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Mesquite
medicine
When
I was growing up in the early 60s, my friends and I
used to ride our bikes in the empty lots around the
Heights. Back in those days, since there were few homes
already built, there were plenty of uncleared lots with
thick brush and large mesquite trees. We had some really
neat bike trails upon which to race and have fun. As
long as we stayed on the paths, we were fine. However,
if we lost control of our two-wheelers, and veered off-track,
we were in trouble. Inevitably, we would careen into
a heavily-armed mesquite branch, a clepe (Ziziphus obtusifolia),
or a costilla (Condalia spathulata), any of which would
oblige us with a flat tire. We learned the hard way
to be more careful around curves in the trails.
The older mesquite trees exude an amber resin
or sap that deposits itself along their twisted trunks.
My buddies and I would collect it and eat it. It didn't
taste bad per se, but then it really didn't taste like
much either. We called it "honey-mama." It
made our teeth stick together, yet had no sweetness
to it at all. The ripe, succulent bean-pods, on the
other hand, were quite tasty. We would pick them at
their peak and enjoy them with gusto. They were like
candy from the monte.
A friend once related to me how an old timer
who raised goats used to pay him 50¢ for every
large paper grocery sack full of mesquite bean pods.
When the pods were abundant he could fill sacks easily
and earn several dollars in a day. That was pretty good
money for a kid, considering that a dollar could get
you six delicious hamburgers at the Glass Kitchen. A
big cherry-coke was only 10¢, and the best banana
splits were only 35¢ at Lafon's Drug Store. Those
were the days. Oh well.
Someone once told me that the best herb to reduce
a man's panza was raíz de mezquite. If you have
ever tried to dig up a mesquite with a talache, then
you know how that remedy works. It has nothing to do
with brewing a tea. Mesquite seems to have at least
six feet of root depth for every foot of height. During
our recent incredibly severe drought, with record-setting
temperatures, the mesquite trees were seemingly unaffected.
In fact, this year most mesquites produced bumper-crops
of bean pods than in a normal year. It is during tough
times as these that the mesquite and prickly-pear cactus
can keep wildlife and livestock from starving to death.
To the botanist, the mesquite is known as Prosopis glandulosa,
or P. juliflora. It is a member of the bean or legume
family. Some of its other common names include honey
mesquite, mezquite, mizquitl, algarrobo, huizache mexicano,
pechita, chachaca, chúcata, and tahí.
If you are from around these parts, chances are you
have cooked over a mesquite-wood fire and maybe you
think that is about all mesquite is good for. For most
people, mesquite means leña, or fire wood, but
that is not all. A tea made from the sap, leaves, pods,
or bark is used as an antiseptic and astringent, and
is used to treat a number of ailments including diarrhea,
dysentery, colitis, dyspepsia, hemorrhoids, urinary
tract infections, kidney stones, excess menstrual bleeding,
stomach ulcers, inflammation of the digestive tract,
sore throats, skin sores, wounds, and abrasions. It
is also popularly used to treat inflammation of the
eyes, conjunctivitis, and gum disease. In vitro, the
mesquite has shown anti-bacterial and anti-fungal activity
against 32 different strains of bacteria and fungi.
In rural Mexico and South Texas, an eye wash is made
from the leaves to treat the eyes of sheep and goats.
The bean pods are very nutritious, containing as much
as 13% protein (the seeds can contain as much as 60%
protein with the seed coat removed), and 36% sucrose.
They are also rich in calcium, iron, nine amino acids,
eight fatty acids, three cholesterol-lowering phytosterols,
two protective bio-flavonoids, complex carbohydrates,
and dietary fiber. This is a definite health-food. Native
American people, in what is now the US and Mexico, relied
greatly on the crops of mesquite beans. They would grind
them into a nutritious meal or flour. Some indigenous
people still continue to do so today.
The legumes are nitrogen-fixers, which means
they capture atmospheric nitrogen and increase soil
nitrogen. Since the mesquite is a legume, it also fixes
atmospheric nitrogen for its own needs and leaves plenty
to share with other non-legume species that live under
its canopy or nearby. One of the primary ways the mesquite
accomplishes this is through a symbiotic relationship
with root-dwelling Rhizobia bacteria that perform the
actual nitrogen fixing in root nodules along the tree's
root system. Some of the nodules on older specimens
are actually gargantuan in size. This is one reason
a mesquite tree always looks so fertile and healthy
-- it actually is! Due to its deep, extensive root system,
the mesquite also brings up deep nutrients and deposits
them in the top soil in the form of litter, where shallower-rooted
species, particularly the grasses, can appropriate the
nutrients. You will always find the greenest grasses
and brush closest to the mesquites.
The mesquite is one of nature's blessings to the desert.
It is readily and abundantly available throughout the
Southwestern US and Mexico. You don't have to go very
far around here to find a mesquite. It needs no attention
whatsoever to thrive. An older specimen will provide
shade and branches for young kids to climb on and enjoy.
If you are fortunate enough to have a large tree in
your yard, hold on to it. It will probably be around
for many generations to come.
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