Nature Notes From Crater Lake
Volume 29, 1998
Huckleberries
By Steve Mark
Delicious wild fruit has never been
cited as the primary, or even a secondary, reason for why people come to
Crater Lake. Few of them know that the park contains four species of
huckleberries, and are aware of the lone exception to rules prohibiting
collection of plant material in Crater Lake National Park. Each person
is allowed one quart of huckleberries per day for personal use, largely
because picking does not appear to interfere with perpetuating the host
shrub. Bears will forage for ripe huckleberries (as I found out one
afternoon in the Sky Lakes Wilderness south of Crater Lake), but this
inclination has yet to bring them into conflict with human visitors to
the park.
All four huckleberry species are in the
genus Vaccinium, which belongs to the Ericaceae (heath)
family. This group of plants is distributed worldwide and contains
roughly 3,300 species in 103 genera. Most thrive, as the family name
suggests, on uncultivated land with inferior drainage. This is usually
where the soil is poor, often coarse, and sometimes acidic.
The swamp huckleberry, V.
occidentale, likes the western border of the park where it forms
dense thickets along streams. It is also known as the westernbog
blueberry, since western North American "huckleberries" are really
blueberries. (True huckleberries are classed in the genus
Gaylussachia, a group much more prevalent in Europe than in the
United States). In any event, this plant yields tasty bluish-black
berries which usually ripen by early August. They can be had in easily
accessible areas such as Boundary Spring, Sphagnum Bog, and Red Blanket
Creek.
Bluish-black berries can also be seen
on the dwarf or mat huckleberry, V. caespitosum. These shrubs are
less than a foot high, with most only a few inches off the ground. They
are found in many places around the park, but are probably most evident
in the Castle Crest Wildflower Garden, Vidae Falls, Annie Spring, and
Wheeler Creek.
The broom huckleberry, V. scoparium,
is also known as grouseberry. Some North American Indian groups call it
fireberry due to the color of the fruits. This plant possesses bright
red berries which are edible and sweet, though usually too small for
picking in any quantity. Being the most drought-tolerant species in the
genus, it is abundant in lodgepole (Pinus contorta) and mountain
hemlock
(Tsuga mertensiana) forests throughout the park.
What is certain to be the most
sought-after member of the genus,
V. membranaceum, goes by several common names. It is variously known
as the big, thinleaf, or mountain huckleberry, as well as Ewam to
speakers of the Klamath language. This shrub, which is between two and
five feet in height, appears as widely branched bushes containing thin
leaves that usually measure over an inch long. Its berries are reddish-
to purplish-black when they ripen during the first half of August. There
are patches southwest of Park Headquarters, but most pickers go to an
old burn area on Huckleberry Mountain (Ewamcan in Klamath) in the
Rogue River National Forest where more sunlight has enhanced flowering
and fruiting.
|
Upper left:
Western blueberry
(Swamp huckleberry),
Vaccinium occidentale.
Upper right:
Big whortleberry
(Thinleaf huckleberry),
V. membranaceum.
Lower left:
Dwarf blueberry
(Mat huckleberry),
V. caespitosum.
Lower right:
Grouse whortleberry
(Broom hucklebery),
V. scoparium.
Drawings by Charles F. Yocum,
Shrubs of Crater Lake,
Crater Lake: Crater Lake Natural History Association, 1954,
p. 52. |
A visit to Huckleberry Mountain can be
combined with a trip to see Crater Lake because it is located less than
three miles west of the park boundary. Follow posted signs from the
snowpark located on Highway 62 to a primitive campground situated within
the huckleberry patches. The bushes cover a relatively broad area, so
you will have plenty of options for where to spend a couple of hours
picking berries. After a couple of afternoons there last August, I
remembered that Henry David Thoreau once quoted Pliny in describing
huckleberries, In minimis Natura praestat,
Nature excels in the least things. Anyone who has tasted the fruit from
Huckleberry Mountain will agree, especially if they are fortunate enough
to savor it in pie, jam, or pancakes!
The author would like to thank Joy
Mastrogiuseppe for reviewing this article and her suggestions.
Steve Mark has worked as park
historian at Crater Lake and Oregon Caves since 1988.

The Watchman Lookout as depicted in the July 1933
Nature Notes from Crater Lake.