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Forgaging
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OH and I are thinking of taking the little one foraging this weekend, to get him used to nature and so on.
Can anyone recommend what sort of things to forage for and perhaps suggest some recipes - maybe for jams or for a nice jus for meat. I also love adding herbs to just about everything. I'm particularly curious about edible flowers.
Any suggestions appreciated and any tips / stories from avid Foragers would be most welcome. There's abundant woodland and countryside where we live.
Thanks.
Can anyone recommend what sort of things to forage for and perhaps suggest some recipes - maybe for jams or for a nice jus for meat. I also love adding herbs to just about everything. I'm particularly curious about edible flowers.
Any suggestions appreciated and any tips / stories from avid Foragers would be most welcome. There's abundant woodland and countryside where we live.
Thanks.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Bit late for edibles unless you are confident identifying fungi, maybe time to hunt for things to make decorations.
Fircones, beech mast, twigs covered in lichen, ash and sycamore keys bendy willow twigs
Or things you can grind down and make paint from, again lichens. On fallen twigs only but it can give different colours if you add acid or alkaline( vinegar or bicarb.)
Berries, that are non poisonous rowan, hawthorn, berberis, tree bark and common moss, you won't need much.
Collect a few for garden birds but leave most behind.
For the future the RSPB do a great first garden wildlife book that will cover a lot of the wildlife in a normal woodland.
Fircones, beech mast, twigs covered in lichen, ash and sycamore keys bendy willow twigs
Or things you can grind down and make paint from, again lichens. On fallen twigs only but it can give different colours if you add acid or alkaline( vinegar or bicarb.)
Berries, that are non poisonous rowan, hawthorn, berberis, tree bark and common moss, you won't need much.
Collect a few for garden birds but leave most behind.
For the future the RSPB do a great first garden wildlife book that will cover a lot of the wildlife in a normal woodland.
Never been one for nature,too wet,too cold,uncomfortable and I prefer comfort.
However what you are doing is what I would describe as good and responsible parenting.........something I was not very adapt at.
As a child I was occasionally taken for a walk on Sundays across what I called the Penny Fields, grandad would throw down a penny when I wasn't looking and I would find it...I really believed that one found pennies in that field.
The walk ended at a pub called the Paul Pry where grandma and grandad went in and I sat outside with half a shandy and a packet of crisps.
That was my only experience of foraging.
Well done to you CG.
However what you are doing is what I would describe as good and responsible parenting.........something I was not very adapt at.
As a child I was occasionally taken for a walk on Sundays across what I called the Penny Fields, grandad would throw down a penny when I wasn't looking and I would find it...I really believed that one found pennies in that field.
The walk ended at a pub called the Paul Pry where grandma and grandad went in and I sat outside with half a shandy and a packet of crisps.
That was my only experience of foraging.
Well done to you CG.
Rock painting is very popular where I live. Collect suitable stones, take them home, paint them and hide them for others to find. He might enjoy looking for stones and pebbles.
Pine cones can be painted and glittered for Christmas decorations.
My two year old grandson loves jumping in muddy puddles more than anything in the whole wide world, especially if it is raining. Wellies and a rain suit and he's set for the day. He spends at least 4 hours a day outside whatever the weather.
Pine cones can be painted and glittered for Christmas decorations.
My two year old grandson loves jumping in muddy puddles more than anything in the whole wide world, especially if it is raining. Wellies and a rain suit and he's set for the day. He spends at least 4 hours a day outside whatever the weather.
Fat hen (too late this year though) https:/ /www.wi ldfoodu k.com/e dible-w ild-pla nts/fat -hen/
There’s still a lot of crab apples around which make a lovely jelly which goes with both savoury and sweet things. Or rose hips for syrup. Good for winter coughs. Sloes for sloe gin, that’s really easy to do. Prick the sloes, put in a screw top bottle 3/4 full or so, fill to the top with granulated sugar and gently add the cheapest gin you can find. Swish around every day or so until the sugar has disappeared then leave in a cool dark place for a few months. As everyone else has said I’d leave fungi alone though.
When I was little we used to pick mushrooms, blackberries, whortleberries, lava and cobnuts. It's too late in the year for all of those. In junior school we used to go out on walks with the teacher and pick a wild flower, bring it back to school, find the latin name for it and press it in a book. That activity gave me an appreciation for the hedgerows to this day. You are not supposed to pick the flowers these days but identifying them (maybe by taking a photo) would be fun.
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