From what you’ve learned, what edible plants would be the most hardiest to grow? And I mean the once that are easy… nurse them to seedlings and just set it and forget.
@mitchelhammond82407 күн бұрын
Awesome video
@matchpoint1425 күн бұрын
Poor explanation. And never ever eat anything as a trailside nibble, always rinse thoroughly and blanch it for 60 seconds is best. Animals pass along their waste all over the place and this can spread very severe even deadly diseases especially bird poop. Always rinse. I see all these experts pick stuff while explaining their videos and eat stuff without even thinking about rinsing it at a I know it is fun to eat plants while in the woods but rinse first
@teaducharme756729 күн бұрын
How can you tell the difference between this and lupine?
@user-zc7cq2rs5kАй бұрын
Death Candice candice coke fit in your mouth
@RiverbuggerАй бұрын
Hello, Great channel and glad I came across it. Love identifying medicinal and wild edibles. Been on many walks and classes with Christopher Nyerges who is a friend and has written many books on this topic. Thanks for sharing your knowledge as well! Keep up the great videos!! Enjoying the survival mixed in with the primitive skills and plant identification!!
@wildfoodgirl9148Ай бұрын
Question for you: Are you thinking this is Harbouria trachypleura (that's the one I call whiskbroom parsley, with the stiff, super narrow-lobed, quite bitter leaves found in a narrow band on the Front Range) or Pseudocymopterus montanus syn Cymopterus lemmonii (variable leaves, softer, not delicious but not bitter, wide range; that's the one I call mountain parsley). Just investigating these plants. Thanks for the help!
@wildfoodgirl9148Ай бұрын
Hey friend! I can't believe I didn't know you had all these cool videos!
@maureendonnelly3873Ай бұрын
I had them growing in the yard on my lawn smelled like onions
@neelalamАй бұрын
would be better if you don't explain everything, let viewers think themselves what you are doing or what you are going to do.
@angieurban2069Ай бұрын
Excellent video! I think I’d like to try the spiderwort and Indian bread root. Could you have also made juniper leaf tea?
@luckylarry5112Ай бұрын
All that's missing is a fat quail or a couple of rats over the spit.
@redtsun67Ай бұрын
Learn to listen to that feeling in the back of your head. The primal brain, also known as the reptilian brain, has been honed over millions of years. Before you eat anything you should look at it, feel it, and smell it. If you get a bad feeling, don't eat it.
@DarkRamProductionsАй бұрын
Imma smoke the grass
@wilsixone2 ай бұрын
You don't say anything about the bulb on the second plant which looks like it's got like a triangle shape to it which we have growing all over the place. You mention the first plant has no discernable bulb yet. So I'm confused - will the bulb that's not there yet look like the other one? Are all triangle-shaped bulbs the poisonous ones?
@berndtherrenvolk19512 ай бұрын
I never knew about this distinction, which is why I was poisoned and died 12 years ago on a camping trip.
@JF-bc2lw2 ай бұрын
Will both smell like onions?
@anthonym96682 ай бұрын
Umm, you don't dig them unless they are done flowering and have seeds present on their tops, which one one he dug wasn't lol, and they have a bulb at the bottom of the plant, the part of the root he his holding generally isn't eaten. The bulb is what's gathered dried and used for flour or later meals
@tommunyon28742 ай бұрын
The ponderosa woodlands beyond our back fence in New Mexico were full of wild onions. For reasons unknown our beagle/dachshund mix dog loved wild onions. As soon as we pulled one out of the ground he was there to eagerly gobble it down.
@BryanKirch2 ай бұрын
I’m looking at a 30 acre property in the Sonoran desert. Instead of a traditional garden I’d like to repopulate the land with native perennial edibles. How would you suggest I go about something like that?
@jaypete35002 ай бұрын
Lol
@lostvisitor2 ай бұрын
Good thing your faking it, other wise you would die wasting so much energy on a bed. Like most modern city people you have no clue about nature. only what you read in books.
@ArthurCollette-rc2ng2 ай бұрын
Onion smell like onions and poisonous ones do not
@1HorseOpenSlayАй бұрын
Thank you, that is exactly what I was wondering.
@mikerandle57132 ай бұрын
What size Zebra pot, 16cm?
@mikerandle57132 ай бұрын
Thanks for not editing out the failures.
@ThomasD662 ай бұрын
There are toxic camas in the east as well (e.g. Nuttall's death camas) but they are not as common in the mountain. The more common cause of toxicity in Appalachia is people mistaking young daffodils for wild onions or ramps. Thankfully this is merely unpleasant, not life threatening. Trust your nose, if it does not smell strongly of onion do not eat it.
@ChristmasLights22 ай бұрын
Any idea if one could find a seed supplier for these plants?
@MmmHuggles2 ай бұрын
I guess I've never noticed "wild onion". The "wild onion" I'm used to I guess is wild garlic (hollow stem). What I don't get is there are two kinds here. One is a very oniony smell and smaller while the other is a very garlicy smell and is bigger. I always called the oniony one wild onion, but it doesn't look like either of those (has a hollow stem). The garlicy one also has a hollow stem.
@dougsimon97882 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@qparxiii3 ай бұрын
I don't believe the authenticity of this video... in Southern California inland empire, it gets so hot that before noon, that all of society banishes you from the fringes of all human dignity for looking like zombie apocalypse, hills have eyes, Sla from the Goonies, and Quato from Total Recall without incessant air-conditioning ... I'll be using this channel as my sermon against all lies lies lies yeah!!! Thanks
@naesews3 ай бұрын
This might be a long shot but at this point i'm asking everybody. Any ideas on cheap motorhomes /tiny houses for a young pregnant couple? We are in Colorado and need any help we can get. They need stability and a camper is all they can afford to buy. Anyone reading this, thank you for your time.
@marievay.den41653 ай бұрын
Wow, just found this video today and it saved my life and the lives of my family😮😮😮❤
@adina2263 ай бұрын
Thank you for the so useful tip of square steam , this is so easy to remember ..!
@charlesrs3 ай бұрын
wild onions have hollow leaves
@rcrossmbigcountrycooking9273 ай бұрын
Lakota, timpsila
@Berley_12343 ай бұрын
i loved finding wild asparagus when i lived in wyoming - Powell near Yellowstone
@michelleslutpuppy43553 ай бұрын
Books 📚✨ are everywhere on plants good & bad ones I've gotten books on them about 5/10 of them i had one 🕐🕜 i kept all the time. I'd read it all the time iloved the book
@michelleslutpuppy43553 ай бұрын
I had a book of herbs some eatables other poisonous even mushrooms 🍄🌈🍄🌈
@michelleslutpuppy43553 ай бұрын
Yaeh the green part onion is hallow the other aint it solid
@cgallagher50233 ай бұрын
Thank you!!!
@bigal259384 ай бұрын
Aren’t wild onion leaves hollow?
@PatrickStone-bu2ve4 ай бұрын
Umbrella, great
@danieljonhson63674 ай бұрын
The wild onions I usually come across have a hollow leaf like an onion from the garden.
@IhaytFukkingsocialmedia4 ай бұрын
death camas doesnt have the unique onion smell
@davidbrand53264 ай бұрын
Good informative video!!👍👍
@starmhz14 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for the video. It is just what I needed help me learn more about plants.
@MoniMeka4 ай бұрын
That Indian Bread Root reminds me of Blue Boonet! 😊
@starmhz14 ай бұрын
Yeah me too. I'm also afraid I would get parsley confused with poison hemlock. That would be my luck.
@potterylady444 ай бұрын
Ha...this was nice. Thanks for sharing!
@Caleyfan864 ай бұрын
I’ve eaten Camus before, mistakenly. Still here- not a real reaction
@BeastMixer4 ай бұрын
Come to the high desert in Southwest Wyoming to teach us more!!👍😁