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#21 |
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Don't forget to mark said plants that you've ID so you can see it through the seasons and find it again next year.
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Safe Zone LLC "The Most Trusted Name in Outdoor Gear". Check out our free Family Disaster Plan The Mora Bushcraft Series is now available! Knot Making and Wild Edible Plants cards are in! |
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#22 |
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I learned a lot from my mom and other "older foragers"... I also have a library of books I use for occasional reference.... And there are a ton of websites.. I'd post sum links if wasn't such a techie retard.... Don't totally discount the sites database though!.. Great thing about it is that most the entries are user submitted- if u have a question just shoot a message to the user!
If you're just starting out and you don't have a mentor.. It may be worth learning all the most poisonous plants u have locally so you can easily identify and avoid them... Many of my friends I've started to bring out often joke that I'm more of a "poison expert" than an "edible expert"...at the very least learn the look-a-likes!
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"One's Quest for Knowledge is Never Complete." |
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#23 | |
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Senior Member
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Quote:
I often eat the stalks, pull up the plant, cut off anything that isn't tender enough to chew, usually only about 6 in. or so(from the bottom), and eat it. Tastes like cucumber!
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I'm a simple man, of simple means, turned my back on the machines, to follow my dreams. Last edited by Ted; 01-10-2010 at 05:42 PM. |
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#24 |
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young survivalist
Join Date: Oct 2009
Location: southern ohio
Posts: 237
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wild edible is my specicalty!! no jokes here people. cut me some slack. i really am good at wild edibles. send me a PM if you want more info
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some people like Bear Grylls. others like Les Stroud. well you know what. i like Jerimiah Johnson |
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#25 |
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Super Moderator
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Why would you not want to share valuable information in the forum. Sometimes I have found when discussing issues like this, that it is best to share so that all can see and review my information. If it holds up to the scrutiny of this crowd, then I am more comfortable in knowing that it is accurate.
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#26 |
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young survivalist
Join Date: Oct 2009
Location: southern ohio
Posts: 237
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my bad crash. i would have to dig through several bookselves to find my sources. but i didnt want to post on here bc since he lives where he does i would hate to have him looking for something that doesnt grow where he is.
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some people like Bear Grylls. others like Les Stroud. well you know what. i like Jerimiah Johnson |
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#27 |
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PMC/Deputy Sheriff
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Any plant resources.... hmmm well I'd try the forest, they are usually a good resource for plants, so is the neighbors flower bed, as is the farmers field and river banks.
I tend to find a lot of plant resources in the forest. I just saying...
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Do or Do Not, there is no try. Jedi Master Yoda |
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#28 |
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a bushbaby
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: I travel but was raised in Alaska
Posts: 1,231
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i was to lazy to do that. i just made white creamy goopy stuff. i think it would make a really good base for a creamy soup.
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Come share my fire. |
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#29 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2009
Posts: 472
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I have 3 plant resources I use a lot and one 'cookbook'.
I initially went to school to learn plant sciences. The first two are keys we used in taxonomy classes. The third is an herbal. The fourth is just a general how-to-eat-it book. Plants in the Vicinity of New York, Gleason, published by the NY Botanical Garden (out of print but available online fairly cheap.) this one is good for most of the northeast and into the Great Lakes area. This has to be one of the easiest keys out there for this particular area. If you decide it's for you, I can post the corrections needed. There are a few key errors that might lead to dead ends. An Illustrated Flora of the Northern United States and Canada, Britton and Brown. this is a 3 volume set and it helps if you start with the book noted above and use this set as a secondary reference. Available from Dover Books. The nomenclature is out of date but the illustrations are very helpful. Again good for most of the northeast down to New Jersey and out to the Great Lakes (and into Canada) but the keying is very difficult. A Modern Herbal, Grieve. Available from Dover Books. This one is dangerous if you aren't careful but it is a very good old herbal. Feasting Free on Wild Edibles, Angier. Stackpole Books. Two volume set condensed into one book, formerly Free for the Eating and More Free for the Eating Wild Foods. Last edited by LowKey; 01-12-2010 at 12:35 AM. |
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#30 |
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PMC/Deputy Sheriff
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Actually I use Tom Brown Jrs Guide to Edible & Medicinal Wild Plants, and the Native American Guide to Edible Plants in North America. Marking the location and State where I found each one.
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Do or Do Not, there is no try. Jedi Master Yoda |
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#31 |
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Junior Member
Join Date: Jan 2009
Posts: 9
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+1 on the forager's harvest. that's where i got started.
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#32 |
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Administrator
Join Date: Feb 2007
Posts: 861
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