that its mucilaginous
sap has healing powers.
Last and inevitable resort of overflow
waters is the tulares, great wastes of reeds (Juncus)
in sickly, slow streams. The reeds, called tules,
are ghostly pale in winter, in summer deep poisonous-looking
green, the waters thick and brown; the reed beds breaking
into dingy pools, clumps of rotting willows, narrow
winding water lanes and sinking paths. The tules
grow inconceivably thick in places, standing man-high
above the water; cattle, no, not any fish nor fowl
can penetrate them. Old stalks succumb slowly;
the bed soil is quagmire, settling with the weight
as it fills and fills. Too slowly for counting
they raise little islands from the bog and reclaim
the land. The waters pushed out cut deeper channels,
gnaw off the edges of the solid earth.
The tulares are full of mystery and
malaria. That is why we have meant to explore
them and have never done so. It must be a happy
mystery. So you would think to hear the redwinged
blackbirds proclaim it clear March mornings.
Flocks of them, and every flock a myriad, shelter in
the dry, whispering stems. They make little arched
runways deep into the heart of the tule beds.
Miles across the valley one hears the clamor of their
high, keen flutings in the mating weather.
Wild fowl, quacking hordes of them,
nest in the tulares. Any day’s venture
will raise from open shallows the great blue heron
on his hollow wings. Chill evenings the mallard
drakes cry continually from the glassy pools, the
bittern’s hollow boom rolls along the water paths.
Strange and far-flown fowl drop down against the saffron,
autumn sky. All day wings beat above it hazy
with speed; long flights of cranes glimmer in the
twilight. By night one wakes to hear the clanging
geese go over. One wishes for, but gets no nearer
speech from those the reedy fens have swallowed up.
What they do there, how fare, what find, is the secret
of the tulares.