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       The Potting Shed Forum Index -> Going wild
Kathy

Foraging

Who does it? There's something most satisfying about finding food for free, don't you think!
The forest floor is just covered in blueberries at the moment, if I was to pick 24hrs a day for the next month I couldn't cover a fraction. We've already picked loads and dried some for winter, there's info about the healing properties of them here. http://www.whyorganic.org/archive...perfoods%20-%20Blueberries%5D.asp
nanny-now and forever

i like a good forage too kathy

tomorrow it is crab apples...we discovered a laden tree just by the school and i fancy some crab apple jelly this year

we have a 9 year old who will be willing to go up the tree (better than stuffing him up a chimney, he's a nice kid) so by tomorrow evening i hope to have my jelly bag on the go

next will be the hazel nuts, god knows how many trees there are on the property, more than there are squirrels in the world i reckon....then the sloes and perhaps the blackberries and i am now keeping my eye out for any mushrooms that might appear....and the apple tree in the garden does indeed have some apples on it though they ae small so blackberry and apple crumble could be on the menu this autumn
Cabbagepatch

Foraging has to be one of my favourite pastimes, starting with young nettles in the spring. The blackberries aren't looking good this year and the sloes are very early.

I know they are supposed to be better after a frost but they are so ripe, we now have a load in the freezer waiting to be turned into sloe gin. Well, freezing them has to be as good as a frost surely...
mc55

I have had pounds and pounds of blackberries ... have my eyes open, but am still to find hazelnuts, sweet chestnuts (I THINK there are some in the cemetry, but I'm not 100% certain), crab apples and plums / damsons.
Pilsbury

2 hazle trees in the little garden bits at the end of the road so i thought I will have some of them later,then yesterday morning i was driving past and there was a bleedin squirral there!!!! Im in the middle of town!!! is there nothing safe Crying or Very sad
Lizzie

We're hoping for some hazelnuts this year - there are some trees we've not noticed before quite a way from the woods (where the squirrels live) so we're keeping out fingers crossed. The squirrels round here (red ones, thankfully....) seem to prefer pine cones anyway.

We've still got some of last years elderberries in the freezer and will pick some more this year. There's always a bumper crop of sloes in the hedges on the farm, and we've found a really good spot for blackberries but they're not ripe yet...

I really like berry-picking in the autumn Very Happy
Somerset Lad

Wild mushrooms will be about now ,ceps, hedgehog, wood blewits, parasols, no end of lovely fungi. Good time of the year for the forager. Wink Laughing Cool
Aqui

I'm too scared to pick mushrooms, just in case, although I know to avoid the red ones with white spots!

I love grazing on blackberries when we walk through the park/woods. They are lovely this year here!

And I could do a lot of scrumping as no one seems to pick the fruit of their trees - they just let it fall and drop - they would probably eat it if it was in a plastic tray, peeled and chopped and covered in cling film,though! But anyway, I'm scared of ladders - more so after seeing lloyd's post.
nanny-now and forever

Somerset Lad wrote:
Wild mushrooms will be about now ,ceps, hedgehog, wood blewits, parasols, no end of lovely fungi. Good time of the year for the forager. Wink Laughing Cool


i was thinking about that only today SL when i went for a wander with mr nanny and looked for mushrooms along the side of the fields

must take my book next time....mind you i didn't see a single one so i would have carried the book for nothing....
Kathy

I see loads of Fungi, even in the garden but am also scared to eat them. Next time they have a mushroom walk on the estate I'll join in.
nanny-now and forever

Kathy wrote:
I see loads of Fungi, even in the garden but am also scared to eat them. Next time they have a mushroom walk on the estate I'll join in.


that is a good way to learn....you could also get a collins gem book of mushrooms and fungi, they are really quite informative and have very clkear descriptions and photographs, i use mine a lot and i haven't died yet
Aqui

we went on a mushroom walk a few years back and i'm fairly confident i could spot a parasol, but i'm still scared. we'll have to go again in a few years - the kids on it seemed to really enjoy it and found some of the best mushrooms!

i have a mushroom book which us fantastic, but can't remember the author's name. it's just over there, but i can't see that far (and j's feeding to sleep right now)

       The Potting Shed Forum Index -> Going wild
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