Arcturus Primitive Skills Institute

cattail

Today I got to thinking about the many uses of Cattail. I have been to many survival schools and at one of them, the survival instructor pulled up a Cattail, peeled off the long leaves and had us eat the raw stalk. I actually did not mind the taste; I put some salt on my second helping of Cattail and it reminded me of celery. There is a reason why Cattail is known as “nature’s supermarket.” Cattail can be found in wetland areas, along streams, ponds, or even in ditches or drainage areas. I literally find it growing in the ditch in front of my house. In spring, eat the young shoots while they are edible, like I once did. The yellow pollen from the head can be used as flour. The inner part of the root can be chopped up, dried and ground up into flour as well. Mash up the root and make a poultice out of it for cuts, stings, burns and wounds. The stems contain a sap that is good for toothache and burns. Put on a sunburn as the sap has pain-killing properties. You can use the long leaves of the plants to make baskets or sleeping mats. Try braiding the leaves to make cordage. Use the fluff in a t-shirt as a type of absorbant bandage for heavy bleeding, or you could fashion it into a diaper. Cattail also makes a fine tinder that falls under the category of a flash tinder. To make good tinder, harvest a few cattail heads with the stalks attached, tie them together and hang from the rafters and let them air dry for 2-3 weeks. The dried cattail stalk has been used as a hand drill when making primitive fire or as a spindle for a bow drill fire. You can transport fire by soaking a cattail head in fat or oil, then lighting it. This fire will burn for about 6 hours. You can also use it this way as a torch. Arrow shafts can be made from dried cattail stalks. You can even build a wigwam type shelter from cattails. Come on out to Arcturus Primitive Skills Institute and I will show you these and other uses for this versatile plant. See you in the wild. -Art