DCHP-3

wild celery

DCHP-1 (pre-1967)

Entry from the DCHP-1 (pre-1967)

This entry may contain outdated or offensive information, terms, and examples.

1

an aquatic plant, Vallisneria spiralis, having long, ribbonlike leaves; tape grass.

Quotations

1853
The canvass-back . . . feeds upon the roots of . . . a species of "tape-grass" .. . botanically called "Valisneria," after the Italian botanist, Antonio Valisneri. . . . Its roots are white and succulent, and bear some resemblance to celery--hence the plant is known among duck-hunters as "wild celery."
1957
Groups of Indian women gather berries; also wild celery, the roots of rushes, and the inner bark of the poplar--all which they eat raw
1962
Greedily they suck up the wild celery, water lilies and swamp-grass roots.
2

See 1925 quote.

Quotations

1925
WILD CELERY. Lomatium utriculatum, Nutt. In the very early spring, in fact as soon as the snow is off the ground, the young sprouts . . . are sought for amongst the broken rocks on hillsides which constitute the natural habitat of this plant. . . . It is a good imitation of the cultivated Celery, but becomes rather pungent as it grows old.