Forage Fellows ππ±
- Digital Goods and Resources! π
I thought it could be a good idea to gather valuable resources for people to use whilst foraging! Feel free to comment other suggestions and I'll expand the list periodically. For now the list is minimal and general, but if/when it expands i might categorize them based on region or field of interest. Give us your best resources! π
- Shroomify (Mushroom Identifier App)
- Link to Android app and for, iOS Devices
- Falling Fruit (Interactive Foraging Map)
- https://fallingfruit.org/
- Pl@ntNet (Identify Plants with Pictures)
- https://identify.plantnet.org/
- Fungus Identifier (AI based, use with caution!)
- https://fungusid.com/
- Mushroom World (Database)
- https://www.mushroom.world/
- INaturalist (Social biodiversity network)
- https://www.inaturalist.org/
- Shroomify (Mushroom Identifier App)
- poppies petals, young bramble, linden leaves and chinese mugwort
Il know that bramble are eatable and I can recognised them perfectly but I couldn't bring myself to eat it. It feels to weird. I should'nt have forrage it. I've made a flower-leave salad and mugwort fritters out of the rest.
publication croisΓ©e depuis : https://jlai.lu/post/6859176
- Almost Time for Mountain Gooseberries
My wife and I walk our dogs on a trail along the Rio Grande every morning, and years ago I found this patch of Mountain Gooseberries. The birds usually get to the ripe ones before I do. I never pick too many to ensure the birds do have enough. As the patch has grown, and continues to grow, I eat more.
- Fiddleheads
I almost missed fiddlehead season but was able to get out Sunday and collect a few that were still curled up tight.
Iβve heard there are a few edible species but we only harvest the ostrich fern, Matteuccia struthiopteris. I love them lightly battered and fried (after blanching) or pickled to go in bloody marys.
More info: https://extension.umaine.edu/publications/2540e/
- Collecting dandelion sap
I've been thinking about collecting dandelion sap (y'know, the white stuff inside the stem) for a while, but I can't find anything about how to collect it because duckduckgo only shows unrelated results.
- Spotted dead-nettle
I tried a tiny taste and it was pretty neutral, not "grassy" at all. Might work well in a salad.
I didn't take any home since there was not much there and I'm not 100% sure on the ID.
- Spruce tips taste like nothing?
Got some spruce tips, but they basically have no flavor. Am I picking at the wrong time? Or maybe it's just a bland tree?
- Garlic mustard
At least I'm pretty sure that's what it is. It has a nice garlic taste. I chopped it and put in some oil, salt and pepper for a nice little spread.
- British Mycological Society Talk: Chris Knowles - A beginners guide to fungal habitats in the UK
cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/9734268
> British Mycological Society Talk: Chris Knowles - A beginners guide to fungal habitats in the UK > > Chris Knowles is a field mycologist, tutor and digitiser at the Herbarium of the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh. In this talk, Chris presents a back-to-basics look at the various ecosystems where fungi thrive, from ancient woodlands to urban environments. Each habitat presents unique challenges and opportunities for fungal communities, shaping their diversity and distribution; Chris discusses what this means for a forayer and how to plan around these challenges.
- Oy, what are you looking forward to foraging?
Pretty psyched for garlic mustard and dandelion season here soon.
Paw-paw season is my favorite though because you need to plan around climbing trees and jumping around in rivers.
Got any great experiences you want to share?
- Let's get this sub going again now that the forest will start to bloom again! π±
Hello there foragers and gatherers!
I've transitioned instances, but I am the one running this community. Hoping to grow this community now that the long cold winter is finally coming to and end, at least here in Scandinavia. It's been a while since anything has happened in this community, most likely due to the winter and there not being many possibilities for foraging that time of year. However, it's now warming up, so it would be super nice to see some more activity in this community again, and I'll do my best to put the word out there that this community exists for more to join.
Here are a few things I plan on doing this spring! βοΈ
- One of my all-time favourite things to do gather during the spring is birch sap! But please do be careful how you do this, as it can heavily damage a tree. It's a very healthy drink and tastes super good. Here is a video that let's you know how to do it :) This sap can also be turned into syrup which is great for desserts and drinks. Let me know if there is any interest on this syrup and I'll write up a guide on how to do it!
Plants and herbs I try to look for during Spring:
- Wild garlic, ramsons, and victory onion - The wild gourmet onions
- Nettle - wild spinach
- Ground elder - nature's wild parsley
- Garlic mustard - wild garlic
- Rowan tree leaf(sprouts) - the forest's marzipan
- Maple tree blossoms - the forest's nectar fireworks
- Sorrel - the taste of spring
- Ground elder shoots - Nature's answer to vanilla
Let me know what you're planning on foraging in the next few weeks, and happy foraging! π
- First ever Thicket Bean (Phaseolus polystachios) harvest
Sorry this isn't actually foraging per se, but the only kind of people who'd grow these are probably foragers anyway. I've been growing them for a couple years, but this is the first year I had enough to bother trying to eat them! From two plants we got about 1/2 a cup.
So my question is, does anyone have any tips for actually eating these things?? We tried soaking them for 24 hours and boiling them for 2 hours, and they were still inedibly bitter! I'm thinking maybe brining them, an alkaline soak, splitting them all in half, and/or swapping out the cooking water a few times. At least one of those ought to work hopefully. It'll have to wait till next year though, we wasted these ones lol.
- Short Saturday mushroom hunt. England, UK
Sadly, there are only a few small areas of ancient forest left in my area, but they are so diverse and abundant. They're always a treat to explore.
Ochre brittlegill (Russula ochroleuca), stump puffballs (Lycoperdon / Apioperdon pyriforme), amethyst deceiver (Laccaria amethystina), Common puffballs (Lycoperdon perlatum), clouded agaric (Clitocybe nebularis), and what I believe to be red cracking bolete (Boletus / Xerocomellus chrysenteron) which are very abundant here. I did find some more wood mushrooms (Agaricus sylvicola) and green cracked brittlegills (Russula virescens), but I didn't take a picture for some reason.
- Small agaric haul. England, UK
Agaricus arvensis or campestris. I can never tell horse and field mushrooms apart, but no yellow staining and a pleasant mushroom and mild anise smell. I found several rings. Unfortunately, the maggots beat me to most of them. Also found a fair few meadow puffballs (Lycoperdon pratense) that had unfortunately just started to spore, and some parrot waxcaps (Gliophorus psittacinus) which, whilst edible, are far too small and slimy to bother with.
I did also find either a rather beautiful pure bright white amanita. Either a Destroying angel (Amanita virosa) or white dapperling (Leucoagaricus leucothites), im not knowledgeable enough to tell. Whilst fun to find, it's definitely not one I brought home.
- How should I crack upon nuts from Juglans nigra ?
My town have a plantation of Juglans nigra. These nut trees don't grow usually in France yet when I decided to have a taste of them, I thought I would handle it like another nut. But they are different.
I try to have the green shell to dry completely before peeling them off. But I couldn't so I went with a knive to get ride of it before they turn bad. The nuts are smaller than the one that grows here but so hard I can't crack them with a nutcraker.
Should I have wait longer before picking them up ? What is right to great ride of the green skin ? How could I crack them ?
- Finding muscadine by smell
Does anyone else primarily find muscadine by smell? I can easily notice it from 20 yards away.
- A small but feisty find (Wood Hedgehog)
Found me some Wood Hedgehog mushroom today.
Considered to be a good od edible, having a sweet nutty taste and crunchy texture. Some consider it the culinary equivalent to the chanterelle. There are no poisons look-alikes either π
Further info about the mushroom: http://www.mushroomexpert.com/hydnum_repandum.html
- Some unusual urban foraging⦠can anyone identify these?
This was an unusual tree I noticed in my neighborhood and it took me some time to identify. But when I did I was delighted to learn it is quite edible.
Processing the seeds was a bit of a chore and I only ended up with a small handful for my trouble but it was still a fun experiment.
They are sweet and starchy, like a small chestnut. Tasty and if they were bigger they would be quite worth the effort.
So, test your ID skills: can anyone figure out what tree these are from? Hint: itβs a food I doubt many English speakers have ever tried, though it should look a little familiarβ¦
Answer if you give up
Castanopsis, generally known as chinkapin, though not the same as North American chinkapins. Read more on Wikipedia: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Castanopsis
- 3D printed Berry Harvester!
Stumbled across this one recently, as the link and image suggests this is a fully 3D printable berry picker! Thought about buying one, but this one is rather convincing due to its features. Link to print! https://cults3d.com/en/3d-model/tool/mobile-berry-harvester-3d-print-forest-garden-berry-picker
- Mushrooms, where do I start?
Hi folks. I forage for plants. I know those pretty well. Whn I don't, I use an app caled PlantNet (definitely recommend it) is there something similar I can use where you take a picture and verify?
Where do I start? Any advice for a beginner?
- Found an interesting coral last hunt!
Not 100% sure what the name of this bugger is, but a cool one for sure!
- Welcome Foragers!
Hello, I created this community has the previous one disappeared out of thin air(?). I have not ran a community before, but I assume it should be all good as most people looking for this type of community are rather down to earth. badumn tsss.
Anyways! Share your latest adventures, findings, tips or tricks!
Let's see if we can grow this community together <3
Edit; media uploads seem to be unavailable at the moment on this instance, so will have to wait with adding icon and banner for this community until that is back. This also means that if your account is on lemm.ee you need to upload pictures to a third party and then post the link in your post :)