Salal
Gaultheria shallon
Appearance
Range & Habitat
REciprocal relationships
Salal is an evergreen plant, so it keeps its beautiful green leaves all year. It spreads by underground stems and roots. Deer and elk will eat the stems of these plants. In the summer, pinkish blossoms appear, and in the fall, the plant produces large, dark red to dark purple berries. Birds and other animals, including bears, eat the branches and berries, and spread seeds through their stool. Salal cover provides shelter for small animals and is a place of rest and bedding for elk and deer.
Salal is used as a sweetener by many, including the Musqueam First Nation. The Musquam will eat these berries when ripe, or dry and store them for future use. For the Shíshálh First Nation, salal berries’ natural pectin could hold together the berries in berry cake. The berries can also be turned into fruit leathers by blending the berries until smooth, spreading them flat in a pan, and drying them.