Historias: Stories of El Paso - Virtual Exhibition

Historias: Stories of El Paso - Virtual Exhibition

Historias: Stories of El Paso A virtual exhibition curated by our community Courtesy of: Ligia A. Arguilez Title: Gobernadora in the the Borderland Historia type: Photograph & Essay —Ingrid Leyva photo / Ligia A. Arguilez text Gobernadora, guamis, or creosote bush, is a common presence in our desert. It is commonly found at the medicinal herb stands of the Ciudad Juárez mercado. If you’re lucky, a man might be selling fresh bundles of it in the plaza for five pesos. You might buy one and bring it up to your nose to smell it. If you do, you will smell the scent of home, of the coming rain, your mother boiling it on the stove for her té, or making medicine for your sore and smelly feet. You might remember your abuela blessing you with its branches dipped in water, or the way you desperately missed the smell of desert rain when you moved away from here. Plants like this one have a way of tying you to this place in ways you don’t always notice until you leave. Larrea tridentata— la gobernadora— is our quintessential fronteriza desert plant. Común y corriente, as some call this dominant shrub, it nonetheless has a fascinating and ancient history in these borderlands deserts we call home. It is this shrub’s smell that is often referred to as the scent of desert rain, something that people from this area experience in very nostalgic ways that often ties them to memories of place and home. It has been loved as the desert’s most powerful medicine by indigenous and Mexican communities over time, and reviled by others as an invader of profitable grasslands. The creosote bush is a master survivor of the Chihuahuan, Sonoran, and Mojave deserts of North America and is a dominant or co-dominant plant in all three of these deserts. Because of this perennial shrub’s many adaptations to aridity it is able to survive without water for up to two years, flourishing in the hottest and driest environments of this continent. There are individual creosote bushes which are considered to be some of the oldest living things on the planet. These shrubs are able to clone themselves and and live for hundreds or sometimes thousands of years. The Tohono O’odham of Arizona and Sonora, call it greasewood or shegoi, and identify it as the first plant made by Earth Maker in their origin story. Gary Nabhan recounts a version of this in his book Gathering the Desert: “As darkness washed up against itself, a spirit grew inside it: Earth Maker. Earth Maker took from his breast the soil stuck to it, and he began to flatten this soil like a tortilla in the palm of his hand. He shaped this mound of earth, and from it, the first thing grew: the greasewood.

Area: Central / Downtown

Source: Ligia A. Arguilez

Uploaded by: El Paso Museum of History

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

Report this entry

Choose the most important reason for this report

Your name

Your email address

Optional detail

Thank you for your report

More from the same community-collection

DIGIE

The digital wall construction continues during the month of ...

DIGIE

The digital wall construction continues during the month of ...

DIGIE

The digital wall construction continues during the month of ...

DIGIE

The digital wall construction continues during the month of ...

DIGIE

The digital wall construction continues during the month of ...

DIGIE

The digital wall construction continues during the month of ...

Victoria Sinclair

Victoria Sinclair - Miss El Paso 2014.

Old El Paso at El Paso Exploreum

Children learn about El Paso in the early 1880s at the general ...

Pony Express at El Paso Exploreum

A young boy "rides' a pony in Old El Paso at El Paso Exploreum ...

El Paso Exploreum Children's Museum Opens in El Paso

The city's first children's museum opened on Jan. 28, 2013. The ...

The Six-Footers - 1914

President Taft's bodyguards, The Six-footers, who accompanied ...

El Paso Police Department - 1918

Left to right: Dr. J.A. Hardy, Sgt. J.D. Thompson, Capt. S.H. ...

El Paso Police Department Motorcycle detail - 1928

Left to Right: H.J. Williams, Harold Green, E.W. Cockran, Leo ...

El Paso Police Detectives - 1930s

Front row left to right: ?, Maywood Brandon (Drennan), Callie ...

We have LIght - 1948

15 APR 1948 - MAKES A DIFFERENCE - City, police, and El Paso ...

El Paso Police Department Women's Auxiliary Police - 1951 - 1953

El Paso Police Department Jail Matrons - 1951 - 1953 Bottom Row ...

Border Closed JFK killed 1963

Officer Bob LaFrance standing guard

El Paso Police officer Juan Escontrias - 20s

Throughout the 1920s, El Paso's lawmen were frequently the ...

Directing traffic in front of Hotel Orndoff - 1909

El Paso police officer using hand-operated traffic signals ...

DIGIE

December 20, 2014 - DIGIE under construction.

DIGIE

December 20, 2014 - DIGIE under construction.

DIGIE

December 20, 2014 - DIGIE under construction.

DIGIE

December 20, 2014 - DIGIE under construction.

home.search_collection