Field Mint (Mentha arvensis) and Black-eyed Susan (Rudbeckia hirta)
Golden Currant - Ribes odoratum

Golden Currant Shrub with lobed, coarsely toothed leaves that forms thickets reaching 5 feet tall. Yellow flowers provide its name, though the fruit produced ripens to purple-black in June. Fruits were harvested by Plains Indians for use in preparing pemmican, a winter staple food which combined fruit, meat (usually bison, elk, or deer) and fat. Also known as “buffalo currant” for this reason. The dark juice of crushed currant skins mixed with clay was used as decorative body paint by some tribes.

Page Last Updated: Saturday, April 29, 2006 3:29 PM
Web Author: Jim Pisarowicz