- Thule | United States
With bike trailers, child bike seats, and smart storage, we make biking safer, easier, and way more fun Whether you're casting off at dawn, paddling through quiet waters, or catching waves at your favorite break — Thule has you covered
- Schoenoplectus acutus - Wikipedia
California's dense, ground-hugging tule fog is named for the plant, as are the tule elk, tule perch, and tule goose (a subspecies of the greater white-fronted goose) The giant garter snake (Thamnophis gigas) was historically closely associated with tule marshes in California's Central Valley
- TULE Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
The roots and seeds of tule, a reed that grows along shorelines and in the shallows, were eaten and the reeds themselves were used to make baskets, cord, sandals and clothing
- Plant Guide for hardstem bulrush (Schoenoplectus acutus)
Tule houses were common throughout many parts of California; the overlapping tule mats made homes well-insulated and rain-proof The walls and roofs were thatched with mats of tule or cattail and secured to the frame
- Tule and Its Many Gifts - Natural History Museum
Tule, a type of sedge, is a tall plant that grows in shallow waters at the edges of ponds, lakes, and marshes and grows throughout California Descendant communities throughout the state found tule useful for weaving its fibers into baskets, mats, thatched roofs, and dolls
- Tules - The Oregon Encyclopedia
In Oregon and much of the western United States, tule is the common name for two species of emergent plants that grow in shallow water of marshes, muddy shores, and lakes
- Tules: Weaving Baskets, Boats, Decoys, and Houses
Tule (pronounced too-lee) is one of those fascinating plants that has been a part of California Indian culture for millennia It is one of the most versatile plants in California, and multiple species grow in different environmental regions
- Hardstem Bulrush
Hardstem bulrush (Schoenoplectus acutus), known as tule in California, is a tall, perennial sedge native to freshwater marshes across North America It belongs to the Cyperaceae family and thrives in wetland environments, forming dense stands along shorelines
|