
I'm going to let you in on a little secret.
The plant in my header is a Sassafras tree. Yeup! By tarnation, it is. Well, with that out, I can sleep again at night.
Although it's mostly known for its fragrant wood, tea, root-beer flavoring, and potpourri, it is also a fairly strong and sturdy wood. Oh, and did I mention it's waterproof? The oil and sap which gives the wood its fragrant properties also makes the wood orange, springy, and, well, waterproof. In the Ozarks, this wood is harvested and whittled into small oars for kayaks. These oars are some of the best hand-made oars in the world.
Second only to the Osage Orange,
Maclura pomifera, the Sassafras also makes some historically accurate bows, throw sticks, and walking sticks. It wasn't as popular to use this wood, but evidence shows it was used as for sacred instruments because of its identifiable smell.
The leaves are distinguished from other trees by their smooth, shiny look accented by the glove-like shape. If you hold your hand up with your fingers tight against one another, you'll have the general no-lobed shape, if you spread your fingers out like Spock, you'll have the general glove shape. The tree itself is short,stout, dwarfy, and notched with crevices. But, the smell gives it away.
It can be found across most of the state in shaded to well-lit areas, whether fields, woods, or wetlands.
Sassafras is also one of my favorite trees. ;)
Scientific name:
Sassafras albidum