Pacific NW Indigenous Plants

Crop Database

24 plants and materials used by the peoples of the Salish Sea — organized by category, season, and Farmcraft challenge relevance.

Camas

Camassia quamash

1
Food

Season: Late spring / early summer

Staple bulb food of the Pacific NW. Slow-roasted in earth ovens for 24-48 hours, yielding sweet, calorie-dense cakes. Cultivated through fire management of prairies. The 'breadbasket' of Coast Salish, Nisqually, and Puyallup peoples.

TEK8: D8 Gather, D6 Garden

MC Build: Blue orchids or cornflowers on coarse dirt. Campfire blocks nearby for earth ovens. Signs explain the roasting process.

Wapato

Sagittaria latifolia

1
Food

Season: Autumn through early winter

Aquatic tuber harvested from wetlands. Women waded into cold water, loosening tubers with their feet. Called 'Indian potato' — a staple starch that could be dried and stored. Puyallup River wetlands were prime habitat.

TEK8: D8 Gather, D20 Journey

MC Build: Lily pads and seagrass in shallow water. Potatoes in adjacent farmland. Waterlogged stairs for wading areas.

Salal

Gaultheria shallon

1
FoodMedicine

Season: Mid to late summer

The most important fruit of coastal peoples. Dark purple berries pressed into dried cakes for winter storage — essentially Indigenous fruit leather. Grows abundantly in PNW forest understory. Also used medicinally as appetite suppressant.

TEK8: D8 Gather

MC Build: Sweet berry bushes under spruce/dark oak canopy. Brown carpet for dried fruit cakes on drying racks.

Huckleberry

Vaccinium spp.

1
Food

Season: Late summer (mountain) / mid-summer (lowland)

Mountain and lowland varieties. Families traveled to high-elevation berry fields every summer — gathering grounds managed through controlled burning. Cannot be commercially farmed; they require the forest. Symbol of wild food sovereignty.

TEK8: D8 Gather, D20 Journey

MC Build: Sweet berry bushes at higher elevations. Create mountain berry field areas with varying leaf canopy overhead.

Salmonberry

Rubus spectabilis

1
Food

Season: Early to mid-summer

One of the first berries to ripen each year. Eaten fresh — too delicate to dry. Pink-orange berries with a tart, salmon-roe-like flavor. Young shoots eaten like asparagus in spring. Indicator plant: when salmonberries ripen, salmon are running.

TEK8: D8 Gather

MC Build: Sweet berry bushes near water sources. Use orange-tinted blocks nearby to suggest the salmon-colored fruit.

Thimbleberry

Rubus parviflorus

1
Food

Season: Mid to late summer

Large, soft red berries that cannot be transported (too fragile). Eaten fresh at the gathering site or dried into cakes. The large maple-shaped leaves were used as containers, wrapping material, and toilet paper. A trail-side food.

TEK8: D8 Gather

MC Build: Sweet berry bushes along forest paths. Use large fern blocks and leaf blocks nearby to suggest the broad leaves.

Stinging Nettles

Urtica dioica

12
FoodFiber/TextileMedicine

Season: Young shoots: spring / Fiber: autumn stalks

Triple-use powerhouse. Spring greens higher in iron than spinach. Bast fiber in stems stronger than cotton. Medicinal tea for joint pain and allergies. One of the first spring foods — a signal that winter is over.

TEK8: D8 Gather, D4 Craft, D6 Garden

MC Build: Ferns in rows for nettle fields. Cauldrons for processing. Item frames with string for fiber stages. Brewing stands for tea.

Fiddlehead Ferns

Various species (Matteuccia, Polystichum)

1
Food

Season: Early spring

Young coiled fronds of sword ferns and lady ferns. Rich in omega-3 fatty acids. Traditional first food signaling the start of gathering season. Found in moist forests surrounding Tacoma. Brief harvest window.

TEK8: D8 Gather

MC Build: Fern blocks in shaded, moist areas near water. Place in clusters under dense tree canopy.

Oregon Grape

Mahonia aquifolium

1
FoodMedicine

Season: Berries: late summer / Root: year-round

Tart blue berries used in pemmican and preserves. Bright yellow root bark is a powerful antimicrobial medicine (contains berberine). State flower of Oregon. Inner bark yields yellow dye. Grows in forest understory across the PNW.

TEK8: D8 Gather, D4 Craft

MC Build: Use blue orchids or cornflowers with oak leaf blocks overhead. Yellow wool or terracotta nearby for dye reference.

Elderberry

Sambucus cerulea / S. racemosa

1
FoodMedicine

Season: Late summer / early autumn

Blue elderberry (S. cerulea) berries eaten cooked or dried — raw berries are mildly toxic. Red elderberry (S. racemosa) berries only eaten after steaming/drying. Flowers used for tea. Branches are naturally hollow — used for pipes, flutes, and blowguns.

TEK8: D8 Gather, D12 Music

MC Build: Dark oak saplings with blue/purple wool dots for berries. Flower pots with allium for elderflower.

Wild Onion

Allium cernuum

1
Food

Season: Spring through early summer

Nodding onion found in meadows and rocky slopes. Used as flavoring and vegetable. Bulbs eaten raw, cooked, or dried for winter storage. Often found growing alongside camas in managed prairies.

TEK8: D8 Gather, D6 Garden

MC Build: Allium flowers in grassland areas. Place on coarse dirt alongside camas (cornflower) areas.

Kinnikinnick

Arctostaphylos uva-ursi

1
FoodMedicine

Season: Berries: autumn / Leaves: year-round

Low-growing evergreen groundcover. Mealy red berries eaten fresh or cooked with grease. Leaves dried and smoked (traditional tobacco blend component). Medicinal tea for urinary tract. The name means 'smoking mixture' in Algonquian languages.

TEK8: D8 Gather, D12 Music

MC Build: Red carpet or red mushrooms at ground level. Fern blocks and moss for groundcover effect.

Western Red Cedar Bark

Thuja plicata

23
Fiber/TextileBuildingMedicine

Season: Late spring / early summer (bark harvest)

The 'tree of life.' Inner bark processed into fiber for rain capes, hats, skirts, rope, mats, baskets, baby cradles. Outer bark used for roofing. Naturally water-resistant and antimicrobial. Trees survive bark harvest — culturally modified trees stand for centuries.

TEK8: D4 Craft, D8 Gather

MC Build: Stripped spruce logs showing harvest marks. Brown carpet for bark strips. Cauldrons for soaking. Anvils for beating.

Cattail / Tule

Typha latifolia / Schoenoplectus acutus

123
Fiber/TextileBuildingFood

Season: Summer through autumn

Wetland plants providing mats for walls, floors, and rain coverings. Cattail fluff for insulation, wound dressing, and diapers. Tule woven into mats for portable shelters. Cattail roots and pollen edible. Grows abundantly in Puyallup River delta.

TEK8: D4 Craft, D8 Gather

MC Build: Sugar cane in shallow water for cattails. Green/brown carpet for woven mats. Build mat shelters nearby.

Mountain Goat Wool

Oreamnos americanus

2
Fiber/Textile

Season: Spring (shedding season)

Wool gathered from bushes and rocks where mountain goats shed, or from hunted animals. Spun and woven into the famous Salish blankets — used as currency, ceremonial regalia, and insulation. Mixed with fireweed fluff and dog wool.

TEK8: D4 Craft, D8 Gather

MC Build: White wolves/dogs on elevated terrain. White wool blocks in weaving area. Loom structure from fences and string.

Fireweed

Chamerion angustifolium

2
Fiber/TextileFoodMedicine

Season: Late summer (fiber/seeds) / Spring (shoots)

Cotton-like seed fluff mixed with mountain goat wool for weaving bulk. Young shoots eaten as spring greens. Leaves dried for tea. First plant to recolonize burned areas — hence the name. A symbol of resilience and regeneration.

TEK8: D4 Craft, D8 Gather

MC Build: Pink tulips or alliums in open areas. White wool bits on the ground for seed fluff. Place near burned/dark areas.

Western Red Cedar

Thuja plicata

3
BuildingFiber/Textile

Season: Year-round (timber harvest)

The primary structural material of PNW architecture. Longhouse posts and planks, canoes, totem poles, bent-wood boxes. Naturally rot-resistant due to thujaplicin. Splits cleanly along the grain — can be worked without metal tools. Lives 1,000+ years.

TEK8: D4 Craft, D6 Garden, D8 Gather

MC Build: Spruce logs as main structural material. Stripped spruce for worked timber. Use for longhouse posts, planks, and beams.

Douglas Fir

Pseudotsuga menziesii

3
Building

Season: Year-round (timber harvest)

The structural powerhouse of PNW forests. Highest strength-to-weight ratio of commercial timber species. Used for ridge poles, structural beams, fish traps. Today: #1 framing lumber in North America, glulam beams, CLT panels. Grows to 250+ ft, lives 500-1,000 years.

TEK8: D4 Craft, D8 Gather

MC Build: Dark oak logs for heavy structural elements. Use as ridge beams in longhouse builds. Taller than spruce = larger builds.

Big-Leaf Maple

Acer macrophyllum

3
BuildingFood

Season: Year-round (wood) / Spring (sap, flowers)

Dense hardwood used for paddles, tools, bowls, and carved items. Sap tapped for syrup (less sweet than sugar maple). Flowers edible. Moss-draped trees are iconic PNW canopy. Inner bark dried and ground for emergency flour.

TEK8: D4 Craft

MC Build: Oak or birch logs for hardwood elements. Place with vine blocks for the mossy appearance. Use for tool racks and furniture.

Red Alder

Alnus rubra

3
BuildingFoodMedicine

Season: Year-round

Fast-growing nitrogen-fixing tree. Wood used for smoking fish (gives salmon its distinctive flavor), carving, and fuel. Bark yields red dye and is a traditional medicine. First colonizer of disturbed ground — the 'healer' tree of the forest. Improves soil for other species.

TEK8: D4 Craft, D6 Garden

MC Build: Birch logs and birch planks for the pale wood. Place campfires nearby (fish smoking). Red concrete powder for bark dye.

Big Mama Healing Tea Herbs

Various species

1
MedicineFood

Season: Species-dependent

A social enterprise blend of locally grown medicinal herbs: chamomile, lemon balm, peppermint, lavender, echinacea, and others. Part of the 100-to-400 STEAM pipeline — $100 in seeds becomes $400 in product. Cooperative economics rooted in plant medicine.

TEK8: D2 Coin, D6 Garden, D4 Craft

MC Build: Flower garden area with various flowers (dandelion, poppy, cornflower, lily). Brewing stands for tea processing. Chests for packaging.

Devil's Club

Oplopanax horridus

1
Medicine

Season: Spring (shoots) / Autumn (bark)

Powerful medicinal plant covered in spines. Inner bark used for diabetes management, respiratory illness, and spiritual protection. Related to ginseng. Considered sacred — harvesting requires protocol and prayer. Found in old-growth forest understory.

TEK8: D8 Gather, D20 Journey

MC Build: Cactus blocks in forest shade (unusual placement = sacred plant). Signs explaining harvesting protocols. Place away from main path.

Yarrow

Achillea millefolium

1
Medicine

Season: Summer (flowers and leaves)

Universal wound herb — stops bleeding, prevents infection. Tea for colds, fevers, and digestive issues. Poultice for bruises and sprains. Grows wild in meadows and roadsides. Named for Achilles, who is said to have used it to treat soldiers' wounds.

TEK8: D8 Gather

MC Build: White tulips or oxeye daisies in meadow areas. Place near a first-aid station or herbalist hut.

Oregon Grape Root

Mahonia aquifolium (root)

1
Medicine

Season: Year-round (root harvest)

Bright yellow root bark is one of the most powerful antimicrobial medicines in the PNW pharmacopoeia. Contains berberine — effective against bacterial and fungal infections. Used as eyewash, wound wash, and internal medicine. Also yields a brilliant yellow dye.

TEK8: D8 Gather, D4 Craft

MC Build: Same plant as Oregon Grape (food). Dig area nearby showing root harvest. Yellow terracotta for dye products.

Challenge Legend

1 Challenge 1: Crops (Food)
2 Challenge 2: Textiles (Fiber)
3 Challenge 3: Shelter (Building)