Summary[edit] Description: Deutsch: Früchte der Schallon-Scheinbeere (Gaultheria shallon). Die blauen Früchte sind essbar. Date: 21 August 2013. Source: Own work (Original text: eigene Aufnahme). Author: Peter Steinberg. Permission(Reusing this file): wird erteilt.
Description: English: Speaking of salal (Gaultheria shallon), here are the leaves and flowers of that plant. Native folks ate the berries fresh and dried, often formed into cakes. Date: 4 July 2011, 12:57. Source: Salal flower. Author: Leslie Seaton from Seattle, WA, USA. Camera location 47° 38′ 06.32″ N, 122° 17′ 41.37″ W: View all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap - Google Earth: 47.635089; -122.294826.
Summary[edit] Description: Gaultheria shallon—salal. "The berries are a source of food for wildlife and were once also eaten by coastal Native Americans, one group of whom, the Chinook, gave the plant its common name, Salal. The leaves are often used in flower arrangements."—Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center.Photographed at Regional Parks Botanic Garden in Tilden Park neat Berkeley, CA. Date: 12 August 2012, 10:13. Source: H20120812-5316--Gaultheria shallon--RPBG. Author: John Rusk from Berkeley, CA, United States of America. Camera location 37° 53′ 40.28″ N, 122° 14′ 38.25″ W: View all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap - Google Earth: 37.894522; -122.243959.
Gaultheria shallon—salal. Often forms dense mats as understory in redwood and Douglas fir forests. Ranges north from Santa Barbara County in the outer Coastal Ranges to Alaska. The specimen pictured bloomed in January during 2013, one or two months earlier than usual. Photographed at Regional Parks Botanic garden located in Tilden Regional Park near Berkeley, CA.
Summary[edit] Description: English: Native range of Salal (Gaultheria shallon) in Western North America, published by the USDA Forest Service. Date: Unknown dateUnknown date. Source: USDA Plants database. Author: United States Department of Agriculture.
Summary[edit] Description: English: Gaultheria hispidula (L.) Muhl. ex Bigelow - creeping snowberry. Date: 1995. Source: https://plants.usda.gov/java/largeImage?imageID=gahi2_001_ahp.tif. Author: Robert H. Mohlenbrock. USDA NRCS. 1995. Northeast wetland flora: Field office guide to plant species. Northeast National Technical Center, Chester. Provided by USDA NRCS Wetland Science Institute (WSI).
Summary[edit] Description: English: Plate 158-B. Gaultheria procumbens L. - wintergreen, teaberry. Date: 1918. Source: Wild Flowers of New York Part 2, Plate 158-B. University of the State of New York, State Museum, Albany. Author: Homer D. House, New York State Botanist. Walter B. Starr of the Matthews-Northrup Company, Buffalo, and Harold H. Snyder of the Zeese-Wilkinson Company, New York, photographers.
Summary[edit] Description: English: Gaultheria hispidula (L.) Muhl. ex Bigelow - creeping snowberry. Date: 1995. Source: https://plants.usda.gov/java/largeImage?imageID=gahi2_001_ahp.tif. Author: Robert H. Mohlenbrock. USDA NRCS. 1995. Northeast wetland flora: Field office guide to plant species. Northeast National Technical Center, Chester. Provided by USDA NRCS Wetland Science Institute (WSI).
Summary[edit] Description: Salal (Gaultheria shallon) You are free to use this image with the following photo credit: Peter Pearsall/U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Date: 26 March 2015, 14:49. Source: gaultheria_shallon1. Author: USFWS - Pacific Region.
Description: English: Location Redwood National Park Description Coastal redwood forests with virgin groves of ancient trees, including the world's tallest, thrive in the foggy and temperate climate. The park includes 40 miles of scenic Pacific coastline. Date: Unknown dateUnknown date. Source: http://www.nps.gov/storage/images/redw/Webpages/originals/376.jpg Gallery http://www.nps.gov/storage/images/redw/Webpages/index.html Transferred to Commons by Fæ. Author: National Park Service Digital Image Archives. Permission(Reusing this file): All photographs and images in this archive [National Park Service Digital Image Archives] are public domain images. You are free to use these images without a release from the National Park Service. However, the photographs and images must not be used to imply National Park Service endorsement of a product, service, organization or individual.