Yaana.eit – Cow Parsnip – Glacier Bay Ethnobotany

Yaana.eit – Cow Parsnip – Glacier Bay Ethnobotany

Natural Attr
Last Updated: July 2026

Type

Ethnobotanical Site

Best Season

Late May through early September - the main Glacier Bay visitor season, which also brackets the spring emergence of yaana.eit.

Busiest Season

July is the peak of the visitor season, which runs late-May through early-September.

Features

Cow parsnip (yaana.eit) plants - a notorious edible species of southeast Alaska with tender, peelable stalks and a sap that reacts with skin.

Overview

About This Attraction

Look for tall, broad-leaved stalks topped with white umbrella-shaped flower clusters pushing up through the spring greenery - this is yaana.eit, cow parsnip, one of the signature edible plants of southeast Alaska. For the Huna Tlingit, its emergence marks the end of a winter diet of dried fish and preserved berries: the tender peeled stalks, also called wild rhubarb or Indian celery, can be eaten raw or cooked. The chemistry demands respect, though - touching the unpeeled stalks can trigger painful skin reactions. Treat it as a look-and-learn stop on the Glacier Bay ethnobotany route, not a grab-and-taste one.

Quick Facts

Type

Ethnobotanical Site

Main Features

Cow parsnip (yaana.eit) plants - a notorious edible species of southeast Alaska with tender, peelable stalks and a sap that reacts with skin.

What You'll See

Cow parsnip growing in the plant communities of Glacier Bay: leafy stalks the Huna Tlingit peel and eat raw or cooked in spring, historically welcomed after a winter of dried fish and preserved berries.

What Makes It Special

A living intersection of botany and Huna Tlingit culture: yaana.eit is prized as a fresh spring green (wild rhubarb, Indian celery) yet chemically defended - the same stalk is food when peeled and a skin hazard when handled raw.

Best Time to Visit

Spring, when the fresh green stalks of yaana.eit first emerge - the season the Huna Tlingit traditionally look forward to after winter. The park's main visitor season runs late-May through early-September.

Safety Considerations

The hazard here is chemistry, not gravity: cow parsnip sap on unpeeled stalks causes painful skin reactions on contact. Look, do not touch. Standard Glacier Bay wildlife rules also apply - 100 yards from bears and wolves, 25 yards from other animals.

Visitor Tips

  • Do not touch the plant with bare skin - contact with unpeeled stalks can cause painful skin reactions.
  • Observe and photograph rather than harvest; this is an interpretive ethnobotany stop.
  • Learn the Tlingit name, yaana.eit - it is also known as wild rhubarb or Indian celery.
  • Keep at least 100 yards from bears and wolves and 25 yards from other wildlife while botanizing.
ℹ️ Data Sources
📖 National Park Service — Yaana.eit - Cow Parsnip - Glacier Bay Ethnobotany (official page) (checked 2026-07-12) 📖 National Park Service — Glacier Bay National Park & Preserve fees, hours & conditions (checked 2026-07-05) 📖 Climate data: Glacier Bay, Ak Us, 40 ft (NOAA 1991-2020 normals, station USC00503294) 📝 YourNPGuide Editorial

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