| Foreword |
| Chapter I Tradition |
| Chapter II Beginning a garden |
| Turtle |
| Clearing fields |
| Dispute and its settlement |
| Turtle breaking soil |
| Turtle's primitive tools |
| Beginning a field in later times |
| Trees in the garden |
| Our west field |
| Burning over the field |
| Chapter III Sunflowers |
| Remark by Maxi'diwiac |
| Planting sunflowers |
| Varieties |
| Harvesting the seed |
| Threshing |
| Harvesting the mapi'-na'ka |
| Effect of frost |
| Parching the seed |
| Four-vegetables-mixed |
| Sunflower-seed balls |
| Chapter IV Corn |
| Planting |
| A morning's planting |
| Soaking the seed |
| Planting for a sick woman |
| Size of our biggest field |
| Na'xu and nu'cami |
| Hoeing |
| The watchers' stage |
| Explanation of sketch of watcher's stage |
| Sweet Grass's sun shade |
| The watchers |
| Booths |
| Eating customs |
| Youths' and maidens' customs |
| Watchers' songs |
| Clan cousins' custom |
| Story of Snake-head-ornament |
| Green corn and its uses |
| The ripening ears |
| Second planting for green corn |
| Cooking fresh green corn |
| Roasting ears |
| Mâtu'a-la'kapa |
| Corn bread |
| Drying green corn for winter |
| Mape'di (corn smut) |
| Mape'di |
| Harvest and uses |
| The ripe corn harvest |
| Husking |
| Rejecting green ears |
| Braiding corn |
| The small ears |
| Drying the braided ears |
| Seed corn |
| Selecting the seed |
| Keeping two years' seed |
| Threshing corn |
| The booth |
| Order of the day's work |
| The cobs |
| Winnowing |
| Removing the booth |
| Threshing braided corn |
| Amount of harvest |
| Sioux purchasing corn |
| Varieties of corn |
| Description of varieties |
| How corn travels |
| Uses of the varieties |
| Ata'ki tso'ki |
| Mäpi' nakapa' |
| Mä'nakapa |
| Ata'ki |
| Boiled corn ball |
| Tso'di tso'ki and tso'di tapä' |
| Madapo'zi i'ti'a |
| Other soft vari |
| Ma'ikadicake |
| Mä'pi mee'pi i''kiuta, or corn balls |
| Parched soft corn |
| Parching whole ripe ears |
| Parching hard yellow corn with sand |
| Madapo'zi pa'kici, or lye-made hominy |
| General characteristics of the varieties |
| Fodder yield |
| Developing new varieties |
| Sport ears |
| Names and description |
| Na''ta-tawo'xi |
| Wi'da-aka'ta |
| I'ta-ca'ca |
| Okei'jpita |
| I'tica'kupadi |
| Chapter V Squashes |
| Planting squashes |
| Sprouting the seed |
| Planting the sprouted seed |
| Harvesting the squashes |
| Slicing the squashes |
| Squash spits |
| Spitting the slices |
| In case of rain |
| Drying and storing |
| Squash blossoms |
| Cooking and uses of squash |
| The first squashes |
| Boiling fresh squash in a pot |
| Squashes boiled with blossoms |
| Other blossom messes |
| Boiled blossoms |
| Blossoms boiled with madapo'zi i'ti'a |
| Blossoms boiled with mäpi'nakapa' |
| Seed squashes |
| Selecting for seed |
| Gathering the seed squashes |
| Cooking the ripe squashes |
| Saving the seed |
| Eating the seed |
| Roasting ripe squashes |
| Storing the unused seed squashes |
| Squashes, present seed |
| Squash dolls |
| Chapter VI Beans |
| Planting beans |
| Putting in the seeds |
| Hoeing and cultivating |
| Threshing |
| Varieties |
| Selecting seed beans |
| Cooking and uses |
| Ama'ca di'he, or beans-boiled |
| Green beans boiled in the pod |
| Green corn and beans |
| Chapter VII Storing for winter |
| The cache pit |
| Grass for lining |
| Grass bundles |
| The grass binding rope |
| Drying the grass bundles |
| The willow floor |
| The grass lining |
| Skin bottom covering |
| Storing the cache pit |
| The puncheon cover |
| Cache pits in Small Ankle's lodge |
| First account |
| A second account on another day |
| Diagram of Small Ankle's lodge |
| Chapter VIII The making of a drying stage |
| Stages in Like-a-fishhook village |
| Cutting the timbers |
| Digging the post holes |
| Raising the |
| The floor |
| Staying thongs |
| Ladder |
| Enlarging the stage |
| Present stages |
| Building, women's work |
| Measurements of stage |
| Drying rods |
| Other uses of the drying stage |
| Chapter IX Tools |
| Hoe |
| Rakes |
| Squash knives |
| Chapter X Fields at Like-a-fishhook village |
| East-side fields |
| East-side fences |
| Idikita'c's garden |
| Fields west of the village |
| West-side fence |
| Crops, our first wagon |
| Chapter XI Miscellanea |
| Divisions between gardens |
| Fallowing, ownership of gardens |
| Frost in the gardens |
| Maxi'diwiac's philosophy of frost |
| Men helping in the field |
| Sucking the sweet juice |
| Corn as fodder for horses |
| Disposition of weeds |
| The spring clean-up |
| Manure |
| Worms |
| Wild animals |
| About old tent covers |
| Chapter XII Since white men came |
| How we got potatoes and other vegetables |
| The new cultivation |
| Iron kettles |
| Chapter XIII Tobacco |
| Observations by Maxi'diwiac |
| The tobacco garden |
| Planting |
| Arrow-head-earring's tobacco garden |
| Small Ankle's cultivation |
| Harvesting the blossoms |
| Harvesting the plants |
| Selling to the Sioux |
| Size of tobacco garden |
| Customs |
| Accessories to the tobacco garden |
| Fence |
| The scrotum basket |
| Old garden sites near Independence |