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Foraging Ethic — 28 Comments

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  2. We were blessed at one house we lived in to have wild strawberries. That is my only experience with foraging. Most of the land around us is privately owned, so we can’t exactly go looking. Lately, I forage online and have it sent to me. Does that count? 🙂

    • LOL! Unless you live in a neatly clipped suburb, there are probably many more wild edibles at your fingertips than you’d ever suspect. Honestly, I do quite a bit of foraging along roadsides, in small weedy patches, and from hiking trails.

      Wild strawberries are wonderful. I haven’t partaken of those very often, because I don’t know of a place around here where they grow in abundance.

      • What if I do live in a neatly-clipped suburb? Or on a college campus? Where are the best public places to forage?

        • Lauren, try foraging on protected lands open to the public for hiking. This could be conservation land owned by your town, land protected by your state’s division of fisheries and wildlife, National Wildlife Refuges, land owned by local or regional land trusts, etc. The “best” place for foraging depends on exactly what you are looking for, but for overall diversity of wild edibles, properties with a diversity of habitats have the most to offer. That means land that has forest, field, shrubland, wetland, and upland areas. If you are not foraging from your own yard or from roadsides, it’s best to ask the land owner (town, state, or federal agancy, or the land trust or private owner), if they mind if you forage. Does that help?

  3. Great post! I have not done a lot of foraging except for dandelion greens on our acreage. I’d really like to learn how to do more. Thank you for sharing this with us at the HomeAcre Hop! We’d love to have you back again tomorrow morning.

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  5. Hi Janet,
    I featured your post today on The HomeAcre Hop! Beautifully written and very informative! Thanks so much for sharing 🙂 Hope to see you again today!

  6. Great Post! It’s very well written! Also, beautiful pictures! When we lived in WI we foraged wild asparagus, blueberries, black raspberries, and dandelions. Foraging is very interesting, I think!:)Congratulations on being featured in the HomeAcre Hop!

  7. Hello Janet, this is a beautiful post and I love your style of writing. It really warms my heart to see someone take the entire living system into account with such loving understanding. As well, I appreciate your perceptive comments about the food system.

    I want to let you know that I’m on your side, and while I have started a business that promotes using autumn berries as a resource, I, too, am concerned about their potential impact on the environment, and I encourage people not to plant autumn olive trees.

    I would love to post this article on my Facebook page. Would that be all right?

    • Hi Dustin, thanks for your comment! I just checked your website and see that we are indeed of the same mind on this issue. You are on the cutting edge, selling autumnberry products – that’s wonderful. You are more than welcome to share this post on your facebook page, and I will share a link to yours as well.

      What an interesting topic. Some people have developed such a hatred for invasive species that they can’t consider eating them, but I really think that in this ever changing world, we need to have an adaptive strategy, always shifting our use to the most abundant resources, and protecting the rare.

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  10. I have wondered about foraging for wild edible for the last few years. We have 110 acres and I know about the acorns, hickory nuts, and dandelion greens, but really need to learn about others. Can you recommend an “easy” to identify wild edible book; with lots of clear pictures? LOL I don’t want to accidentally poison us, but would like to not waste valuable resources.
    I enjoyed your article, especially about not taking away from the wild animals who depend on those resources.

    • Hi Rhonda, the easiest way to learn to to id more edible plants is to attend a foraging walk with an experienced forager. They can point out edible plants common to your area, and alert you to characteristics which distinguish them from potentially harmful plants. That’s the safest way to do it, if you don’t have the time or the inclination to learn plant identification, which is the best way to learn to forage. If you do want to learn plant ID, start with one class of plants to make it easier. I recommend starting with trees or shrubs, because they are easier to id than herbaceous plants, and can be id’d even in winter. Trees in particular, are not that hard.

      Sam Thayer’s books (Forger’s Harvest and Nature’s Garden) are excellent, but I would recommend that a beginner double or triple check with at least one other book, to be certain of your id. Never eat any wild plant if you are not certain of its id.

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  15. Hi Janet,

    Your article on foraging responsibly is brilliant!

    I wanted to sign up for emails (as offered) but the mechanism would not allow it. whenever I brought up the keyboard the windows went black. iPad 6. Hope you can correct this problem.

    I will ‘Follow’ only for now. I admire both your P. Of V. and your activities so much.

    • Hi Sandy, I am thrilled that you like this post, and my pov! I am also delighted that you would like to subscribe, but I cannot find anything wrong with my subscription mechanism. It looks fine, others are able to subscribe, and new subscribers have been coming in at the usual rate. Once in a great while (like every few months) I get a message from someone saying the subscription box isn’t working right, but not exactly what you are describing, and they were all using cell phones. I cannot find anything to correct, so unfortunately, all I can say is to try with another device, or maybe just with another browser. Hope that helps.