- Location
- Burke Mountain & Pavilion Lake, B.C.
popcan said:The low ground cover plants with the red berries that you see everywhere underfoot in the Cariboo is Kinnikinik, also known as Bear Berries. Some sources refer to kinnikinik as a combination of stuff that the Algonquin Indians put together, rather than the name of a single plant. Locally here the plant is called Kinnikinik.
Probably the leaves you see in their crops is clover, it's like candy to a grouse. The blue berries are from the Juniper bushes.
I mentioned that one grouse had a rose hip pod in him - I've never seen that before... usually rose hips are too big for a grouse.
Weird, I got one more grouse today, and after cleaning him (pull the legs method), all I had in my hand was the wings and the breasts, and when I went to clip a wing off, I noticed that the heart did not come out with the rest of the innards, and it was still beating!![]()
That's chickens for ya, I guess.
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What I call grouse berries is undoubtably properly called Kinnikinik berries, thanks for that info. I have a couple of books published by the B.C. government in the 70's I think which are entitiled " Food Plants Of The Interior Indians " and " Food Palnts Of The Coastal Indians " or some thing like that. They have a great description and great pictures, I will pull them out and see what they call my grouse berries.
But the berries and leaves to which I refer are the leaves and berries of the Kinnikinik. The odd thing was that the ruffie's crops were full of berries where the blues were full of leaves. Some times you see areas where the berries are sparse but this wasn't the case. Just a personnel preference I guess.
The birds were very big and I couldn't field clean them with the cut off the head method, stand on the wings and pull the legs. So I ripped the skin off the breast, using a pair of shearing scissors I cut along the bottom of the rib cage, snipped off the wings and pulled the back from the breast. The blues I probably should of plucked as they were big enough. A large ziplock bag and a bottle of water and you are good to go.
One nice thing about a .22 is that you don't end up spitting out pellets.
KTK