Sisters
make jewelry like the Indians did
Sisters Ashley
and Sarah Brendel like to make homemade arts and crafts. Now,
they've learned how to make cordage jewelry out of native
Missouri plants.
While doing that,
they became subjects for a magazine article. They are featured
in the current Missouri Conservation Department's kids quarterly
magazine, OutsideIn.
(To see the
complete OutsideIn article, you can go to the department's
website at: www.conservation.state.mo.us.
Then, click on to the Kids section of the website.)
Fourteen-year-old
Ashley said, "I'm a craftsy person. I want to use things
that you don't have to buy. With cordage jewelry, you can
get the materials in the wild."
Nine-year-old
Sarah said, "I wanted to try to make something the way
the Indians did it in the old days."
They got their
chance to learn to make the unique jewelry during a demonstration
by Bill Davit of Washington, Mo. Davit worked for 30 years
for the Missouri Botanical Garden.
Although he's
retired now, he still gives demonstrations on how Native Americans
made all sorts of rope-like products from plants and trees.
An estimated 1,000 different plants found in North America
were used by Indians to make cordage products.
Some were dainty
things like the cordage jewelry and bracelets the Brendel
girls like.
But, others were
for bigger jobs. One reference book said Indians made fishing
nets that were strong enough to hold huge fish, such as the
river sturgeon. Those fish grew up to 18-feet in length but
the Indians' nets held them.
The local girls
met Davit at a Missouri Botanical Garden demonstration day.
They had come with their father, Ron Brendel, who was there
to show off snakes, lizards and frogs. He's a member of the
St. Louis Herpetological Society.
Ashley said, "Once
we saw Mr. Davit's display, we spent all day there working
on different types of cordage.
"He showed
us all the steps, starting with how to chop off the ends of
plants to get at the fiber."
Some of the common
plants that make good cordage include swamp milkweed, dogbane
(also called Indian hemp), rattlesnake master and stinging
nettle. Of course, when you harvest stinging nettle, it's
good to wear gloves because the nettles do sting the skin.
Indians used plant
cordage for such things as fishing line and nets, carrying
bags, shoes and even clothing.
They also used
cordage to make decoration on clay pottery. The Indians would
make a pot and, then while the clay was still damp, they'd
press their cordage to add texture to the pot's exterior,
Davit said.
One thing that's
often important is to dampen the plant fibers before you start
to weave them. That way, the fiber is more flexible when you
weave it but when it dries the cord is stronger.
Ashley said she
made a woven wooden basket the same way, "I dipped the
sticks into water to soften them so it was easier to weave
them together. But, once they dried, their crooked shapes
were wedged tightly together," she said.
Davit said many
plants make good cordage after they turn brown late in the
season. But, he said the yucca plant's fibers are the finest
when harvested while the leaves are green. Yucca isn't a native
Missouri plant but many homeowners use the spiky plant for
lawn decoration.
"You pick
the leaves when they are green. Then, you boil the leaves
for four hours along with wood ashes. Then, using a blunt
knife or a spoon, you scrap off the remaining green part.
What's left makes fine fibers," he said.
Ashley and Sarah
don't limit their activities to arts and crafts.
Ashley now is
a 9th grader at Incarnate Word High School. She plays soccer
on a club team and basketball at school. She hopes to be a
4th grade teacher when she finishes college.
Sarah is in 5th
grade at Russell Elementary School. She also plays soccer
and basketball. She hopes to be a medical doctor when she
is grown.
They are the daughters
of Ron and Cathy Brendel.