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Food: The leaves were used in cooking for flavoring. The fruits were eaten after being roasted in ashes, crushed, and eaten or pounded into small cakes.
Medicinal: Bay seeds were made into a poultice and applied to sores.
The leaves were cooked into a decoction for menstrual cramps. An infusion for a hot bath was used for rheumatism. A tea was a cure for neuralgia, cramps, headaches, and gastroenteritis.
Bay leaves were bound to the head for headaches and were bound to the abdomen for stomachaches. Wet bay branches were placed on a fire for a purification smoke where there had been a sickness.
The oil of the leaves was applied as a decoction for cooling the skin and as an insect repellant. Leaves were spread out on the floor of a Ki ch (home). When walked on, the leaves released fragrant oils which repelled fleas and lice.
The flowers were made into a poultice for swellings.
Construction: Laurel burls were carved into bowls.
Aromatic evergreen tree.
Blossoming December to May.
Bays can be found in canyons and valleys below 5000 ft, often in conjunction with oak trees; Chaparral, Foothill Woodlands, lower Yellow Pine Forest.
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