Paint; body paint, normal paint, etc.
Yes, certain tribes did.
The cranberries were red and as I plopped them in my mouth the sweet juice came flowing out.
Iguanas can eat cranberries only in occasion though (about once or twice a week). My green iguana loves cranberries, I use them as treats to train her.
ovenize
Information on nutrition facts for cranberries are only available by serving size, which is a cup of cranberries. One cup of cranberries only has four grams of sugar.
Depends on how you use them, sweetened cranberries could be a bit of a problem but lightly or raw may be different.
Use enough hot water to cover the cranberries. No measurement needed. In about 15-20 minutes they will absorb all they need, and you can drain the water off. Then measure as you would fresh cranberries.
Some people use strawberry Jell-O mix with fruit jam. Some use wine, cranberries, or plain red food coloring.
Cranberries grow on long-running vines in acidic, sandy bogs and marshes, mostly in the northeast United States, but also in Wisconsin and the Pacific Northwest. Native American used crushed cranberries to preserve food throughout the winter. They also used cranberries as medicine and dye. In 1620, English settlers at Plymouth, Massachusetts, learned to use cranberries from the Native Americans. By 1683, they were making cranberry juice. Cultivation of cranberries began around 1816, after Captain Henry Hall, of Dennis, Massachusetts, noticed that the wild cranberries in his bogs grew better when sand blew over them. Captain Hall began transplanting his cranberry vines, fencing them in, and spreading sand on them himself. By the 1820s, cranberries were being exported to Europe. By the 1850s, American sailors carried cranberries on their voyages to prevent scurvy.
Native Americans used cranberries to make Poultice. This was a long time ago i don't know the recipie! Does this question help you?
Beeswax, cranberries, and crayons
they bribed them and beat them to go against other natives