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CLIFFROSE
- Rose Family
Cowania
mexicana
This shaggy, twisty shrub or tree is often only 6 to 8 feet tall, but at
the canyon rim it grows to 18 feet at least. Prominent large specimens
occur along the Hermit Road (West Rim Drive) and along Highway 64 east.
The champion tree was close to Mather Point: 100 yards east of the East
Rim Drive junction, on the south side of the road just before the paved
turnout. Measurements of that fine specimen were: height, 18 feet; trunk
circumference, 33 inches breast high, average spread of branches, 18 feet.
Unfortunately, the tree was burnt to the ground during a not-so-controlled
burn in summer of 2004. Most cliffrose trunks are about 4 to 8 inches in
diameter with reddish brown bark. The Navajo Indians historically used
the bark for cradle linings--it is very absorbent and unlike juniper bark,
it causes no rash. The stout branches, when straight, were used for arrows.
Medicinally, the cliffrose is an emetic, good for stomach problems and
nausea. The plant is evergreen. |