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Osage Orange

 Maclura pomifera: The Edible Inedible

Sometimes everybody is almost wrong.

If you Google “Osage Orange” or “Maclura pomifera” (mak-LOOR-uh pom-EE-fer-uh) (in 2009) you’ll get some 50,000 hits.*  Approximately 49,997 of those sites will tell you the Osage Orange is not edible. Two of three remaining sites, here and the one below, will say it is edible. The third one reports we say it is edible but we must be wrong.

Osage Orange Seeds

In all fairness, not all of the fruit is edible. Only the seeds are. In fact, the Osage Orange it is closely related to the Mulberries, which we do eat, and the Paper Mulberry which also has an edible fruit. But, 99.999999% of the Internet sites says it is not edible. Why? Two reasons. Somebody a long time ago said the fruit was not edible, and the Internet is mostly cut and paste wrong. I have truly become disgusted with sites like Wikipedia regarding the inaccurate information about plant edibility.

Fruit is not edible

It was from Jim Mason, a naturalist with the Great Plains Nature Center in Wichita Kansas, that I learned the seeds were edible. They taste somewhat like raw sunflower seeds. Not bad for an inedible fruit though he does say it takes a lot of work to get the seeds, and he’s right.  The Osage Orange grows in Florida — I know where there is one in Jacksonville. I have visited it several times. However, the tree grows in abundance in the mid-west, being part of the 1930’s reclamation process. It is, or was, the most intentionally planted tree in the United States. Its native range is a swath running from east Texas up into Oklahoma and parts of western Arkansas. It grows in 39 states and Washington DC, excluding the coldest and or driest areas, such as the high plain states and upper New England. Also found in Canada, it’s “invasive” in Italy and approaching invasive in Spain.

To separate the edible seeds from mature fruit put the fruit in a bucket of water and wait until the fruit is soft, then separate the seeds out.  This will be an aroma-filled process and not pleasant. Let’s just say starving would help.

William Maclure, 1763-1840

Also called Hedgeapples, the Osage Orange got some of its reputation from killing livestock. But careful investigation shows the animals usually suffocated on the large fruit. That got translated into “toxic.” But one livestock feeding study found no significant chemical problems with the Osage Orange. As for the seeds, birds and small mammals have enjoyed them for a long time. Squirrels seem particularly fond of ripping into one.

While the edibility of the Osage Orange has been maligned for decades, its usefulness as a tree has not. It was and still is esteemed for making bows. In fact, some bow makers think the Osage Orange’s wood for bows is superior to the Yew Tree, which is usually held up to be the classic standard.  The wood is turned into various products or used to make guitars. The bark also furnishes a yellow dye and tannins.

Botanically, the Osage Orange, Maclura pomifera, was named for a Scottish-born semi-American geologist named William Maclure (1763-1840.) He moved around a lot so calling him an American is a bit iffy.  Pomifera means bearing apples.

 Green Deane’s “Itemized” Plant Profile

osage_orange

Graphic courtesy of the Great Plains Nature Center

IDENTIFICATION: Tree to 40 feet and 20 inches diameter, often with a short thick trunk and numerous low branches. Bark gray to yellow-brown, thick, divided into narrow forking ridges, usually with hard sharp spines to one inch at leaf base. Sap thick, white, sticky. Leaves alternate, ovate, 2 to five inches long, one to three inches  wide. Fruit large yellow-green knobby balls to five inches in diameter.

TIME OF YEAR: Fruit, smelling faintly of orange, in late summer, fall.

ENVIRONMENT: Bottom lands that are often inundated with water, mixed with other hardwoods, and interspersed with prairie, and grow where moderately dry as well.

METHOD OF PREPARATION: Seeds raw or roasted

*The original article was written in August 2009. Since then the number of hits has increased from 50,000 to 1.5 million (Sept 2014)  and I think now a few more sites say the seeds are edible. One addition to make. I learned of a study that was looking for old homesteads to excavate in the midwest. They originally thought of using old wells as a possible homestead locator but found old Osage Orange trees were more indicative of a former homestead nearby. That says something about the usefulness of the tree. 

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Nostoc… for when you are really hungry.

BC’s philosopher Wiley.

In the old cartoon series BC, Wiley, a peg-legged curmudgeon, was the strip’s philosopher. One day he opined: “The bravest man I ever saw was the first one who ate an oyster raw.” He could have easily penned “who ate nostoc raw.”  

Nostoc can resemble a pile of disintegrating dog scat. Not exactly appetizing. If you add that there are some 300 hard-to-identify species Nustoc barely creeps into the realm of edible. As one might presume in parts of the world where there are billions to feed they eat it… and other places, too.  Perhaps the easiest stop to find locally it is on the ground cover one walks on in nurseries. Apparently it is the cause of much slipping and falls. In the wild I see it now and then in high and dry ground with much water nearby and moisture in the air. It is particularly common near Haul Over Canal on the northwest scrubby side. 

Nostoc was a mystery for centuries as folks thought it was alien and was seen after a variety of celestial events. We now know it is an algae plumped up by passing rain. Some flies like to lay eggs in it, apparently with bad effects. An article in the 2008 Journal of Ethnopharmacology reported in the Peruvian highlands Nostoc commune when eaten as food can produce the neurotoxic amino acid BMMA. From the Abstract:

Is Nostoc a no-no? Photo by Green Deane

“In the mountains of Peru, globular colonies of Nostoc commune (Nostocales) are collected in the highland lakes by the indigenous people, who call them llullucha. They are consumed locally, traded for maize, or sold, eventually entering the folk markets of Cusco and other neighboring cities. Throughout highland Peru, Nostoc commune is highly salient as a seasonal dietary item, being eaten alone, or in picante — a local stew — and is said to be highly nutritious. Nostoc commune has been known to produce unusual amino acids, including those of the mycosporine group, which possibly function to prevent UV damage. We analyzed 21 different Nostoc commune spherical colonies from 7 different market collections in the Cusco area for the presence of beta-N-methylamino-L-alanine (BMAA), a neurotoxic amino acid produced by diverse taxa of cyanobacteria, using four different analytical techniques (HPLC-FD, UPLC-UV, UPLC/MS, LC/MS/MS). We found using all four techniques that BMAA was present in the samples purchased in the Peruvian markets. Since BMAA has been putatively linked to neurodegenerative illness, it would be of interest to know if the occurrence of ALS, Alzheimer’s, or Parkinson’s Disease is greater among individuals who consume llullucha in Peru.”  This was echoed in a Chinese study.

Some have argued this is also why you should also not eat Alfalfa or Black Medic because of BMAA. Other studies disagree, such as “Toxicity and bioaccumulation of two non-protein amino acids synthesised by cyanobacteria, β-N-Methylamino-L-alanine (BMAA) and 2,4-diaminobutyric acid (DAB), on a crop plant.” (Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety, 15 January 2021.)  All that said there is a general rule about algae and that is never eat blue-green algae. Green yes, blue-green never. A nitrogen fixer, you can read more about  Nostoc here. 

Engarde! From my Sword Fern video.

This is my 500th newsletter. Some quick math suggests that’s about a decade of correspondence but it’s actually 16 years worth. The first newsletters were monthly. Back then I had to do the mailing as well. It was quite a chore. If one email address was wrong — or the mail box full –the entire mailing was aborted and there was no hint which address triggered the rejectiion. Now the mailing costs $40 a month (if I keep editing out folks who subscribe but never read the newsletter.)  

Topics covered in that first newsletter were: Water Vine, Smilax, Doesn’t Grow Here, Kudzu, Elderberry/Water Hemlock, Pomegranate Ponderings, the fact that elephants do not like chili and feeding cows curry reduces their methane production by 40%. The newsletter is published on Tuesdays because research 16 years ago said that was the day of the week an email was least likely to be deleted unread. It also gave me a one day break from teaching foraging classes on the weekend. I did not start the newsletter on a whim (or for advertising.) 

Green Deane in his journalism days four decades ago. Photo by Wang Su-mei

Some 40 years ago I was working journalist on daily newspapers. I covered law and crime and wrote features on the side. I also freelanced for national magazines and later ended up as an assignment editor for a TV station. I left that job because that was the beginning of “making” news rather than reporting news… The TV reporters, we called them “twinkies,”  were good-looking but more often than not empty headed and had to be told what questions to ask. Anyway, on one newspaper the reporters had to write a weekly column. It was actually the editor’s job to write one new column a day — a running feature, on the top of page three — but instead he farmed it out to seven writers. There were restrictions: It has to be about a local issue, it could not be an opinion piece, and had to be relevant to the coverage area. Those of us who had to write a weekly column came to loathe it. It was a re-occuring migraine and often one did not have anything to write about, and, unlike today, fiction and advocacy was not allowed. 

So I knew the newsletter pitfalls when I started this endeavor.  Fortunately there is always something to write about in the foraging world and the newsletter takes up only about one day per week, first word to mailing. I do not post newsletters on Facebook regularly because I deliberately chose not switch over to that medium. It’s too capricious and unreliable even if it would save some $500 a year. I also tend to end up in Facebook Jail regularly and always completely by surprise. The things that offend Facebook is ever-increasing. 

And of course a newsletter is pointless without readers. Thank you for tolerating all these years of repetition, typos and misspellings. The mistake are all my own. 

Possible Book Cover Photo

What of the book? Some seven years ago I proposed a book to some publishers: They collectively said no. Then one, in October 2020, said yes and could I deliver the book in 90 days to be printed in 2021? So I put my life on hold and wrote the book in 90 days turning it in on time (years of newspaper deadlines made that possible.) Then they said thanks but we won’t start it until 2022 and put it on sale in 2023. Bummer: Slow-forward: They are starting to put the book together. The good news is they are keeping most of the 430 articles I sent (covering more than 1500 species.) It is international in scope (European weeds went everywhere the Europeans went.) What makes this forth-coming book different, besides my endless ranting about dunk botanists and Dead Latin, is each entry — or almost every entry — includes nutritional information about the plant: Vitamins, minerals, anti-oxidants et cetera. That comprised most of the research as I already had the bulk of material written for my website. And yes there are color pictures, most of which I took over the years. The biggest headache, of all things, was vitamin A. It is expressed in a variety of ways that don’t easily translate into one metric. I finally gave up and kept all the various metrics. I might have preprints by October, three years after the project started. Actually this is my third book. My first one was in 1990 called 1001 Facts Somebody Screwed Up, followed by 1001 More Facts Somebody Screwed Up. Neither had 1001 facts. They did together way back at the beginning before editors got their delete buttons on it. Anyway, that publisher went out of business and sold the right to publish those book to cover debts. So one can still buy them but I have not seen a royalty check from them since 2000. And that, “dear readers” as Dear Abby use to write, is the publishing world. I dive had some short fiction published along the way most notably in Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine. 

Smoking Salmon

Where I grew up the Alder was called a trash tree. Why? It took over freshwater wetlands and filled in ponds. Not a strong wood, long lived or large. Folks never mentioned it’s prime wood for smoking meat and other comestibles… such as cheese. Smoking can preserve and flavor.

Pairing the wood to the food to be smoked is perhaps more an art than a science, an exercise in personal taste. I am more inclined to use what I have on hand or tinker with it a little. I’ve been saving wood for particular applications. So far my stash includes maple, white oak, apple, mesquite, and avocado. Surprisingly citrus wood is difficult to come by. 

Camphor gets a bad rap on the internet. I used to burn camphor in my fireplace. The Chinese make a famous duck dish using camphor smoke for flavoring. American barbecue pages all scream Camphor wood is toxic… however one commercial smoke house in northwest Florida uses camphor wood particularly on fish. And many sites warn cherry is toxic though you can buy cherrywood expressly for smoking particularly seafood. (I think perhaps they are confusing different species.)  They also approve of a western juniper but condemn an eastern juniper and mistakenly call them cedars.  All condemned the sycamore…. which is used for skewers and wooden spoons and bowels et cetera. They say Sycamore has a resin. Sycamore is quite close to the maple. I’m collecting sycamore sap now for syrup. Maple sap is clear, like water. Sycamore sap is — collectively — dark orange. Maybe it does have a resin… I will have to burn some and report. 

Sycamores is a hardwood not used for smoking.

Meats, seafoods, and cheese are foods that are regularly smoked. (I wonder if hard-boiled eggs can be smoked?) Delicate smoke for mild foods, stronger flavored for red meats et ali. Getting general approval for smoking is Acacia, Alder, Almond (I’d question that as I do Prunus caroliniana. Perhaps they mean Sweet Almond.) Apricot, Ash, Aspen (well aged, it can be sappy unless quite dry) Australian Pine (which is not a pine but closer to the oaks than conifers. The wood and dampened needles are used) Beech, Birch, Blackberry Roots, Bottlebrush Tree, Bunya Bunya cone leftovers, Butternut, Carob, Carrotwood, Chestnut, Coconut Husks (be careful, they have flaming gas jets, I know that from personal experience.) Corn Cobs, Cottonwood, Dogwood, Fig (sparingly) Grape Vine, Gorse, Guava, Heather, Hickory, Honey Locus, Jabuticaba, Jackfruit, Kiawe, Lead Tree (Leucaena leucocephala)  Lilac, Lychee, Madrone, Magnolia (I presume M. virginiana which is also a good wood to grow oyster mushrooms on) Manzanita, Mulberry, Nectarine, Oak (white and red) Olive, Orange (the latter for pork, also grapefruit, lemon, lime) Osage Orange (blended with oak) Peach, Pear, Peat, Pecan, Persimmon, Pistachio Shells, Pimento, Plum, Red Mangrove (Rhizophora racemosa) Santol, Sassafras, Seaweed (washed) Starfruit, Straw, Sugarcane, Tamarind, Willow, and Walnut, Black and English. 

Sourwood is chewed but not eaten.

Some woods are in …limbo… like the Sycamore and Sweet Gum (all the gum trees taste bad.) Another one is sourwood. Natives cooked meat on sourwood sticks so it can’t be all that bad. No reports on Southern Wax Myrtle, some report Crape Myrtles can be used. If the Bradford Pear could be used to smoke food it would help eliminate that non-productive, invasive ornamental species. As it is related to the apple perhaps it can. I’ve also got three gallons of dried Queen Palm kernels I’m going to try. They have a coconut-flavored. I wonder how they would smoke and taste… explode perhaps? You don’t use conifers for smoking (such as true pines, firs, hatmatacks, cypress et cetera.) They throw a foul flavor.

A loquats ripen the get sweeter.  Photo by Green Deane

Perhaps the next two species do not need repeating but I’ll assume you are a new reader. Loquats are in full fruit now particularly in the middle of the state. In south Florida they will be around for two or three more weeks. In north Florida they are just beginning to ripen. They’re usually fruit for six to eight weeks in each location. Like Star fruit they start out green turn light yellow and tart then slowly turn deep golden and very sweet. Unlike green star fruit green loquats are NOT edible. In fact there is one report in the literature in which a green loquat killed a child. Don’t eat the green fruit. They also naturally have a small amount of arsenic, enough to trigger tests for said. You can read about loquats here and a video here. 

Butterweed’s blossom does not resemble a mustard. Photo by Green Deane

This. too, has been mentioned earlier but bears repeating: Butterweed is toxic. The warning is prudent because the plant — before it blossoms — resembles a generic mustard. However, unlike all mustards, Butterweed has a mild flavor whereas all mustards have at least some pungency. If you mistakenly eat Butterweed raw or cooked it will damage your liver. Once the plant blossoms it does not resemble any mustard as the flowers are quite different. Mustards have four-petaled blossoms, Butterweed’s blossom looks like a yellow daisy. The plant likes to grow in damp places and gets to be about a yard high when at the blossoming stage. Unfortunately the leaves have a nice texture and a mild taste. That tells you immediately that it is not a mustard.

Foraging Classes as the cold moderates and the chance of rain increases. This weekend I am in Ft Pierce, at a rather strange preserve, and this Sunday at a familiar standby, Mead Garden in Winter Park.

Saturday March 26th,  George LeStrange Preserve, 4911 Ralls Road, Fort Pierce, FL, 34981. 9 a.m. to noon. This location does not have official bathrooms or water. 

Sunday March 27th, Mead Garden: 1500 S. Denning Dr., Winter Park, FL 32789.  Meet at the bathrooms. 9 a.m. to noon. 

Saturday April 2nd,  Dreher Park, West Palm Beach, 1200 Southern Blvd., West Palm Beach, 33405., 9 a.m. to noon. Meet just north of the science museum. 

Saturday/Sunday May 7th & 8th,  Honea Path, South Carolina, classes at 9 a.m. and 1 p.m. each day. 

For more information, to pre-pay or sign up go here

My nine-DVD set of 135 videos has been phased out and replaced by 171-videos on a 128-GB USB, see left.  The USB videos are the same videos I have on You Tube. Some people like to have their own copy especially if social order falters.  The USB videos have to be copied to your computer to play. If you want to order the USB go to the DVD/USB order button on the top right of this page or click here. That will take you to an order form. Or you can make a $99 donation, which tells me it is for the USB (include a snail-mail address.)  I’d like to thank all of you who ordered the DVD set over the years which required me to burn over 5,000 DVDs individually. I had to stop making them as few programs now will read the ISO files to copy them. Burning a set also took about three hours. 

Green Deane Forum

Want to identify a plant?  Perhaps you’re looking for a foraging reference? You might have a UFO, an Unidentified Flowering Object, you want identified. On the Green Deane Forum we — including Green Deane and others from around the world — chat about foraging all year. And it’s not just about warm-weather plants or just North American flora. Many nations share common weeds so there’s a lot to talk about. There’s also more than weeds. The reference section has information for foraging around the world. There are also articles on food preservation, and forgotten skills from making bows to fermenting food. Recent topics include: Stale Bread and Cod Liver Oil, Killing Bugs with Tobacco Plugs, Eating weeds: Is it safe? Have they mutated? Not the Eastern Red Bug but the Pink Tabebuia, African Tulip Tree, Asparagus densiflorus, Green Deane’s Book… You can join the forum by clicking on the button on the upper right hand side of this page.

This is my weekly newsletter #500. If you want to subscribe to this free newsletter you can find the sign-up form in the menu at the top of the page. My website, EatTheWeeds.com, which is data secure, has over 1500 plants on it in some 428 articles. I wrote every one myself, no cut and paste. 

 To donate to the Green Deane Newsletter click here.

— The hunt for a place to move to continues. Looking for a fixer upper on agicultural land preferably on the southern half of the state. Quiet and the ability to raise ducks or a goat or two a priority. Internet not a necessity. Failing that perhaps rent a mother-in-law cottage. I grew up on a farm and can husband animals and raise a garden. If you know of anything please let me know. GreenDeane @gmail.com.  Failing that buying an RV and finding a place to park is plan C. 

 

 

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Chinese Elm (and Siberian Elm) has edible leaves, seeds and inner bark. Photo by Green Deane

Both the Chinese and Siberian elms have several edible parts. When they start to fruit they make what is called a “samara” (SAM-ah-rah) which is a round paper-like envelop, slightly smaller than a dime. That is edible raw or cooked and the trees are loaded with them. Over time a seed develops in that samara which is about the size of a lentil and can be used the same way. Young leaves are also edible year round as is the cambium. Locally Chinese Elms — also called Lace Bark Elms, the Siberians are more saggy — are numerous, used in landscaping with some naturalization. The Siberian Elm was planted by the millions as part of the Work Project Administration during the depression and are common in the mid-west. To read more about them click here.

2004: Walt Cook, a Wyoming state veterinarian, takes care of one 300 stricken elk, all of which quickly died after eating a lichen, Parmelia molliuscula.

I am constantly meeting people who want to reduce the entire realm of foraging down to one sentence: “If the animals can eat it you can eat it.” That advice can kill you and or make you very ill. Birds can eat arsenic, squirrels strychnine, poison ivy is high-protein deer food. Conversely day lilies kill cats and avocados crash canaries. Three hundred elk were killed in Wyoming eating native lichen. There’a quite a list of false advice. Then you hear “all black berries are edible.” Wrong. “Most red berries are edible,” Wrong. The best you can do with berries is that almost all white berries are toxic. Not all but almost all, or enough of them to leave white berries alone. In the satirical novella Animal Farm, by George Orwell, the final rule is “all animals are equal but some are more equal than others.” That might be said about eating plants. Goats can eat almost anything. They are the garbage scows of the world, putting pigs to shame. However avocados will kill goats, but not us. In fact Avocados are toxic to most creatures. That said, as humans go we are fairly limited compared to animals, tolerance-wise. That’s another reason to know your plants and use the I.T.E.M. system, Identification, Time of Year, Environment, Method of Preparation. I had a fellow email me from a Mediterranean country. He said his foraging method was if it tasted good he ate it, if it tasted bad he didn’t eat it. He asked me what I thought of that. I replied I hoped he had good life insurance.

West Indian Chickweed is here all year.

From the Mail Bag:  This weed has totally invaded my lawn and I am desperate to get rid of it. Do you have any suggestions? Yes, it was a serious question about an edible,  Drymaria cordata. It’s not as edible as regular chickweed and has some medicinal uses, but it is an edible. Thus my advice was: Eat The Weeds! I receive a lot of emails like that. Maybe I should change the website’s name to “Kill The Weeds.” You know a nation is fed when people complain about edible plants in their lawn. I’ve also noticed an odd trend, the most visited pages recently were not about weeds but critter cuisine, you know, eating slugs and lizards and the like. Maybe it’s seasonal or some biology class logged on. I had over 400 inquiries about the Osage Orange, a very obscure edible that was lucky to see four visit a year. Analytics can be strange.

Foraging classes are held rain, shine, hot or cold. Photo by Nermina Krenata

Foraging classes: Below is my foraging class schedule for most of December this year. Locally classes usually happen even with a few people. Check for most distance classes to make sure they will be held. Holidays and weather can influence peoples’ commitment to attend a class. 

Saturday, December 8th, Florida State College,  south campus, 11901 Beach Blvd.,  Jacksonville, 32246.  9 a.m. to noon. We will meet at building “D”  next to the administration parking lot.

Saturday, December 15th, Seminole Wekiva TrailSanlando Park, 401 West Highland St. Altamonte Springs, Florida 32714. 9 a.m. to noon. Meet in the parking lot, first right after entering the park. 

Sunday, December 16, Bayshore Live Oak Park, Bayshore Drive. Port Charlotte. 9 a.m to noon, meet at the park across from Ganyard Street.

Saturday, December 22nd, Dreher Park, 1200 Southern Blvd., West Palm Beach, 33405. Nine a.m. to noon. Meet just north of the science center. 

Sunday, December 23rd, Blanchard Park, 10501 Jay Blanchard Trail, Orlando, FL 32817. 9 a.m. to noon, meet at the tennis courts next to YMCA building. 

Saturday, December 29th, Jervey Gantt Recreation Complex, 2390 SE 36th Ave., Ocala, FL, 34471. 9 a.m. to noon. Meet in the parking lot north of the water complex.

For more information on classes go here. 

An edible but not a too tasty native Passiflora.

During a class this week we saw a fruiting Passiflora lutea, not that common in my experience. It is an edible though the flavor is neither here nor there. One usually finds in in damp or well-watered areas. Some of the student’s sharp eyes also noticed Pepper Grass just starting its winter run, as are other little mustards and the native Plantagos and Pellitory. Our winter species will be showing up between now and Christmas and are usually around for a few months, varying with the species. Chickweed shows up around Christmas and is gone by Valentines Day, the mustards are around longer as is the False Hawksbeard. To learn more about the Passifloras click here.

Do you know what edible wild mushroom this is? You would if you read the Green Deane Forum.

Suffering from foraging withdrawal during the colder months? There is a cure and it’s free: The Green Deane Forum. There may be snow on the ground but the conversations are warm and there’s something for every level of forager. We talk about harvesting wild food every day of the year, swapping everything from harvesting tips to recipes to places to find wildedibles. The forum is also a great place to post photos you took of plants you can’t identify. They might be edible or medicinal. Instead of struggling with the internet let our experienced members help you nail down those elusive identifications. You can also read up on food preservation techniques that don’t require you to go out in the cold.  Recent post include Maybe Ringless Honey Mushrooms? Orange Helicopter with Red Dangling Lobes, Yellow Orange Round Fruits Near River, and Five-Minute English Muffin This Time With Beautyberries. To visit or join the Green Deane Forum click on the button above “categories” on the right hand side of this page.

Donations to upgrade EatTheWeeds.com and fund a book have gone well. Thank you to all who have contributed to either via the Go Fund Me link, the PayPal donation link or by writing to Green Deane POB 941793 Maitland FL, 32794.  There are many needs left such as expanding the foraging teacher page and the page on monotypic edibles. Several functions were also lost when we transitioned to the new website. I’m still having a hard time finding articles I wrote!  There’s always something and such things get more complex and expensive every year. 

Green Deane DVD set of 135 videos

All of Green Deane’s videos are available for free on You Tube, and more are on the way. I am schedule to start this week. They do have ads on them so every time you watch a Green Deane video I get a quarter of one cent. Four views, one cent. Not exactly a large money-maker but it helps pays for this newsletter. If you want to see the videos without ads and some in slightly better quality you can order the DVD set. It is nine DVDs with 15 videos on each for a total of 135 videos.  Many people want their own copy of the videos or they have a slow service and its easier to order then to watch them on-line. The DVDs make a good gift for that forager you know especially on long, cold winter months. Individual DVDs can also be ordered or you can pick and choose. You can order them by clicking on the button on the top right hand side of this page (if your window is open wide enough.)  Or you can go here.

And… the oaks are masting. Here is my short article on oaks and acorns. 

This is weekly issue 333, something of a mathematical accomplishment. And as a reader of the newsletter mark Dec. 21 for my annual Urban Crawl (my 7th I think.) 

If you would like to donate to Eat The Weeds please click here. Or you can use my Go Fund Me  link, or by writing to Green Deane POB 941793 Maitland FL, 32794

 

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  • His name was Will Endres and he was a North Carolina herbalist…Poison ivy, foraging classes, horse mint, ground cherries, foraging USBs, the Green Deane Forum, Southern Wax Myrtle, https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-475-september-21-2021/474

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-474-september-14-2021/

    Chance happens in foraging. 

    Coralwood, Kudzu, Foraging Classes, Favolus Mushrooms, learning edibles,  foraging USB, the Green Deane forum, aroma and cyanide

    473

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-473-september-7th-2021/

    It would be convenient if Pindo Palms fruited regularly. 

    Pindo palms seeds, Canna, Foraging classes, Ghost Pipes, Labor Day, Tallow Plums

    472

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-472-august-31-2021/

    Are there any Shiitake mushrooms locally? 

    Train Wrecker, Chicken of the Woods, Foraging Classes, Dogwood, Hackberries, Kudzu, foraging DVDs and the Green Deane Forum 

    471

    A white Water Hyacinth was seen recently in the Little Econ River east of Orlando. 

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-471-august-24th-2021/

    Water hyacinth, Foraging Classes, Wild grapes, Tumble Weed, Goldenrod, Swamp Mallow, Foraging USBs, the Green Deane forum, Donations  

    470

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-470-august-17th-2021/

    One way northern and southern climates differ is the greater array of non-native species that are constantly being imported and or found in southern climates.

    Torell’s Eucalyptus, Chaya, Guavas, Java Plum, Ground Cherries, Coco-plums, Natal Plum, Dragon Fruit, Podocarpus, Persimmons, Foraging USBs, Green Deane Forum, Donations, the Two-Leaf Nightshade 

    469

    Plants remind one that weather is less dependable than we might think. 

    Jambul, Chanterelles, Cactus Fruit, Sugarberry, Doveweed, Foraging Classes, Isabelline, Foraging USBs, the Green Deane Forum, and Donations

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-469-august-10-2021/

    468

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-468-august-3-2021/

    Yes, there are land crabs in Florida and the rest of the gulf coast.

    Land crabs, Foraging classes, Grapes, Podocarpus, Horsemint, Saw Palmetto, Goldenrod, Russian thistle, USBs, Green Deane Forum, donations. 

    467

    Candyroot, Foraging Classes, Wild Grapes, DVDs, Green Deane Forum, Donations, Saw Palmetto, Barnyard Grass, Brookweed 

    Is it the season or is it the rain?

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-467-july-27th-2021/

    466

    This summer’s foraging classes at Putney Farm in Honea Path South Carolina are now history

    Foraging in South Carolina, American Beech, Sourwood, Birches, Moringa, foraging Classes, Sumac, Country Wine, Saw Palmetto, foraging USB, Green Deane Forum, and Donations

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-466-july-20th-2021/ 

    465

    Newsletter #465, July 13th, 2021

    Kousa Dogwood, Sassafras, Wild Carrots, Birches Apples

    Apples, Mushrooms, Podocarpus, Foraging Classes, Knotweed, Cactus, Peppervine, Foraging DVDs, the Green Deane Forum, donations, 

    464 

    In real estate it is location, location, location. 

    Blue Indigos, Milk Caps, Jelly Fungus, Strawberry Guava, Foraging Classes, Pandamus Grass, Smilax, Foraging DVDs, Green Deane Forum and Donations

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-464-july-6th-2021/

    463

    Podocarpus are not fickle but they are slightly unpredictable. 

    Podocarpus, Java Plum, Stillwater Canoe, Mushrooms, Foraging classes, Atamasco Lily, foraging USBs, the Green Deane Forum, and donations  

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-463-june-29th-2021/

    462

    If you think you are not allergic to poison Ivy …

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-462-june-22-2021/

    Poison Ivy, Socks and Pythons, Black Cherries, Pokeweed, Yuck, Foraging Classes, Cashews, USBs, the Green Deane Forum, Donations.  

    461

    Sycamores, bacteria, Foraging Classes, Beautyberries, USBs, the Green Deane Forum, Donations, Sweet Acacia

    Sugar maples are famous for their syrup but how many species of trees can you actually tap?

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-461-june-15th-2021/

    460

    What can be said about the Jambul Tree?

    Jambul, Foraging Classes, Maypops, Pindo Palms, Chaya, Foraging USBs, Green Deane Forum, Donations, 

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-460-june-8th-2021/

    459

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-459-june-1st-2021/

    For more than 60 years I have associated Lilacs with June.

    Lilacs, American Lotus, Foraging Classes, Chinese Tallow Tree, Eastern Hemlock, foraging USBs, the Green Deane Forum, Donations, toxic Atamaso Lilies. 

    This week’s debatable question is “can you eat elderberries raw?”

    Elderberries, Two-leaf Nightshade, Foraging Classes, Morning Glories, foraging USBs, the Green Deane forum, donations, Jack in the Pulpit 

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-458-may-25th-2021/

    457

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-457-may-18th-2021/

    Acres of wild blackberries….

    Blackberries, foraging is illegal, Sea Blite, Foraging classes, Sea Purslane, foraging videos on USBs, the Green Deane Forum, 

    456

    The Bunya Bunya and Norfolk Pine are closely related.

    Bunya Bunya, Norfolk Pine, Allergic reactions, foraging classes, Chickasaw Plums, Blue Mushrooms, cattails, foraging videos on USBs, and the Green Deane Forum, 

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-456-may-4th-2021/

    455

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-455-april-27th-2021/

    Is it edible? 

    Evening Primrose, False dandelions, Yucca, Foraging classes, foraging videos on USBs, the Ghreen Deane Forum, 

    454 

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-454-april-20-2021/

    Pineapple Guava, Hercule’s Club, Usnea, Miner’s Lettuce, Foraging Classes, Paper Mulberry, Where do you forage, Foraging Videos, the Green Deane Forum, Brookweed, 

    Perhaps no ornamental has been championed as much as the Pineapple Guava

    453

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-453-april-13-2021/

    It’s about time to make a prediction.

    Ringless Honey Mushrooms, Eastern Coral Bean, Foraging Classes, Watercress, Marlberries, Foraging Videos, Green Deane Forum, Donations, 

    452

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-452-april-6th-2021/

    On the east coast of my native state of Maine about seven miles south of Portland is the Town of Scarbrough.

    Paper Mulberries, Foraging Classes, Deer Mushrooms, Hercules Club, USB Videos, Green Deane Forum, Donations.

    451 

    Which tree has more life, the Mulberry or the Moringa? 

    Mulberry, Atamasco lily, Foraging Classes, Blueberries, Huckleberries, Watercress, Foraging USBs,  the Green Deane Forum, Smilax, 

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-451-march-30th-2021/

    450

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-450-march-23-2021/

    wisteria, Cherokee Rose, Deer Mushrooms, Foraging Classes, Hydrilla, Garlic, video USBs, Green Deane Forum, Donations

    The weather may be chilly still it’s a hot time of year for foraging. 

    449 

    It’s not June that’s busting out all over but rather Vacciniums, mostly blueberries.

    Vacciniums, groundnuts, evening primroses, foraging classes, video USBs, Pawpaws, Florida Pennyroyal,

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-449-march-16-2021/

    448

    The Greeks were perhaps the first people to call things what they were such as “yoke mate” for spouse or “shiny leather” for the Reishi mushroom.

    Bottlebrush tree, Candyroot, Loquats, Mulberries, Foraging classes. USB, the Green Deane Forum 

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-448-march-09-2021/

    447

    Fireweed, Latex Strangler Vine, Foraging Classes, Clover, Bacopa, Violets, USBs, Cashews 

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-447-02-march-2021/

    Fireweed/burnweed has a flavor chefs love. 

    446

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-446-feb-23-2021/

    Loquats, Loquat wine, Wild Garlic, Foraging Classes, Chickweed, Lamb’s Quarters,  Toxic Butterweed, Bulrush, USBs, and the Green Deane Forum, 

    While driving around have you seen a tree with large, dark green leaves and yellow fruit?

    445

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-445-feb-16-2021/

    Can you eat red mangroves?

    Mangroves, foraging classes, plantagos, Passion Flowers, Black Medic, USBs&DVDs, Alligator pendent, and the Green Deane Forum  

    444

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-444-february-9th-2021/

    Young and tender describes them best: Elm leaves we nibbled during our foraging class in Gainesville Saturday.

    Elms, Eastern Red Bud, Foraging Classes, Ragweed, Cattails, Coquina, Mole Crabs, USBs & DVDs, the Green Deane Forum, nickerbeans, alligator tooth. 

    443

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-443-february-2-2021/

    If you look across local lakes now you will see ruby red splotches on the horizon. 

    Maples, Drymaria, Foraging Classes, Seaweed, USBs & DVDs, the Green Deane Forum, Jabuticaba, 

    442

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-442-january-26-2021/

    Violets, False Hawk’s Beard, Foraging Classes, Stink Horns, Weed Seeds, USB & DVDs, the Green Deane Forum 

    A common blossom that’s easy to identify is the wild violet. 

    441

    Our mighty stinging nettles are up.

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-441-january-19-2021/

    Stinging nettles, Sow Thistle, Foraging Classes, Chickweed, Wild Geraniums, Silverthorn, USBs & DVDs, and the Green Deane Forum 

    440

    The Western Tansy Mustard is one of our shortest-lived wintertime forageables. 

    Western Tansy Mustard, Eastern Gamagrass, Begonias, Foraging Classes, Spiderworts, USBs&DVDs, the Green Deane Forum, 

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-440-january-12th-2021/

    439

    Our tasty winter green chickweed is in its glory. 

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-439-january-05-2021/

    Chickweed, Sheep Sorrel, Oxalis, Latex Strangler Vine, Pellitory, Black Medic, Geranium, Horsemint, Henbit, Shepherd’s Purse, Plantain, Wild Mustard Radish, Canna, Cattails, Foraging Classes, Botany Builder #12, USB & DVDs, and the Green Deane Forum

    438

    What difference can 172.4 miles make?

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-438-december-29th-2020/

    Goji berry, Sea Rocket, Black Medic, Harlequin Glorybower, Foraging Classes, Nagi Tree, Glasswort, USBs & DVDs, the Green Deane Forum 

     

    437

    At what point does a “wild” plant become an edible plant?

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-437-december-22-2020/

    Florida Thatch Palm, Sleepy Hibiscus, Cereus, Bauhinia, Foraging Classes, Cockroach Berry, Silverthorn, USBs and DVDs, the Green Deane Forum 

    436 

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-436-december-15th-2020/

    Usually we see Christmas Berries about April. 

    Christmas Berries. Foraging Classes, Sow Thistle, Mustards & Radishes, Black Calabash, USBs & DVDs, and the Green Deane Forum  

    435

    Our first sighting of one of our winter comestibles happened Saturday

    Chickweed, Ringless Honey Mushrooms, Foraging Classes, Henbit, Wild Geraniums, Peltate, Is this Plant Edible? foraging USB & DVDs, the Green Deane Forum,  

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-435-december-08-2020/

    434 

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-434-december-01-2020/

    Winter Podocarpus, Acerola, Foraging Classes, Chufa, Redflower Ragweed, Weeds of Southern Turf Grasses, foraging USBs &DVDs, the Green Deane Forum.

    Actually there’s nothing wrong with the photo per se, it’s the time of year that’s different.

    433

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-433-november-24-2020/

    Every April of so we go looking for Wild Garlic…

    Wild Garlic, Big Caltrop, Foraging Classes, Ghost Pipes, Balm of Gilead, USBs & DVDs, Green Deane Forum 

    432 

    We are shifting mushrooms seasons from terrestrial to trees or ground to wood.

    Lion’s Mane, Gooseberries, Foraging classes, Sea Purslane, Foraging in urban areas, USB and DVDs, the Green Deane forum 

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-432-november-17th-2020/

    431

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-431-november-10-2020/

    While looking for the yellow-blossomed Dandelions…

    Dandelions, Mustard and radishes, Plantains, Foraging Classes, Brazilian Pepper,Skunk Vine, USBs & DVDs, the Green Deane Forum 

    430

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-430-november-3-2020/

    During our foraging class in West Palm Beach Sunday we saw inch-high sprouts of the winter edible Pellitory.

    Pellitory, Poor Man’s Peppergrass, Foraging classes, Seaweed, Jelly Fish, Southern Wax Myrtle, Stinkhorns, Jack Ol Lanterns, USBs & DVDs, the Green Deane Forum. 

    429

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-429-october-27-2020/

    During our foraging class Sunday in Gainesville we dug up a couple of Winged Yams. 

    Winged Yams. Tropical Almond, Foraging Classes, Roses, Bay Leaves, Citron Melon, the Honeycomb Mushroom, USBs and DVDs, the Green Deane Forum.

    428

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-428-october-20-2020/

    Country Wine, Foraging Classes, Chinese Tallow Tree, Caesarweed, Cambium, USBs and DVDs, the Green Deane Forum, and Ceibas

    Three reasons prompted me to resurrect my wine-making past. 

    427

    Mother Nature has her own schedule.

    Ringless Honey Mushrooms, Golden Rain Tree, Foraging Classes, Dragon Fruit, Partridgeberry, DVDs & USB, the Green Deane Forum

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-427-october-13-2020/

    426

    Fall is a good time to write about Yellow Pond Lilys.

    Yellow Pond Lilys, Persimmons, Monstera deliciosa, Turkey Tails, Foraging Classes, Sida, sumacs, two sages and a pusley, USBs and DVDs, and the Green Deane Forum

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-426-october-6-2020/ 

    425

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-425-september-29th-2020/

    The question isn’t whether Reishi mushrooms grow in North America. 

    Reishi mushrooms, Wax Myrtle Berries, Foraging Classes, American Beautyberries, Sea and Wood Oats, Ground Cherries, Anoles, Chestnut Bolete, DVDs and USB, the Green Deane Forum. 

    424

    Horsemint is in season and easy to find. 

    Horsemint, Crowfoot Grass, Foraging Classes, Apples, the aroma of wild food, plant pronunciations, foraging DVDs and USB, the Green Deane Forum,  

    423

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-423-september-15th-2020/

    No one told the Ringless Honey Mushrooms it isn’t November.

    Ringless Honey Mushrooms, the Syzygiums, Foraging Classes, Heartwing Sorrel, Bacopa, Groundnuts, USB and DVDs, and the Green Deane Forum 

    422

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-422-september-8th-2020/

    Pindo and Queen Palms, Canna, Indian Pipes, Foraging Classes, Scrumping, USBs and DVDs, the Green Deane Forum. 

    421

    In the backwoods of Maine where I grew up Dogwoods were small.

    Perennial Peanut, Kousa Dogwood, Sugarberry/Hackberry, Foraging Classes, Ground Cherries, foraging DVDsUSBs, the Green Deane Forum. 

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-421-september-01-2020/

    420

    Gracie gets the prize. 

    Black Trumpets, Persimmons, foraging classes, Kudzu, Wild Apples, the toxic False Parasol, foraging USBs and DVDs, and the Green Deane forum. 

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-420-august-25th-2020/

    419

    Last Sunday’s foraging class — Haulover Canal — was a hot one with a lot of walking.

    Tallow Plums, Foraging Classes, Goldenrod, Saw Palmettos, White Spiderling, Sumac, foraging DVDS & USBs, 

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-419-august-18th-2020/

    418

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-418-august-11-2020/

    There is probably some Syzygium in your kitchen.

    Bunya Bunyas, Syzygiums, Chanterelles,  Cactus Tuna, Sugarberry, Doveweed, Isabelline, foraging DVDs and USB, the Green Deane Forum…

    417

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-417-august-04-2020/

    Wild mints can be prima donnas.

    Horsemint, Russian Thistle, Foraging Classes, Goldenrod, Swamp Mallow, foraging videos, Green Deane Forum, Pindo Palms 

    416

    With apologies this newsletter is starting with the foraging class schedule.

    Wild Grapes, foraging class schedule, Pepper Vine, Podocarpus, Country Wine Update, Sumacs, Saw Palmettos, Foraging Videos, Green Deane Forum, Black Gum

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-416-july-29th-2020/

    415

    July is passing and that means many different things to foragers depending upon your location on the rotation.

    Forked-tendril grapes, pindo palms, cactus, foraging classes, the false roselle, barnyard grass, strawberry guava, foraging DVDs & USB, the green Deane Forum, 

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-415-july-21-2020/

    414

    It’s called Pandanus and Screw Pine and a lot of other names as well.

    Pandanus Grass, Smilax walteri, Foraging Classes, Knotweed, Pineapple Weed, Tamarind, Toe Biters, foraging videos on USB, and the Green Deane Forum 

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-414-july-14th-2020/

    413

    Is it time to rethink Magnolias? 

    Magnolias, Foraging Classes, Podocarpus, Florida Wine, Bread and Beer, Foraging Videos on USB, Green Deane Forum, Strawberry Guavas

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-413-july-7-2020/

    412

    First an apology to those who showed up for a class last Sunday at Haul Over Canal to find, like me, the road closed.

    Chamberbitters, foraging classes, Grapes, Magnolias, videos on USB, Green Deane Forum, and Bacopa 

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-412-june-30th-2020/

    411

    What can be said about the Jambul Tree? 

    Jambul Tree, Foraging Classes, Morning Glories, Boletes, Poke Sallet, Tindora, Foraging Videos on USBs, and the Green Deane Forum 

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-411-june-23-2020/

    410

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-410-june-16th-2020/

    Sugar maples are famous for their syrup but how many species of trees can you actually tap?

    Tapping trees, grapes, foraging classes, American Beautyberries, Creeping Fig, Richardia, videos on USBs and the Green Deane Forum 

    409

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-409-june-9-2020/

    There’s an old song “what a difference a day makes.”

    Mushroom class, foraging classes, Natal Plum, Surinam Cherries, Foraging videos on USBs, the Green Deane Forum. 

    408

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-408-june-2-2020/

    Yellow ponds, that’s how I think of it, or in some places, yellow rivers.

    American Lotus, Jack in the Pulpit, Black Cherries, a toxic lily, Chinese Tallow Tree, Foraging Classes, Maypops, Videos on USBs, and the Green Deane Forum.

    407

    In the realm of plant populations there is endangered, threatened then rare. 

    Candyroot, American Lotus, Foraging Classes, Eggs, USBs and the Green Deane Forum 

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-407-may-26-2020/

    406

    This was a “Prunus” foraging week. 

    Chickasaw Plums, Indigo Milk Cap, Black Medic, Foraging Classes, Cattails, Foraging Videos, Podocarpus, Wine Making, Blue Porter Weed, Green Deane Forum, Wild Pineapple. 

     https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-406-may-19-2020/

    405

    We are in between mushroom seasons, so to speak.

    Boletes, Society Garlic, Gopher Apples, Foraging Classes, Foraging DVDs/USBs, Botany Builder #28, Maypops, Toxic Cherry Laurel, Cochineal Dye, and the Green Deane Forum. 

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-12-may-2020/

    404

    This week’s debatable question is “can you eat elderberries raw?”

    Elderberries, Grapes, Common Plant Names, Redflower Ragweed, Fakahatchee Grass, Ground Nuts, Foraging Classes, Foraging videos, Wild Coffee and Coralberry, the Green Deane Forum. 

     

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-05-may-2020/

    403

    Now is a good time to go looking for blackberries. 

    Blackberries, Pineapple Guava, the Bacopas, Foraging Classes, Foraging Videos now on USB drives, Eastern Coral Bean, Coquina, Green Deane Forum, and Cotton 

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-28-april-2020/

    401-402 

    At one time there were just Opuntias.

    Cactus, Gopher Apples,  Deerberries, Foraging Classes, Mushrooms, Foraging DVDs, Persimmons, Avocados, Paper Mulberry, Pawpaw, Smartweed, Green Deane Forum and YUCK!, 

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-april-14-21-2020/

    400

    Watercress grew in a ditch behind an apartment complex I lived in near Sanford, Florida…

    Watercress, Wild Garlic, Marlberries, Chokeberries, American Nightshade, Chamberbitter, Green Deane Forum, Donations, DVDs 

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-7-april-2020/

    399

    Blossoming this time of year is the Eastern Coral Bean, sometimes called the Cherokee Bean.

    Eastern Coral Bean, Sea Blite, Foraging Classes, Pineapple Guava, Foraging DVDs, Variegated Mahoe, Australian Pine, Bananas, Green Deane Forum, Donations, Making Wine 

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-31-march-2020/

    398

    If you have an established ivy gourd…

    Ivy Gourd, Swinecress, Foraging Classes, Cashews, Henbit, Purslane, DVDs, Green Deane Forum, Donations, Basswood, 

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-24-march-2020/

    397

    A common blossom that’s easy to identify is the wild violet.

    Violets, Seablite, Loquats, foraging classes, Redflower Ragweed,  Latex Strangler Vine, Green Deane Forum, Donations, DVDs, Ivy Gourd 

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-17-march-2020/

    396

    Fireweed/Burnweed has a flavor chefs love.

    Fireweed/Burnweed, Clover, Foraging Classes, Waning Weeds, Fungi, Creeping Cucumber, Bacopa, Pennyroyal, DVDs, Green Deane Forum, Donations 

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-10-march-2020/

    395

    A few newsletters ago it was mentioned the Mulberries were in blossom.

    Mulberries, foraging classes, Pawpaws, Time Change, Dandelions and False Dandelions, Winter Plants and Wintergreen, Green Deane Forum, DVDs, Donating, and foraging photo #19 

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-3-march-2020/ 

    394

    Species in the Rumex genus can be difficult.

    Rumex, Foraging Classes, Citron Melons, Loquat, Clover, Green Deane Forum, Foraging DVDS, Donations, 

     https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-25-february-2020/

    393

    What are those white blossoms?

    Plums, Hawthorns, Pawpaw, Foraging Classes, Blewit, Wild Garlic,  Plantagos, Green Deane Forum, DVDs, Donations, Botany Builder #38.

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-18-february-2020/

    392

    It’s time for my annual warning about Butterweed

    Butterweed, Bulrush, Foraging Classes, Wild Pineapple, Red Powder Puff, DVDs, Creeping Indigo warning, Green Deane forum, donations, 

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-11-february-2020/

    391

    Most trees in the Pea Family are toxic but not all of them.

    Eastern redbud, Cattails, Pines, Foraging Classes, Coquina and Mole Crabs, Acorns, Plantagos, DVDs, the Green Deane Forum 

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-04-february-2020/

    390

    While driving through the middle of the peninsula this week I noticed Lambsquarters in their most common seasonal place: Citrus groves.

    Lambsquarters, Foraging Classes, Passifloras, Doveweed, Axils, Jelly Fish, DVDs, the Green Deane Forum, Donations 

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-28-january-2020/

    389

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-21-january-2020/

    Cladonia is a large genus of edible but not tasty lichen.

    Lichen, foraging classes, Botany Builder 28, Wild Lettuce, Removing Invasive Species, Botanical Names, Black Medic, Foraging DVDs, the Green Deane Forum, Donations

    388

    It’s rather obvious that wintertime foraging varies where you live.

    Winter Foraging, Chickweed and edible friends, Foraging classes, Sublimed sulfur, A cheap foraging book, Details and Solanum Americanum, Oyster Mushrooms, DVDs, Donations and the Green Deane Forum. 

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-14-january-2020/

    387

    Eastern Gamagrass, aka Fakahatchee Grass, is an edible you don’t see and then you do.

    Eastern Gamagrass, Ivy Gourd, Foraging Classes, Teas, Botany Builder #10, Carpetweed, Donations, Foraging DVDs, the Green Deane Forum 

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-7-january-2020/

    386

    There’s no reason to buy mustard greens now.

    Wild mustard and radish, Butter and Ruby Boletes, Foraging Classes, Edible Blossoms, Surinam Cherries, toxic Creeping Indigo. 

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-31-december-2019/

    385

    It’s a good time to mention the toxic Butterweed and Rattlebox.

    Butterweed, Foraging Classes, Roses, Hawthorns, Euell Gibbons and Nutrition, Rattlebox 

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-24-december-2019/

    384

    Plants give you something to look forward to especially if you know where and when to look.

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-17-december-2019/

    Wild Garlic, Chickweed, Goosegrass, Sow Thistle, Stinging Nettles, Dandelions, Sycamore, Foraging Classes, Tar Vine, Desert Horse Purslane, Green Deane Forum, DVDs, Go Fund Me, Urban Crawl

    383

    Mother Nature can be fickle and it’s almost always tied to weather.

    Grapes, Swinecress, Silverthorn, Foraging Classes, False Hawk’s Beard, Jelly Ears, Botany Builder #31,  Cactus, the Green Deane Forum, Foraging DVDs, Go Fund Me 

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-10-december-2019/

    382

    Pyracanthas are furious in the fall.

    Pyrachanthas Chinese and Siberian Elms, Silverthorn, Foraging Classes, Drymaria, Botany Builder #30, Magnolia Blossoms, Ginkgo, Foraging DVDs, the Green Deane Forum, Go Fund Me, Pollination in a word, and Remembering Nefertiti

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-3-december-2019/

    381

    This time of year two wintertime foragables come up, one quite esteemed the other barely edible.

    Henbit, Wild  Geraniums, Foraging Classes, Chickweed, Horse Nettle & Tropical Soda Apple,  Bananas

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-26-november-2019/

    380

    wild Mustards and radishes, Toxic Water Hemlock, Smartweed, Foraging Classes, Golden Rain Tree, Skunk Vine, Scat Contamination, Lady Bugs, and Lion’s Mane 

    Many foraging books are what I call “Ohio-centric.”

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-19-november-2019/

    379

    Dandelions, Seaweed, Foraging classes, Jellyfish, Wax Myrtle Berries, the Stinkhorn and Jack O’Lanterns, Mustards and Radishes, the Green Deane Forum, Donations, and foraging DVDs  

    Dandelion blossoms, ten pounds of sugar, and two cakes of bread yeast became my first batch of wine.

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-05-november-2019/

    378

    Edible Mushrooms, Foraging Classes, Tie Change, Blue and Red Sages and Oakleaf Flea Bane, Chinese Elm, Christmasberries, Wild Mustards, donations, DVDs, the Green Deane Forum. 

    Unusual rains last week coaxed more life out of several edible mushroom species that were seasonally put to bed a month ago.

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-29-october-2019/

    377

    Cucumber Tree, Paul Dreher, Sida, Turkey Tails, Foraging Classes, Palmate Leaves, Richardia, Perennial Peanut, Caesarweed, Botanical Names, Donations, Foraging DVDs, the Green Deane Forum. 

    Foraging is treasure hunting for adults

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-22-october-2019/

    376

    As is often the case one can walk past edible species many times and not notice them.

    Cinnamon, Dragon Fruit, Foraging Classes, Sumac, Persimmons, Yellow Pond Lily, Donations, Foraging DVDs, the Green Deane Forum 

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-15-october-2019/

    375

    The fruiting of species can be a mystery. 

    Cocoplums, Simpson Stopper, Coconut borer, Southern Wax Myrtle, Foraging Classes, Ringless Honey Mushrooms, White American Beautyberries, Wood Oats, Donations, foraging DVDs,  the Green Deane Forum 

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-08-october-2019/

    skipped a week, wordpress down

    374

    Panicum is a very common group of edible native and non-native grasses in Florida and North America.

    Panic Grass, Aromas, Plant Pronunciations, Foraging Classes, Purslane, Pindo Palm Wine, Donations, DVDs, the Green Deane Forum

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-24-september-2019/(opens in a new tab)

    373

    It’s the time of year to talk about Saw Palmetto berries.

    Saw Palmettos, Tallow Plum, Foraging Classes, Wild Apples, Elevation, Donations, DVDs, the Green Deane Forum

    Newsletter 17 September 2019

    372

    Seagrapes are coming into season.

    Seagrapes, Doveweed, Foraging near roads. Foraging Classes this week, Black & Sweet Gums, Isabelline and Mushrooms of the Gulf South. 

    Newsletter 10 September 2019

    371

    Newsletter 03 September 2019

    Labor Day used to mean more than hurricanes threatening the east coast from Florida to Maine.

    Labor Day, Creeping Fig, Foraging Classes in spite of Hurricane Dorian, Liatris, Poke Weed, Yellow Pond Lilly,  Poke Weed, Mosquitos & Beer, Lawns Aren’t Green, donations, 

    370

    It’s the time of year when Horsemint is easy to find. 

    Horsemint, Cocoplums, Natal Plumbs; Mushroom, Chitin, Arsenic and Insects; Stevia and Ragweed, Foraging Classes, Railroad Tracks, Goldenrod, Go Fund Me

    Newsletter 27 August 2019

    369

    I never receive mail about Lion’s Ear.

    Newsletter 20 August 2019

    Lion’s Ear, Brazilian Nightshade, Foraging Classes, Sida, Gopher Apples and Tallow Plums, White Chicken of the Woods, Go Fund Me, Foraging DVDs, the Green Deane Forum. 

    368

    The Water Hyacinth is blooming and no doubt many people are irritated by that.

    Newsletter 13 August 2019

    Water Hyacinth, Milk Cap Mushrooms, Foraging Classes, Kudzu, Green Deane Forum, DVDs, Go Fund Me, and I need a webmaster. 

    367

    Bunya Bunya get no respect 

    Bunya Bunya, Red Spiderling, Goldenrod, Sugarberry, Foraging Classes, Horsemint, Sweet Gum/Black Gum, The False Parasol: A mushroom to avoid, Green Deane Forum, Russian Thistle and railroad tracks, Foraging DVDs, Go Fund me, and I need a webmaster.

    Newsletter 6 August 2019

    366

    What’s in season to forage? Many species now perhaps because of unusual weather pattens this year.

    What plants can you forage for now, what mushrooms can you forage now, foraging classes, Blue Porter Weed, DVDs, the Green Deane Forum, Go Fund Me 

    365

    It’s common yet uncommon, that is, not rare but you don’t notice it too often. 

    Hawthorns, American Lotus, Upcoming foraging class schedule, Chanterelles, Burgoo and Loblollies, Donations, the Green Deane Forum, foraging DVDs 

    Newsletter 23 July 2019

    364

    One more abbreviated newsletter with schedule because I have been teaching out-of-state. 

    Newsletter 16 July 2019

    Newsletter 23 July 2019

    363

    Newsletter 9 July 2019

    This and next week’s newsletters (July 9 & 16, 2019) are abbreviated because…

    362

    One would think that with a name like “Barnyard Grass” one would find the species in barnyards. 

    Barnyard Grass, Strawberry Guava, Seaside Gentian, Spanish Needles, Toxic polypore, Foraging Classes, Teaching in South Carolina, Go Fund Me, the Green Deane Forum, foraging DVDs 

    Newsletter 2 July 2019

    361

    Yes it is edible but….

    The other White Chicken-of-the-Woods, Two-Leaf Solanum, Norfolk Pines and the Bunya Bunya, Foraging Classes Florida,  Foraging Classes South Carolina. Go Fund Me, the Green Deane Forum, and foraging DVDs 

    Newsletter 25 June 2019

    360

    Ground cherries locally tend to have two seasons, spring and fall. 

    Ground Cherries, South Carolina Foraging Classes, new food crops, Florida Foraging Classes, the Winged Yam, Passion Flower, the toxic Cherry Laurel, Go Fund Me, the Green Deane Forum, foraging DVDs

    Newsletter 18 June 2019

    359

    Yellow ponds, that’s how I think of it, or in some places, yellow rivers.

    American Lotus, South Carolina Foraging Classes, Local Foraging Classes, the toxic Atamasco Lily, Jack-in-the-Pulpit, Juniper Berries, Go Fund Me, Green Deane Forum, DVDs, the Chinese Tallow tree 

    Newsletter 11 June 2019

    358

    From a foraging point of view it was a very berry weekend starting with Coastal Ground Cherries, Physalis angustifolia in Port Charlotte.

    Ground Cherries, Cassine, Marco Island, Classes in South Carolina, Foraging Classes Florida, How Safe Is Foraging, Go Fund Me, the Green Deane Forum, DVDs  

    Newsletter 4 June 2019

    357

    The first time I ever saw red poppies growing was in Athens on my first visit to Greece

    Corn Poppies, Impatiens, Smartweed, Mushroom Update, Foraging Classes, Botany Builder #28 Echinate, Blue Porterweed, Green Deane Forum, Go Fund Me, DVDs, and Wild Pineapple 

    Newsletter 28 May 2019

    356

    If you were starving and came upon a patch of cattails you would have great cause for celebration.

    Cattails, Kudzu, Acorns, Lantana, Foraging Classes, Gopher Apples, Go Fund Me, and foraging DVDs 

    Newsletter 21 May 2019

    355

    The American Nightshade is a much-maligned plant

    American Nightshade, Ground Cherry, Blueberries et cetera, Carolina Bristle Mallow, Foraging Classes, Juniper Berries, Donations, the Green Deane Forum, foraging DVDs

    Newsletter 14 May 2019

    354

    There’s an odd kind of mulberry here in Florida. 

    Basswood (The Linden/Lime Tree) Chestnut Bolete, Foraging Classes, Kudzu, Wild Pineapple, Winged Yam, Foraging DVDs, Ivy Gourd, Donations, Gamagrass/Fakahatchee Grass, the Green Deane Forum 

    Newsletter 7 May 2019

    353

    There’s still time to look for Sea Blite, a seasonal salt-tolerant species that’s here this month, gone next month

    Sea Blite, Sugarberry, Foraging Classes, the Mahoe, Partridgeberry, Marlberries Revisited, DVDs, Donations and the Green Deane Forum. 

    Newsletter 30 April 2019

    352

    By April Stinging Nettles are usually gone for the season.

    Newsletter 23 April 2019

    Stinging nettles, Green Mushrooms,  Suriname Cherries, Wild Garlic, Foraging Classes, Miner’s Lettuce, Confederate Jasmine, Florida Pennyroyal, Redvein Abutilon, DVDs, Go Fund Me, and the Green Deane Forum 

    351

    If you are in the habit of eating wild mushrooms

    Newsletter 16 April 2019

    Five Edible Wild Mushrooms, Pineapple Guava, Eastern Coral Bean, Forestiera segregata the Florida Privet, Weekly Foraging Classes, Wild Edibles and locations they like, DVDs, the Green Deane Forum, and Go Fund Me 

    350

    Watercress/Wintercress grew in a ditch behind an apartment complex I lived in…

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-09-april-2019/

    Watercress, Wild Garlic, Upcoming Foraging Classes, Marlberries, Chokeberry, Making You Own Vinegar, Usnea, DVDS, Green Deane Forum, Go Fund Me, A Leafing Hickory 

    349

    Tallow Plums are something of a botanical mystery.

    Newsletter 2 April 2019

    Tallow Plums, Wild Garlic, Blueberries and relatives, Toothache Tree as a source of pepper, Foraging Classes, Eastern Coral Bean, American Nightshade, Soon it will be mushroom season, Green Deane Forum, Foraging DVDs, Go Fund Me. 

    348

    A few newsletters ago it was mentioned Mulberries were in blossom…

    Newsletter 26 March 2019

    Mulberries, Creeping Cucumber, Coco-plums, Foraging Classes and a new location, toxic Butterweed, Suriname Cherries, Green Deane Forum DVDS, Fermenting Spiderwort, Go Fund Me…  

    347

    Pawpaws can be among the most difficult and easy wild fruits to find.

    Newsletter 19 March 2019

    Pawpaws, Eating Grass, Foraging Classes, sickening Tropical Sage, Wisteria, Gladiolus, Raceme vs Spike, the Green Deane Forum, DVDs, Go Fund Me. 

    346

    With an impossible scientific name and strong aroma Fireweed is often over looked by the foraging community.

    Fireweed, Mayflowers, Lilacs, Pussy Willows, Foraging Classes, Mistetoe, Green Deane Forum, DVDs, Go Fund Me, Drying Loquats

    Newsletter 12 March 2019

    345

    Most foragers know Smilax tips are edible.

    Newsletter 5 March 2019

    Smilax berries, Marlberries, Daylight Saving Time, True Thistles, Coquina & Mole Crabs, Botanical Names, Foraging Classes, the Green Deane Forum, DVDs, and Go Fund Me 

    344

    Heads up, literally: Loquats are ripening.

    Newsletter 26 February 2019

    Loquats, Blackberries, Mulberries. Maypops, Creeping Cucumbers, Dollarweed, Strange Time of Year, Foraging Classes,  Eau de Rodent, Turkey Berry,  Toxic Tomatoes, the Green Deane Forum, DVDs, Go Fund Me, 

    343

    Lamb’s Quarters… Fat Hen… and where to find it.

    Newsletter 19 February 2019

    Lamb’s Quarters, Citron Melons, Last Average Frost Date,  Maple Seeds, Eastern Red Bud, Pink Tabebuia, Loquats, Pawpaws, Surinam Cherries, Cocoplum, Wild Mustard, Wild Radish, Blackberries. Agaricus campestris, Foraging Classes, Go Fund Me, DVDs, Green Deane Forum, Plantago rugelii  

    342

    The Western Tansy Mustard is one of our shortest-lived winter-time forageables.

    Newsletter 12 February 2019

    Western Tansy Mustard, Bittercress, Micro-Mustards, Black Medic, Foraging Classes, Florida Herbal Conference, Doveweed, the Larch, Tulips, Go Fund Me, Green Deane Forum, DVDs,  

    341

    Going north to forage is always pleasant this time of year. 

    Newsletter 5 February 2019

    Wild Garlic, Black Cherry vs Laurel Cherry, Elderberries, Foraging Classes, Lawns Aren’t Green, Florida Herbal Conference, Go Fund Me, the Green Deane Forum, Foraging DVDs 

    340

    Yeah… that’s a mouthful…

    Male Pine Cones, Poorman’s Pepper Grass and Maca, Perennial Peanut, Foraging Classes, Seaweeds, Dandelions, Nicker Beans, Florida Herbal Conference, Go Fund Me, the Green Deane Forum, Foraging DVDs, and Trametes lactinea.

    Newsletter 29 January 2019

    339

    An often overlooked wild edible is Bulrush.

    Newsletter 22 January 2019

    Bulrushes, Candyroot, Florida Pennyroyal, Sow Thistle, Wild Pineapple, Florida Herbal Conference, Calliandra, Foraging Classes, Blewits, Magnesium Deficiencies, DVDs, Green Deane Forum, Go Fund Me, Spanish Cherries 

    338

    Newsletter 15 January 2019

    A common blossom that’s easy to identify is the wild violet. It’s cultivated brethren is the pansy.

    Violets, foraging mistakes, upcoming foraging classes, the Florida Herbal Conference, Bauhinias, False Hawks Beard, Green Eyes, Florida Privet, foraging DVDs, the Green Deane Forum, Go Fund Me, Swinecress, Stink Horns, and Lawns Aren’t Green. 

    337

    Newsletter 08 January 2019

    There are Plantains that look like tough bananas and there are Plantains that are low and leafy plants. 

    Plantains/Plantagos, Fleabane, Goji Berry, Sycamore tree, Sublimed Sulfur, Richardia, Foraging Classes, Foraging DVDs, the Green Deane Forum, Go Fund Me.  

    336

    Newsletter, 01 January 2019

    Newsletter, 01 January 2019

    Making their winter debut are our stinging nettles and they might have the second-worst nettle sting on earth.

    Stinging nettles, Sow Thistles, Chickweed, Foraging Classes, Podocarpus Mystery, Hen Bit, the “Bills”, Wax Myrtle Berries, Foraging DVDs, the Green Deane Forum, Go Fund Me

    335

    Newsletter 18-25 December 2018

    Newsletter 18-25 December 2018

    Newsletter 18-25 December 2018

    A winter edible you should be scouting for is Galium aparine, or Goosegrass…

    Goosegrass, Jelly Ears, False Hawk’s Beard, Roses, Nickerbeans, Christmasberry, Dandelion, Lemon Bacopa and it’s evil bitter sister Water Hyssop, Foraging Classes, Pinellas County, Foraging Videos, Go Fund Me, Green Deane Forum, Thistle Seeds, 8th Annual Urban Crawl 

    334

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-11-december-2018/

    Pyracanthas are furious in the fall. Their brilliant red berries stand out in every landscape 

    Pyracanthas, Gingko, Chickweed, Hibiscus, Bauhinia, Foraging Classes, Death By Apple Seeds, Green Deane Forum, Foraging DVDs, Go Fund Me, can you ID the edibles? 

    333

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-04-december-2018/

    Both the Chinese and Siberian elms have several edible parts.

    Chinese and Siberian elms, if an animal can eat it, West Indian Chickweed, upcoming Foraging Classes, Passiflora lutea, the Green Deane Forum, Go Fund Me, Foraging videos, and oaks   

    332

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-27-november-2018/

    Foragers benefit from bad ideas. 

    Silverthorn, Little Mustards, Creeping Cucumber, Foraging Classes, Go Fund Me, Wax Myrtle, Green Deane Forum, Indian Pipes, Foraging Videos, 

    331

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-20-november-2018/

    The seasons are changing and so is the foraging with a shift into not only fall but winter plants.

    Christmasberry, Sugarberry, Foraging Classes, Carpetweed, Beefsteak Polypore, Go Fund Me. Green Deane Forum, Foraging videos

    330

    Common plant names can be so misleading. 

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-13-november-2018/

    Silk Floss Tree, Pandanus Grass, Sand Spurs, Stinging Nettle, Foraging Classes, Chicken of the Woods, Go Fund Me, Foraging DVDs, and the Green Deane Forum  

    329

    We don’t have the opportunity to often use the word “windfall”…

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-november-06-2018/

    Chinese elm, pines and inner bark, jellyfish, wild oaks and sea purslane, foraging classes, personal notes, donations, DVD and the Green Deane Forum 

    328

    The tree is easy to find but is it edible? 

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-30-october-2018/

    Golden Rain Tree, Daylight Saving Time, Back Yard Foraging and Pets, Foraging Classes, Smartweed, Go Fund Me, DVDs, and the Green Deane Forum

    327

    Learning about edible wild plants seem intimidating at first.

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-23-october-2018/

    Ringless Honey Mushroom, Foraging Class Schedule,  Morning Glories, Go Fund Me, DVDs, and the Green Deane Forum, 

    326

    Our Sumacs are happy. 

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-16-october-2018/

    Sumacs, Persimmons, What is Edible? Foraging Classes, Perennial Peanut, Sea Grapes, Go Fund Me, Green Deane Forum, foraging DVDs, 

    325 

    This might be a good time to write about Yellow Pond Lilys.

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-09-october-2018/

    Yellow Pond Lily, Papaya and Castor Beans, Sida, Turkey Tails, False Turkey Tails, Foraging Classes, DVDs, Go Fund Me, Green Deane Forum. 

    324

    Is it edible? Yes, no, maybe…

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-2-october-2018/

    Chinese Tallow Tree, Caesarweed, Horsemint, Oyster Mushrooms, Foraging Classes, DVDs, Go Fund Me, the Green Deane Forum. 

    323

    Seasons can be subtle

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-25-september-2018/

    Seasons, Jambul Tree, Mushrooming, Saw Palmaettos, Foraging Classes. Toxic Caterpillars, Foraging Videos, and the Green Deane Forum. 

    322

    It was on the side of the bike trail, half squished.

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-18-september-2018/

    Persimmons, Ringless Honey Mushrooms, Bananas, Foraging Classes, Peppervine, Foraging Videos, Green Deane Forum, 

    321

    In the backwoods of Maine where I grew up Dogwoods were small.

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-11-september-2018/

    Kousa Dogwood, Canna, Ground Cherries, Cocoplums, Foraging Classes, Foraging DVDs, Go Fund Me, the Green Deane Forum, OMG!, Carpetweed, Indian Pipes 

    320

    In the olden BC days… before computers…

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-04-september-2018/

    Fall foraging, foraging classes, DVDs, Green Deane Forum,  Go Fund me, Creeping Fig 

    319

    Still unpacking from my road trip (which is my excuse for this shorter-than-usual weekly newsletter.)

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-28-august-2018/

    Mushroom class, foraging class in South Carolina, Foraging Classes, Kudzu, Radium Weed, DVDs, Go Fund Me, the Green Deane Forum  

    318

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-21-august-2018/

    This is an abbreviated newsletter

    Foraging class schedule for August and September 2018

    317

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-14-august-2018/

    Bunya Bunya get no respect in countries where people have plenty of food.

    Bunya Bunya, Norfolk Pine,  Black Gum, Sugarberry, Erect Spiderling, Green Deane Forum, Foraging DVDs, Foraging Classes, Go Fund Me, 

    316

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-08-august-2018/

    There’s an old phrase: “Sometimes you have to bow to the absurd”

    Chanterelles, Black Trumpet, Sumac, Foraging Classes, Horsemint, Green Deane Forum, DVDs, Go Fund Me, 

    315

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-31-july-2018/

    Putting on black fruit now is the much-debated Peppervine, Ampelopsis arborea.

    Peppervine, Pindo Palms, Foraging Classes, Americaln Lotus, DVDs, Green Deane Forum, Where the wild food is.  

    314

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-24-july-2018/

    Our foraging class in Port Charlotte this past week was above and beyond if you like fruit.

    Cocoplums,  Jambul Tree, Mangos, Ground Cherries, Foraging Classes, Fermenting Mushrooms, Blue Porterweed, Foraging DVDs, the Green Deane Forum, 

    313 

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-17-july-2018/

    Millions of dollars and many decades have been spent trying to eradicate the edible pictured above.

    Latex Strangler Vine, Beefstake Polypore, Sugarberry, Foraging Classes, Eastern Gammagrass, Purslane, Green Deane Forum, Foraging DVDs, Lawns Aren’t Green, 

    312

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-10-july-2018/

    Lobsters… no, not the kind from the sea but the woods: Lobster mushrooms. 

    Magnolias, Lobster Mushrooms, Foraging Classes, Carpetweed, Green Deane Forum, Foraging DVDs, Bacterial Considerations, 

    311

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-3-july-2018/

    There’s a wonderfully aromatic plant that prefers to hide most of the year.

    Horsemint, Tallow Plum, Orlando Mushroom Group, Pecan Truffles, Foraging Classes, and DVDs 

    310

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-26-june-2018/

    Podocarpus does not, as they used to say, have an attitude.

    Podocarpus, Simpson Stopper, Orlando Mushroom Group, Foraging Classes, Jack In The Pulpit, Green Deane Forum, and foraging DVDs. 

    309

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-19-june-2018/

    Paper Mulberries are related to bread fruit. 

    Paper Mulberries, St. John’s Mint, Black Gum, Podocarpus, Poison Sumac, Foraging Classes, DVDs, Green Deane Forum, Blue Porterweed

    308

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-12-june-2018/

    Sorting out Morning Glories, Maypops and plants with cyanide, a Bolete with no name, Foraging Classes, Eating Little Red Bugs, the Green Deane Forum, Foraging DVDs,  

    307

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-05-june-2018/

    Yellow ponds, that’s how I think of it…

    American Lotus, Black Cherry,  Foraging Classes, Toxic Atamasco,  Milk Caps. The Old Man of the Woods, Green Deane Forum, Chinese Tallow tree, foraging DVDs, 

    306

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-29-may-2018/

    Yucca is not Yuca. Or said another way: YOU-ka is not YUK-ka.

    Yucca, Matchhead, Oaxaca Lemon Verbena, Doveweed, Ficus Racemosa, American Nightshade, Foraging Classes, DVDs, Green Deane Forum, Eastern Hemlock 

    305 

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-22-may-2018/

    The Orlando Mushroom Group (OMG!) met Sunday for their first fungal foray of the year. 

    Orlando Mushroom Group, Pawpaws, Foraging Classes, Pregnancy and Plants,  Green Deane Forum, Foraging DVDs, Go Fund Me, and Chanterelles. 

    304

    Spiderworts got me in trouble once

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-15-may-2018/

    Spiderworts, Pond Apples, Sea Oxeye, Foraging Classes, OMG mushroom hunt, Go Fund Me, Green Deane Forum, Foraging DVDs, Botany Builder 26,   

    303

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-08-may-2018/

    Not all of botany is settled.

    Grapes, Ivy Gourd, Eastern Gamagrass, Foraging Classes, DVDs, Green Deane Forum, Go Fund Me, the Orlando Mushroom Group, 

    302 

    Sea Purslane and Purslane are not the same species

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-01-may-2018/

    Sea Purslane, Sargassum, Morning Glories, Foraging Classes,  Foraging DVDs, Green Deane Forum, Orlando Mushroom Group, Go Fund Me, Jack in the Pulpits, 

    301

    The American Nightshade is poised to fruit heavily.

    https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-24-april-2018/

    American Nightshade, Blackberries, Orlando Mushroom Group, Common Fungi of South Florida, Foraging Classes, Ivy Gourd, Green Deane Forum, Foraging DVDs, Go Fund Me, 

    Newsletters in chronological order

  •  29 November2016:  https://www.eattheweeds.com/newsletter-6-december-2016/ Issue 235: What do you see #25, Beautyberries, Simpson Stoppers, Wild Pineapples, Where To Find Wild Edibles. Foraging Classes, A possible edible shrub? Bananas, Foraging DVDs and the Green Deane Forum
  • 22 November 2016:  Issue 234 Dandelions, Goji Berries, Wapato, Foraging Classes, Foraging DVDs, the Green Deane Forum
  • 15 November 2016: Issue 233: Chinese Elm, Wild Lettuce, Horsemint, Smartweed, Beautyberry, Brazilian Pepper, Winged Sumac, Foraging Classes, DVDs, the Green Deane Forum,
  • 08 November 2016:  Issue 232. Cucumber Weed, Honey Mushrooms, Creeping Cucumber, Tallow Plum, Christmasberry, Foraging Classes, Green Deane DVD, and the Green Deane Forum.
  • 01 November 2016: Issue 231: Edible Wild Radish, Deadly Water Hemlock, Peppery Smartweed, Crushed Acorns, Foraging Classes, DVDs and the Green Deane Forum
  • 25 October   2016: Issue 230: Tropical Almond, How Kids Learn, Foraging Classes, Dove Plums, the Green Deane Forum and foraging DVDs.
  • 18 October 2016: Issue 229: Do you need to know the botanical names? Morning Glories, Persimmons, Yam A, Foraging Classes, Green Deane Forum, DVDs, Acorn Bread.
  • 11 October 2016: Issue 228: Harvesting windfall, is the ground polluted? the Green Deane Forum and foraging DVDs
  • 04 October 2016: Issue 227: Carpetweed, foraging and bacteria, foraging classes, the Green Deane Forum, and foraging DVDs.
  • 27 September 2016: Issue 226: Acorns, Creeping Fig, Jewels of Opar, Foraging Classes, Ft. Desoto, Chaya, Green Deane Forum, foraging DVDs.
  •  20 September 2016: Issue 225: Hackberry – Sugarberry, Kudzu, Skunk Vine, Foraging Classes, Persimmons, Green Deane DVDs and the Green Deane Forum.
  • 13 September 2016: Issue 224: Water Hyacinth, Panic Grass, Foraging Classes, DVDs, Pindo Wine, the Green Deane Forum
  • 06 September 2016: Issue 223: Learning how to forage, what’s in season now, foraging classes, Green Deane DVDs, the Green Deane Forum.
  • 30 August 2016 was a fifth Tuesday. No newsletter was published.
  • 23 August 2016: Issue 222: Beautyberries, grapes, Pindo Palm, Simpson Stopper, Horsemint, Saw Palmetto, Persimmons, Maine Blueberries, milkweed pods, foraging classes., DVDs, the Green Deane Forum, medicinal and edible mushrooms.
  • 16 August 2016: Issue 221: Horsemint, Pindo Wine, Begonias, Goldenrod, Foraging Classes, Green Deane Forum, Foraging DVDs, Beautyberries,
  • 09 August 2016: Issue 220: Black Cherry, Black Gum, Black Pepper Vine Fruit, the North American Ebony, persimmon, foraging classes, DVDs, and the Green Deane Forum.
  • 02 August 2016: Issue 219: Pindo Palms, White Boerhavia, Water Hyssop and memory, Hackberries, Foraging Classes, DVDs, the Green Deane Forum, and Wild Grpaes
  • 26 July 2016: Issue 218: The Jambul Tree, Norfolk Pine, Hairy Cow Pea, Magnifying Glass, Foraging classes, DVDs, the Green Deane Forum, and Simpson Stoppers.
  • All data on site between April 16 and June 8th were lost because of Hostgator’s incompetence. That included many newsletters.
  • 12 April 2016: Issue 203: Finding Pawpaws, blossoming Eastern Coral Bean, fruiting Mulberries, the Mahoe, Partridgeberries in Florida! Upcoming foraging classes and ForageFest, the Green Deane Forum and DVDs.
  • 5 April 2016: No newsletter because of hacking attempt.
  • 29 March 2016: Issue 202: Ivy Gourd or Tindora, Bidens alba, Fermenting, Loquats, Foraging Classes and DVDs.
  • 22 March 2016:  Issue 201: Linden Tree, Fermenting Spiderwort, Avocado Seeds, Foraging Classes, DVDs
  • 15 March 2016: Issue 200: Identifying Garden Weeds, Loquats, Butterweed, New Class Location, Upcoming Foraging Classes, the Green Deane Forum, Foraging DVDs, 200th Newsletter!
  • 8 March 2016: Issue 199: Garden weeds, finding edible weeds, Western Tansy Mustard, Foraging Classes, Sow thistles, Green Deane Forum and  DVDs.
  • 1 March 2016: Issue 198: Florida Herbal Conference 2016, Poor Man’s Pepper Grass and Maca, Foraging Classes, Seaweed, Free Mustard Seeds, Green Deane DVDs, and the Green Deane Forum.
  • 23 February 2016: Issue 197: The Eastern Redbud and Chickasaw Plum, Wild Radishes and Mustards, Earthskills and Florida Herbal Conference 2016, Upcoming Foraging Classes, Free Mustard Seeds, Green Deane DVDs, and the Green Deane Forum.
  • 16 February 2016: Issue 196: Sow Thistles, Thorns, Spines and Prickles, the Green Deane Forum, Foraging Classes. Florida Herbal Conference, Free Mustard Seeds, Green Deane’s DVDs.
  • 9 February 2016: Issue 195: Silverthorns, Plantagos, Foraging Classes, Florida Herbal Conference, Foraging DVDs, free Red Mustard seeds.
  • 2 February 2016: Issue 194: Tulips, Mustards, Dandelions, Doveweed, Florida Herbal Conference, Foraging Classes, Green Deane Videos, Free Mustard seeds, and the Green Deane Forum: Did you ever eat a larch?”
  • 26 January 2016: Issue 193: Eastern Gamagrass, Florida Herbal Conference, Sea Blite, Queen and Pindo Palms, Opuntia and Nopales, Foraging Classes, Green Deane DVDs.
  • 19 January 2016: Issue 192: Silverthorn, Sheep’s Sorrel, Free Red Mustard Seeds, Stinging Nettles, Henbit, Chickweed, Foraging Classes, DVDs, and the Green Deane Forum
  • 12 January 2016: Issue 191: Roots revisited: Ivy Gourd. Wild Teas. Foraging Classes, DVDs, the Green Deane Forum.
  • 5 January 2016: Issue 190:Stinging nettles, Purslane, Oxalis, Mystery Root, Foraging classes, DVDs, Green Deane Forum.
  • 29 December 2015: Issue 189:Goosegrass, Christmasberry, Natal Plum, Yaupon Holly, Bananas, Nicker Bean, Ground Cherry, Sea Purslane, Sea Blite, Coral Berry, Gracilaria, CLasses, DVDs, and the Green Deane Forum
  • 22 December 2015: Issue 188: Ringless Honey mushrooms, Deer Mushrooms, Tamarind, Mahoe, Tropical Almond, Fifth Urban Crawl, Foraging Classes, DVDs, Green Deane Forum,
  • 15 December 2015: Issue 187: Silverthorn, Peppergrass, Chickweed, Foraging Classes Green Deane Videos, the Green Deane Forum, fifth annual Urban Crawl.
  • 8 December 2015: Issue 186: Wild lettuce, Osage Orange, Ginkgos, Cashew Trees, Pineapple Guava, Turk’s Cap, Foraging Classes, DVDs, and the Green Deane Forum.
  • 1 December 2015: Issue 185: Tropical Soda Apple aka Horse Nettle, Henbit,  Stork’s Bill and Cranesbill,
  • 24 November 2015: Issue 184; Chickweed, pomegranate peelings, pines, homemade mustard, foraging classes, the Green Deane Forum, and DVDs
  • 17 November 2015: Issue 183; Seaweed and Lichen, where to forage, Foraging Classes, DVDs, Green Deane Forum.
  • 10 November 2015: Issue 182:Wild Drinks, a book review; Wax Myrtle Berries, Wild Radish, Foraging Classes, the Green Deane Forum, and DVDs
  • 3 November 2015: Issue 181:Black gum, Seagrapes, Doveweed, Foraging near Roads, Classes, Green Deane Forum, and Videos.
  • 27 October 2015: Issue 180:Foot fruit: Podocarpus and Cashews, Sandspurs, Pony Foot, Foraging Classes, the Green Deane Forum and Videos
  • 20 October 2015: Issue 179:What is a Ceiba and how do you say it? Partridgeberry, Ringless Honey Mushrooms, Red Bays and Magnolias, Laurel Wilt, Pellitory aka Cucumberweed, Foraging Classes, and the Green Deane Forum
  • 7 October 2015 no  newsletter published because site had to be backed up because of hackers.
  • 6 October 2015: Issue 178:Tallow plum, White Beautyberries, Sumac, Sea and Wood Oats, Cactus and Nopales, Foraging Classes, Green Deane Forum,
  • 29 September was a fifth Tuesday, no news letter published then.
  • 22 September 2015: Issue 177: Frost, and ripening vegetables and fruit, Foraging Classes, the Green Deane Forum
  • 15 September 2015: Issue 176:Purslane and a look-alike, Pepper Vine, Upcoming Foraging Classes, Heartwing Sorrel, Green Deane Forum,
  • 8 September 2015: Issue 175: 18 edibles along the Seminole-Wekiva Trial, Foraging Class Schedule, and the Green Deane Forum.
  • 1 September 2015: Issue 174: Kudzu, wild apples, mountain foraging, upcoming classes, the Green Deane Forum
  • 18 and 25 August, no newsletters as Green Deane was on vacation hiking in the Carolinas.
  • 11 August 2015: Issue 173:Horsemint, Foraging along railroad tracks, Goldenrod, Swamp Rose Mallow, Foraging Classes, Green Deane Forum.
  • 4 August 2015:   Issue 172:Ripening grapes, saw palmetto fruit, Yellow Anise, Green Maypops, Large Boletes, Foraging Classes, Green Deane Forum.
  • 28 July 2015: Issue 171:Citron Melons, three edible mushrooms; Blue Lactarius, the Old Man of the Woods, and Chanterelles. Lone Star Ticks and Armadillos in the news, Foraging Classes and the Green Deane Forum
  • 21 July 2015: Issue 170:Tasty Tamarind, Tropical Almonds, the lesser-known Silk Bay, Foraging Classes, The Green Deane Forum, Are the Seasons Changing?
  • 14 July 2015: Issue 169: Are all Portulacas edible? Which yam is it? Elderberries. Foraging Classes. Taking a Bee Hive Home, and The Green Deane Forum.
  • 7 July 2015:  Issue 168: Paper Mulberries, Pindo Palm, Yaupon Holly, The Timucua, Pawpaws, plant books, upcoming foraging classes, the Green Deane Forum.
  • 30 June 2015: Fifth Tuesday, no newsletter.
  • 23 June 2015: Issue 167: Sea Blite, Glasswort, Creeping Fig, Foraging Classes, Green Deane Forum.
  • 16 June 2105: Issue 166:Laco-fermenting, toxic Atamasco Lily, Smilax, Sword Ferns, Foraging Classes, Green Deane Forum,
  • 9 June 2015: Issue 165: Latex Strangler Vine, American Lotus, Dock Seeds, foraging mistakes, early season Podocarpus, Reishi mushrooms, foraging classes, Green Deane Forum
  • 2 June 2015: Issue 164: Ivy gourd, Honey Mushrooms, Wild Food Plants of Hawaii, Classes, Green Deane Forum.
  •  26 May 2015, no newsletter because of hackers. 
  • 19 May 2015: Issue 163:Gopher Apples are blossoming as are Groundnuts. Candyroot is getting showy, Blueberries are ripening. The Simpson Stopper has three kinds of leaves. Wild Coffee and Coralberry Confusion, Upcoming Classes, and the Green Deane Forum,
  • 12 May 2015: Issue 162: Watercress, Wild Garlic, Upcoming Foraging Classes, Green Deane Forum, Botany Builder 28, Does anyone want to guess?
  • 5 May 2015: Issue 161:Wild Pineapple, Ground Cherries, Horsemint, Three kinds of wild grapes, upcoming foraging classes, Botany Builder 27, edible Pluteus petasatus, the Green Deane Forum
  • 28 April 2015: Issue 160:Blackberries, Pickling Betony roots, Elderberry, Smilax, Juniper Berries, Upcoming Classes, Green Deane Forum, What Do You See #24.
  • 21 April 2015: Issue 159: Distance and Elevation, Paper Mulberry, Red Mulberry, Basswood, False Hawk’s Beard, Upcoming Foraging Classes, Green Deane Forum, Botany Builder #26,
  • 14 April, 2015: Issue 158: Pineapple Guava, the Tallow Plum, where to look for edible plants, upcoming foraging classes. the Green Deane Forum, and What Do You See #23
  • 7 April 2015: Issue 157: ForageFest 2015, Lantanas, Weeds of Southern Turfgrasses, A Beginner’s Guide of Edible Florida, foraging in Port Charlotte, non-edible Nicker Beans, foraging classes, the Green Deane Forum, and What Do You See #22
  • 31 March 2015: Issue 156: Is it time to reassess Nuphar roots? Identifying the Simpson Stopper. Foraging Instructors. What ’s in Season, Foraging Class Schedule, Green Deane Forum, What do you see #21.
  • 24 March 2015: Issue 155: Mulberries, Wild Cucumbers, Edible Palms, Sea Rocket, Which Blueberry? Green Deane Forum. Upcoming Foraging Classes, What Do You See #20.
  • 17 March 2015: There was no newsletter.
  • 10 March 2015: Issue 154:Paw paws, Pennyroyal, Dandelions, Green Deane Forum, Foraging Classes, Daylight Saving time, What Do You See #19
  • 3 March 2015, Issue 153: Florida Herbal Conference 2015, Turpentine Pines, Banning Mulberries, Foraging Classes, the Green Deane Forums, Bird Peppers, and What Do You See #18
  • 24 February 2015: Issue 152: Eastern Redbud, Plums, Limequat, Foraging Classes, Seasonal changes and Mulberries, Florida Herbal Conference, Green Deane Forum, and What Do You See #17.
  • 17 February 2015: Issue 151: Pepper Grass, Wild Geraniums, Paper Mulberry, Foraging Classes, Guest article: Bees, Butterflies, and Moths, Florida Herbal Conference 2015, the Green Deane Forum, and Winter Buds10 February 2015: Mystery diced root,  Florida Earthskills 2015 is history, Florida Herbal Conference 2015 is next,  foraging classes, Green Deane Forum, the 150th newsletter.
  • 27 January 2015: The Wax Myrtle, Mustards & Radishes, Hairy Cowpea, Green Deane Forum, Earthskills 2015, Florida Herbal Conferece 2015, How Ungreen of Us.
  •  20 January 2015: Goji berries, Plantagos, Black Medic, Green Deane Forum, Earthskills 2015, Florida Herbal Conference 2015, and Chain of Contamination
  • 13 January 2015: Poorman’s Pepper Grass, Creeping Cucumber, Bulrush, Green Deane Forum, Earthskills 2015, Florida Herbal Conference 2015, classes, Wild Pineapple, Creeping Indigo warning, Calliandra haematocephala, What Do You See #16. 
  • 6 January 2015: False Hawk’s Beard, Roses, Earthskills gathering, 2015 Florida Herbal Conference, Foraging Classes, Pellitory, Goosegrass, Less Money More Weeds
  • 30 December 2014: New Year Leaves, Bauhinias, Pansies, Classes, DVDs, Green Deane Forum, Earthskills Conference, Florida Herbal Conference, Janus, the Roman God who looks both ways, 4th Annual Urban Crawl.
  • 23 December 2014: Are cattails really that good? Is the Moss Rose edible? FORAGER! Classes, DVDS and the Green Deane Forum.
  • 16 December 2014: Sycamores, Wild Mustards, When a Description Doesn’t Fit, Upcoming Classes, Green Deane DVDs, The Green Deane Forum, Florida Herbal Conference
  • 9 December 2014: Wild edibles in downtown Savannah, Georgia, Pyracanthas, Ginkgop, Swinecress, Henbit, herbalism vs foraging, upcoming foraging classes, Green Deane DVDs, and the Florida Herbal Conference.
  • 2 December 2014: The Cabbage Palm, Sow Thistle, Weeds vs. Cultivated Crops, DVDs, Green Deane Forum, and the Florida Herbal Conference.
  • 25 November 2014: Pellitory, Usnea, Thanksgiving, foraging classes, DVDs, the Green Deane Forum and the herbal conference.
  • 18 November 2014: Persimmons, Indian Pipes, Cactus fruit, Lantana, foraging classes, DVDs, the Green Deane Forum and the herbal conference.
  • 11 November 2014, no newsletter as Green Deane had dental surgery.
  • 4 November 2014:    Making Vinegar, Marlberries, Wintercress, Florida Herbal Conference, Upcoming Classes, DVDs, and the Green Deane Forum, all in this week’s newsletter From The Village Green.
  • 28 October 2014: Ground Cherries, Cocoplums, Simpson Stopper, Elderberries, Lemon Bacopa, Bananas, Lactarius Indigo, Upcoming Classes, DVDs, The fourth Florida Herbal Conference, and Florida Gulf Coast University.
  • 21 October 2014: Roses, Book Review: The Wild Wisdom of the Weeds, upcoming foraging season, classes, DVDs, and the Green Deane forum.
  • Oct 7and 14 no newsletter because Green Deane attended an out-of-state memorial service.
  • 30 September 2014: Date Palms, Mushroom Season, Red Tide, Foraging Classes, DVDs, Green Deane Forum.
  • 23 September 2014: Is Portulaca pilosa edible? Gopher Apples, What’s in Season, Class Schedule, DVDs, the Green Deane Forum.
  • 16 September 2014: The Tallow Plum, a neat way to clean tunas, looking for yams, the beautyberry is happy, upcoming classes, DVDs, and the Green Deane Forum
  • 9 September 2014: The passion fruit, where is it safe to forage, the Jambul Fruit, Puss Moth Caterpillar, Classes, DVD, and the Green Deane Forum.
  • 2 September 2014: Sumac, Bananas, Cana, Old Man of The Woods, Podocarpus, Answer to What Do You See #16, Green Deane Forum, DVDs.
  • 26 August 2014: Pine nuts, wild cucumbers, hiking in North Carolina, foraging classes, What Do You See #16, Green Deane Forum and DVDs.
  • 19 August 2014: No newsletter, Green Deane hiking in the Carolinas.
  • 12 August 2014: No newsletter, Green Deane hiking in the Carolinas.
  • 5 August 2014: No newsletter, Green Deane hiking in the Carolinas.
  • 29 July 2014: Bunya Bunya, Ganoderma mushrooms, upcoming classes, where to find the strangler latex vine, the Green Deane Forum and DVDs.
  • 22 July 2014, American lotus, Fifth Annual Mushroom Intensive, Portulacas, Foraging Classes, The Green Deane Forum, and Podocarpus
  • 15 July 2014, Black Cherries, Strawberry Guava, Horsemint, Basswood, Mushroom Workshop, White Indigoberry
  • July 1st and 8th, no newsletter as Green Deane was on vacation.
  • 24 June 2014: Drehear Park, Jambul, Purslane, Classes, DVDs, changing servers.
  • 17 June 2014: Chickasaw Plums, the deadly Water Hemlock, a Monsoon of Mushrooms, the answer the What Do You See #15, upcoming classes, the Green Deane Forum and DVDs.
  • 10 June 2014: Jack In The Pulpits, Seasonal Changed, Podocarpus, Junipers, What Do You See 15, Answer to What Do You See 14, Foraging Classes, the Green Deane Forum, and DVDs.
  • 3 June 2014: No newsletter because of attempted hacking.
  • 27 May 2014: Memorial Day and the Corn Poppy. Where do you forage? What Do You See #14.
  •  2o May 2014: Discovering Chaya; a new loop; Florida’s Wild Edibles, a book review; classes and DVDs.
  • 13 May 2014: Caloric staples: Cattails, Kudzu, Acorns; Seasonal Changes; “Giant Hog Weed” on the Green Deane Forum; Upcoming Foraging Classes; DVDs; What Do You See 13 Answers, all in this week’s newsletter From The Village Green.
  • 6 May 2014: Blackberries, the Water Hyacinth, Of Butterflies and Bees, What Do You See #12 and 13, Green Deane Forum and DVDS.
  • 29 April 2014: Fifth Tuesday of the month. No newsletter published that date.
  • 22 April 2014: Wild Garlic and Onions, Fleabane, Surinam Cherries and Mulberries, What Do You See 12, the answer to What Do You See 11, the Green Deane Forum, Classes and DVDs.
  • 15 April 2014:  Florida pennyroyal, Pawpaws, A new edible Redvein Abutilon, Birds and Loquats, What Do You See #11, answer to What Do You See #10, upcoming classes, DVDs
  • 8 April 2014: Mulberries, Magnolia Vinegar, Surinam Cherries, What Do You See 10, answer to What Do You See 09, Upcoming Foraging classes, Book Review: Foraging With Kids, DVDs.
  • 1 April 2014: The Tropical Chestnut, the Eastern Redbud, Miner’s Lettuce, Upcoming Foraging Classes, What do You See #09, answers to What Do You See 08, Book Review: Guide To Wild Foods And Useful Plants, DVDs, Barbie…
  • 25 March 2014: Finding “wild” edibles, Wild Cucumber, Basswood, Black Medic and Hop Clover, Upcoming Classes,  Brevard Botanical Garden Plant sale, What Do You See 08, answer for What Do You See 07, and DVDs.
  • 18 March 2014:  Golf courses revisited, rain brings the mushrooms, spring greens are putting on, got an article for the newsletter? Classes, DVDs, What Do You See #07, answers to #06,  Birmingham Plant Sale, Book Review: Foraging & Feasting.
  • 11 March 2014:  Finding wild edibles, Dandelions, False Dandelions, Time Change, What Do You See #06, Spring is Here, Upcoming Classes, DVDs, Guest Articles Request.
  • 4 March, 2014: Winging it with maple seeds, Turk’s Caps, Florida Herbal Conference 2014 is history, how to avoid the toxic Cherry Laurel, What Do You See? #05 and the answers to #04, looking for a travel trailer and holding classes in west Florida and beyond.
  • 25 February, 2014: Sheep Sorrel, mystery mushroom, upcoming classes, Botany Builder 39, What Do You See? #04, Answer to What Do You See 03,  DVDs and close encounters of the slithering kind.
  • 18 February 2014: Nettle season, the evergreen Water Hyssop, White Clover, Boletes, our guest article: Plant Nutrition, upcoming classes, the Florida Herbal Conference nears, What Do You See #3 and the answer to What Do You See #2,
  • 11 February 2014: Blewit Mushroom, Wild Garlic, Botany Builder #38, Plantago Power, Guest Article: Is it really Global Warming?  What Do You See #2 and last week’s answer and more all in this week’s newsletter From The Village Green.
  • 4 February 2014: What is White Snow? The Silverthorns are fruiting. Which Ganoderma is it? Botany Builder #37. What Do You See #1, and new feature. EarthSkills gathering Florida is this week, Florida Herbal Conference is this month, all in this week’s newsletter From The Village Green.
  • 28 January, 2014: Cooking up mustard roots, Botany Builder #36, why doesn’t epazote freeze? Class Schedule, EarthSkills 2014, Florida Herbal Conference, DVDs, looking for Mr. Good Transportation, and guest writers.
  • 21 January 2014: Tansy Mustard, Swine Cress, Botany Builder #35, Part II of  guest writer Dewayne Allday’s To Shroom or not to Shroom, EarthSkills 2014 gathering, Florida Herbal Conference 2014, and upcoming foraging classes.
  • 14 January 2014: Start looking for Silverthorn fruit, Henbit, Amaranth and Bitter Cress in local garden, Botany Builder #34, guest writer Dewayne Allday, To Shroom or not to Shroom, EarthSkills 2014 gathering, Florida Herbal Conference 2014, and upcoming foraging classes,
  • 7 January 2014:   Plantagos are ready for harvesting, Chickweed by Heather Pierce with recipes, Botany Builder 33, How safe is foraging? Class schedule, the Florida Herbal Conference, and Green Deane’s DVDs.
  • 31 December 2013: No newsletter published that date.
  • 24 December 2013: Vibrant chickweed, abundant pellitory, eat your Christmas tree? The Third Annual Urban Crawl with violet recipe, the common sow thistle, Botany Builder #32, Bottled scallions and the Green Deane Forum, what is foraging? upcoming classes and DVDs,
  • 17 December 2013: The Green Deane Forum, the Tropical Almond, Botany Builder 31, Over Foraging, ETWs Archive, Mushrooms to be found, three thefts, Green Deane DVDs.
  • 10 December 2013: Wild Radishes and Mustards, Juniper Berries, Amelia Island, Egan Creek Greenway, The Blue Heron Inn, and Botany Builder #30: Peltate. From the Archive: Is this Plant Edible?
  • 3 December 2013: Sow thistles are sprouting, the wild lettuce is up. How many raw elderberries should you eat? The Silverthorn is in blossom, swinecress will soon be here, and Botany Builder #29.
  • 26 November 2013: Strangler Latex Vine still fruiting, seasonal Little Mustards, Stinging Nettles, Forest Kindergarten, a dear visitor, Florida Herbal Conference, Foraging DVDs, and Botany Builder #28: Lianas.
  • 19 November 2013: Chickweed is back! Along with stinkhorns, train wreckers, making dandelion wine, walnuts in the news, Florida Herbal Conference, DVDs, and foraging instructor updates.
  • 12 November 2013: Sargassum, other sea veteables, eating jellyfish, cooking with sea purslane, the wood oats alternative, classes, DVDs, Florida Herbal Conference and an insect invasion.
  • 5 November 2013: The seasonal change is upon us and winter foraging should be picking up. There’s acorns to be collected, a yam blossom to see, and a luffa surprise. The Florida Herbal Conference is coming up, and shoveling snow all in this week’s newsletter From The Village Green.
  • 29 October 2013: No newsletter published that date.
  • 22 October 2013: The Tropical Almond, Smartweed, Dudaim Melon, Polyporus Tenuiculus, Florida Herbal Conference, and Green Deane’s DVDs.
  • 15 October 2013: A new edible, Perennial Pea; early-season cucumber weed; going out of season sea-grapes, persimmons, coco-plums, simpson stopper; begonias-hemlock, honey mushrooms, a calculating cat, Florida Herbal Conference, and DVDs.
  • 8 October 2013: Black Gum, eating Anoles, the Green Deane Forum, Chestnut Bolete, 2014 Florida herbal conference, Green Deane’s DVDs, and 2000-year old seed sprouts.
  • 1 October 2013: Sumac’s in season, persimmons, saw palmettos, creeping cucumbers, three iffy edibles, trust, the genus Lactarius, language and grazing.
    24 Septemner 2013: Ever eat a Norfolk Pine? Snacking on Hairy Cowpeas blossoms. Dare you eat a Saw Palmetto berry? Persimmons are coming into season. Sign up early for the Florida Herbal Conference. Recent rains will stimulate mushroom sightings. Change in the newsletter policy. DVDs as selling.
  • 17 September 2013: Cereus fruit, ground nuts, 5,000 questions, upcoming classes, herbal conference, my mystery mushroom, DVDS.
  • 10 September 2013: Remembering wild apples, the aroma of wild plants, coming to terms with botanical names, a purslane recipe, the Florida Herbal Conference and DVDs,
  • 3 September 2013: Blooming horsemint, Kudzu, classes, Ganoderma curtisii, make a berry picking bucket, upcoming conferences and DVDs.
  • 27 August, 2013: Blossoming Coral Vine, Eastern Gamagrass, Grapes, Foraging Classes, Rattlesnakes, Poison Sumac, and Puffballs
  • 20 August 2013: Podocarpus and fruit wines, thank you cards, class schedule, DVDs, and for what it’s worth.
  • 13 August 2013: Fireweed is gourmet?  Pindo Palms, Bitter Gourd, native grapes, Mt. Washington, Blueberries, persimmons, upcoming foraging classes and a common toxic mushroom the Green Parasol.
  • 6 August 2013: Osage Orange, Saw Palmettos, foraging teachers, upcoming foraging classes, seasonal mushrooms, and how we love our pets.
  • 30 July 2013: Getting Cereus about blooming cactus, the Monadas for medicine and spice, DVDs, our native Anise trees and remembering Dick Deuerling.
  • 23 July 2013, Where to look for weeds, Pineapple weed, Toe Biters, 2 million views, DVDs, and a tribute to mom, Mae Lydia Putney Jordan.
  • 9 July and 16 July 2013 no newsletter due to a death in the family.
  • 2 July 2013: The tasty Bunya Pine Cone, natal plums, willows, botany builder, classes and your pick for a new vegetable.
  • 25 June 2013: The orange Paper Mulberry, the orange Hackberry, Green Deane’s DVDs, Environmentalism, upcoming classes, and the Tree of Heaven all in this week’s newsletter From The Village Green
  • 18 June 2013: Chickasaw plums, ivy gourd, the false roselle, toxic daturas, hand lenses, classes, and who’s manipulating whom?
  • 11 June 2013:  Getting food out of the Chinese Tallow Tree, harvesting young wild yams, pickled Betony root, the deer are raining what? And upcoming classes.
  • 4 June 2013: The maypops and pawpaws are putting on fruit, yucca are blossoming, black cherries are ripe and the black nightshade berries are ripening. That and a new class location, Seminole-Wekiva.
  • 28 May 2013: Sea purslane, sea oats and wood oats, a profusion of coco-plums,  easterngammagrass and how to eat cicadas
  • 21 May 2013: The Prunus are a fruiting, the winged yam, where to find sea blite, should you eat Black Medic, Smilax are in blossom, and new video about Wild garlic/Onions.
  • 14 May 2013: No newsletter that week
  • 7 May 2013: Blackberries, Lemon Bacopa, Surinam Cherries, Basswood, Linden Tree, recent articles and the city of Winter Park spraying cattails because they are not aestheticallypleasing in the park.
  • 30 April 2013: How to tell sow thistles apart, creeping fig, lawns, and why can’t I eat this?
  • 23 April 2013: The sweet aroma of the candyroot, the surprising relative of the Hairy Cowpea, Barnyard Grass, the Rose Apple and releasing bio-controls.
  • 16 April 2013: St. Nicholas Monastery and Tropical Almonds, Pellitory Itch, Vacant Lots, Bamboo Cove, Botany Builder #26, and the calming effects of nature.
  • 9 April 2013:  Pawpaws are blossoming, are there any poisonous look alikes, the bugs are coming, cold weather, and $1.6 million for a frog phobia.
  • 2 April 2013: The wild onions/garlic are fruiting, how to tell the edible Black Cherry from the toxic Laurel Cherry, toxicity in Elderberries, and more Grass is God rebellion.
  • 26 March 2013: Finding fireweed, digging up betony roots, drying loquats, Botany Builder #25, Coppicing, Road Kill, and spreading seeds.
  • 19 March 2013:  The Queen Palm, changing weeds from edible to noxious, velvet leaf, crabgrass, Botany Builder #24, Samaras, New Articles, House Calls, Suriname Cherries, Nopales, and The Drunken Botanist all in this week’s newsletter From The Village Green.
  • 12 March 2013: Mulberries, Creeping Cucumber, Coco-plums, Smartgrass, Botany Builder 23, pinna, winter plant facts, time change, GD videos coming.
  • 5 March 2013:    Goosegrass, pawpaws, Christmasberry, Botany Builder 22 stipules, cultivating wild plants, Apps, Scrub jays.
  • 26 February 2013: Sheep’s Sorrel, White Snow, new articles, shocking news about bees, the Australian Pine, hydrilla, and worms
  • 19 February 2013: Loquats, poison hemlock, turkey berries, toxic tomatoes, conferences, Lake Woodruff, osage orange and turtle travails.
  • 12 February 2013: The ever elusive chickweed, solar oven and nut sheller, the tale of two nettles, wild lettuce, more hard-headed government, new mushroom book, the Maslin technique, ragweed, upcoming classes and loss of habitat
  • 5 February 2013: A close up of usnea, a likeable lichen. The silverthorn is in full fruit, find aromatic wild garlic, identify watercress. There’s also the Thistle Epistle, Frostbites, Mulberries, the herbal conference and up coming classes, all in this week’s newsletter From The Village Green.
  • 29 January 2013: Smilax, non-edible nicker beans, seasonal eating, naughty knotweed, front yard gardening and decapitated grass, pool fish pond, and upcoming class schedule in this week’s newsletter From The Village Green
  • 22 January 2013:  What you can do with a wild wing yam, Florida Pennyroyal, a special Hawthorn you should know about, my latest videos and articles, is eating nutrition good for you? Don’t eat the rattlebox. Sugar Cane and winning environmental bar bets.
  • 15 January 2013:  Haulover Canal, Seablite, classifing plants, clovers, thistles, sow thistles, wild lettuce, Florida Herbal Conference, rising wheat prices.
  • 8 January 2013: Maples are beginning to seed, find local Goosefoots, where the wild food is, the taste test, Florida Herbal Conference, microscopes, and Eugene Handsacker’s shell game
  • 1 January 2013: Chickweed, sublimed sulfur, herbal conference, Green Deane’s DVDs, Weeds of Southern Turfgrasses, Turks Cap, Oxalis, Violets, Plantagos, and the prime mistake foragers make.
  • 25 December 2012: Christmas in Florida, identifying chestnuts, what about ground cherries, winter vines, the toxic Mexican Poppy, the annual urban crawl and natal plums, Canada’s maple syrup much-to-do,
  • 18 December, 2012: How to tell a mustard from a radish. Which cactus pad should you pick? The February Florida Herbal Conference, a traditional urban crawl
  • 11 December 2012: Finding sumacs, magnolia blossoms as spice, the Florida Herbal Conference, follow ups on pollination and Featherstonehaugh, fertilizer, Maygyver and Nefertiti.
  • 4 December  2012: Finding Winged Yams, our little winter mustards, pollenating creatures, Florida Herbal Conference, the Green Deane Forum, Mushrooms a la David Spahr and Dr. Kimbrough, Alligators with marijuana and Featherstonehaugh, all in this week’s newsletter From The Village Green.
  • 27 November 2012: The mustards of wintertime, how to sort out hollies, learning about mushrooms, growing weeds from seeds, dandelions, and the fate of Edward Archboldall all in this week’s newsletter From The Village Green.
  • 20 November 2012:  It’s holly season, and wild mustard time along with seasonal little mustards. Also in the newsletter: The Pond Apple, Florida’s Herbal Conference, Thanksgiving lore, wild pumpkins, Botany Builder 21 and faded underwear, all From The Village Green.
  • 13 November 2012: Going nuts with hickories and acorns;, Spanish Needle tea, good for some of what ails you, why bumble bees can’t fly, and the Florida Herbal Conference,
  • 6 November 2012: Hackberries (Sugarberries) Fireweed, “bad” landscape trees, weighty issues, bikes, time and the 2013 Florida Herbal Conference, all in this week’s newsletter From The Village Green.
  • 30 October 2012:   Which came first, grains or tubers? Groundnuts, wild rice, armadillos, clouds, a follow up on snails and Oh Deer, all in this week’s newsletter From The Village Green.
  • 23 October 2012 Oak trees are masting (dropping acorns) new articles, mushrooms, snails, turtles, False Hawk’s Beard, and more in this week’s newsletter From The Village Green.
  • 16 October 2012:  The winter greens of chickweed, bittercress and poor man’s pepper grass; Solanum americanum, when not to eat; solar oven update, Halloween rant, the impact of weeds, updated articles, the Untouchables, and ginkgo gastronomics.
  • 9 October 2012:    A new crop of sandspurs, confusing Poke berries and Elderberries, nettles for clothes, blue honey, new article about Pandanus, preserving fall foliage, cooking with pine needles and a cockroach eating contest.
  • 2 October 2012:  Pandanus and Ivy Gourd, digging sticks, growing zones and recording setting pumpkin.
  • 25 September 2012:  Chaya, confusing nettles, winter weeds, new articles, yams, the dangers of foraging, tales of a city lot.
  • 18 September 2012: Fuzzy marbles, sweet and sour maypops, food and medicine, recently added articles, sumac hiar, vultures and belladona.
  • 11 September 2012:  Finding tart food, a look at sumac and the false roselle, a new herbalism book and resource, the Green Deane Forum, Sea-Grapes, and scorpions
  • 4 September 2012:   Get Gopher Apples while you can, Getting High, the effect of elevation on plant seasons, a yam for colder weather, a bike with no pedals, and is you cat making you ill?
  • 14 August 2012: Maypops are coming into season; what do you know about cyanide; how to get rid of chiggers; Man of the Earth big root deep down; sorting out wild grapes, and earthworms.
  • 7 August 2012: Eastern Gamagrass, Asian Clams, new articles posted, Creeping Cucumbers, Upcoming classes, Chinese Tallow Tree, Green Dean Forum, What’s the Buzz.
  • 31 July 2012:    Sea Purslane on the grill, when is a clover not a clover? What to do about spices. Archiving newsletters. Class schedule. Growing Patio Potatoes and yams. Fined for growing food and holding birthday party
    all in this week’s newsletter From The Village Green.
  • 24 July 2012 : The Podocarpus is coming into season, grapes are early this year, where to hold a foraging class. my class schedule, making friction fire, is that really a strawberry and sonar sex… all in this week’s newsletter, From The Village Green by Green Deane
  • 17 July 2012 :  Coco-plums are in season, as is Silverhead. Why is Black Point in Maine called that and where does Bidens grow in Brazil? American Holly, scorpions, armadillos and how to make your own sourdough bread, all in this week’s newsletter From The Village Green.
  • 10 July 2012:  A flower that tastes like a mushroom, fear of foraging, nutrition, what is a pirogue, and my class schedule, all in this week’s newsletter From The Village Green.
  • 3 July 2012: Sorting out ground cherries, hairs on plants and why we need to know them, Class Schedule, an upcoming road trip, a great garden party, and Lichen In Space, all in this week’s Green Deane’s Newsletter, From The  Village Green.
  • 26 June 2012: Sorting out blueberries, or, how to figure out what the plant is. Is This Plant Edible and changing views on edibility. And upcoming classes all in this week’s newsletter From The Village Green.
  • 19 June 2012:   What to eat strawberry guavas, which wild edibles should pregnant women avoid, are you collecting seaweed for supper? Lawn grass and code enforcement. Upcoming classes all in this week’s newsletter From The Village Green.
  • 29 May 2012:  Surinam Cherries are ripening but they aren’t cherries. Firethorn berries are green but wait a few weeks. Botany builder #20. What’s barnyard grass? Visit the Green Deane Forum. Bicycles in the news. How to tattoo a banana, all in this week’s Green Deane newsletter From The Village Green.
  • 21 May 2012:  Pineapples that don’t exist, Guerrilla Gardening, upcoming classes and exactly what is the meristem stage? All in this week’s newsletter “From The Village Green” by Green Deane.
  • 7 May 2012:  Can Rescuegrass rescue you? Why forage and what are “naked” seeds? This an more in this week’s newsletter From The Village Green by Green Deane.
  • 23 April 2012: Wild Garlic is heading, spurge nettles are rooting, sea blite is ready for picking, and eastern coral beans are showing you where they are. Did Green Deane actually get poison sumac and what did the spam filter catch? That and more in this weeks newsletter From The Village Green.
  • 9 April 2012: Peppery smartweed, the “yuck” factor, kudzu, the winged yam, pennyroyal, budget cut benefits, and more in this week’s From The Village Green, Green Deane’s Newsletter.
  • 2 April 2012: Where the weeds are. Going to a gym. Compound leaves. Rumex, Topi mambo, Water Lettuce, Duckweed, Edible Flowers Part 19, Classes, Green Deane Forum and “For What It’s worth” all in this week’s newsletter From The Village Green.
  • 26 March 2012:  What’s in and out of season? The Florida Herbal Conference. How do you find edible plants? Pictures or drawings? Upcoming Classes, and more in From the Village Green, Green Deane’s newsletter.
  • 19 March 2012: Where to find papaws. Can you eat grass? Four new articles: Sida, False Roselle, Edible Flowers Part 18, Gout Weed. Can you eat tropical sage? Botany Builder #14, that and more in this week’s newsletter From The Village Green.
  • 5 March 2012: The Eastern Redbuds are confused. A 30,000 year old flower? What might you do if you catch the flu. Sorting out the Perseas. Five new articles.  Arrest made in burning down the world’s oldest Cypress. Class schedule. Green Deane Forum update, all in From the Village Green, Green Deane’s Newsletter
  • 20 February 2012: Wild Radish is turning fields yellow, harvesting nopales, milkweed vine and the evolution of the garden, two new articles, a forum update, this week’s classes, and ducks, all in “From the Village Green” this week’s Green Deane Newsletter.
  • 6 February 2012: The Green Deane Forum, a place to meet other foragers and share questions and successes,  Brazilian Pepper, a staple that grows in teh shade, Botany Builder 14, Herbal Conferencem, Cliamate change. All in this Green Deane’s newsletter this week, From The Village Green.
  • 23 January 2012:  What to do with Brazilian Pepper. Tapping Trees a new way. What’s the difference between a tree and a shrub? Herbal Conference, and I didn’t know that all in this weeks newsletter From The Village Green.
  • 16 January 2012:  Persimmons and frost, saving weed seeds, Botany Builder #12, an herbal invitation, African bees and more in this weeks newsletter from Green Deane.
  • 9 January 2012: The stinging dwarf is back, who is Sunny Savage? Passiflora, epiphany and manatees; new articles, what’s the difference between roots and rhizomes? Wild cucumbers, upcoming classes and the newsletter.
  • 2 January 2012: Pigging out on swinecress. A prescription for walnuts? Snow. New articles on reeds, dahlias, nutrias and edible flowers part nine; Botany builder #10, classes, and how many wild edibles should you know, in Green Deane’s newsletter this week From The Village Green
  • 26 December 2011:   A yam what am a yam; peppergrass; Janus the god of gates; Did you know? New articles; Urban Crawl and upcoming classes; Botany Builder; a Christmas memory and more in Green Deane’s newsletter this week, From The Village Green.
  • 19 December 2011: Chickweed is up locally. Here’s another good reason to forage. What does -ifera mean? Turtle Mound. Canna Island update. Wild Radishes, and more in Green Deane’s newsletter this week, From The Village Green
  • 12 December 2011: Pellitory’s in season. How many apple seeds can you really eat? Botany Builder #7, monocots and dicots. Classes this week. Why are two wheels not part of the green movement? All in Green Deane’s newsletter this week From The Village Green.
  • 6 December 2011:  The controversy over Palmer Amaranth, Tools of the Trail, Poison Plant Handbook, Botany Builder, Did You Know, and upcoming classes, in this week’s newsletter From The Village Green
  • 28 November 2011:  Crowfoot Grass, A grass dictionary, Botany Builder: blade and margin; Thanksgiving.
  • 21 November 2011:  The Chinese Elms are fruiting, what about what the animals eat, a chickweed relative, what is a pappus, a look at a yellow passion flower and a bit of reminiscing in Green Deane’s latest newsletter, From The Village Green.
  • 14 November 2011:  Telling the difference between a wild radish and a wild mustard. How many wild edibles are there? What do you need to know to get started? Why cook bamboo shoots? Botany Builder and this week’s classes, all in Green Deane’s latest newsletter.
  • 8 November 2011:  Look alikes, tell the difference between edible elderberry and toxic water hemlock, discoveries found during this week’s class, what’s peltate?
  • 31 October 2011:  The Halloween and foraging connection…. Seedlings… I.T.E.M.-izing. Battery Acid and pokeweed. Rev7, the Botany Builder and more in Green Deane’s newsletter this week, From The Village Green.
  • 24 October 2011:   Fresh this week:  The new website is up. Are you harvesting sumac berries now or young sow thistles? A “new” edible was found during our foraging class. What about genetically modified foods?  What every runner or    bicyclist should hear about. And did Green Deane really get poison ivy and how you can avoid it. All in Green Deane’s latest newsletter.
  • 1 August 2010 Watervine, Smilax, Does’t Grow Here, Pomegranates
  • 1 July 2010  Jelly Palm, Cactus, Clockwise, Birch Allergies
  • 1 June 2010  Why forage, How safe is foraging, Sea Blite, Ilex vomitoria
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The orange pompom fruit of the Paper Mulberry. Photo by Green Deane

The orange pom-pom fruit of the Paper Mulberry. Photo by Green Deane

Broussonetia papyrifera: Paper Chase

If you are a forager, you will be told two things constantly: One is that the plant of your admiration is “poisonous.” Sometimes they are, often they are not. The other thing you will hear is that a particular species is a “trash tree.”

When I first asked about this species I was told by a knowledgeable botanist that it was a trash tree though at the time he did not know what species it was. Over the years I wondered about its identity. It resembled a basswood tree but wasn’t one. It was certainly prolific, growing in hursts everywhere, often in low spots or gullies and ditches. I watched it for several years but it never seemed to fruit. While it did form colonies I also saw an isolated tree now and then. I presumed it could either fruit or reproduce by cuttings and the like. In hindsight, compounding the issue is that a young tree’s leaves look very different than a mature tree’s leaves. Indeed, it was a lone young tree near a bike trail that got me on the track of solving the identity of my mystery tree.

Young Paper Mulberry leaves

What I discovered was that while it might be an invasive species it is far from a “trash tree.” Know as the Paper Mulberry, the Broussonetia papyrifera  (brew-soh-NEE-she-uh pap-ih-RIFF-er-uh) has been used for thousands of years to make paper and cloth. Young leaves are edible cooked — chewy — and in the right climate it produces orange pom-pom-like fruit. The tree, with extra large leaves, soft on one side, rough on the other, is also a common source of woodland toilet paper.

Native to the cooler regions of Asia they were taken to the Pacific Islands for paper and cloth. Someone had the bright idea of taking only sterile male clones to control their proliferation plus the male trees produce the better bark for cloth and paper. However, they can clone themselves by runners. Big mistake. The Paper Mulberry was in Florida by 1903 with someone also introducing female trees as well. With males and females being able to clone plus seeds from the female the species went gangbusters.

Mature mulberry leaves

Two things compounded my identification and appreciation of the Paper Mulberry. The first, already mentioned, is that the leaves of the young Paper Mulberry look very different than the adult. They are palmate and very indented, resembling an ornamental, Chinese pitchfork. Older leaves are very large mittens with one or two lobes looking like left or right thumbs, double thumbs or no thumbs.  The second issue was the species is from a temperate climate. Florida is not temperate. In my sub-temperate area they never fruit. Eighty miles north of here they do fruit but in years of watching they’ve never fruited locally (They might, however, if we have an exceptionally cold winter producing the necessary chill hours.)  It took tid bits of observations over many years to finally sort out the species’ identity.

To call the fruit an orange pom-pom is actually quite accurate. It starts out as a green ball about the size of a large marble on the end of a two-inch stem. The ball is pitted much like a Bread Fruit, which it is related to, and the Osage Orange. Then the ball grows white hairs which  eventually make the orange pom-pom part, which is edible. The ball is not edible as far as I know. The fruit is sweet, juicy and fragile. It does not travel well and is best eaten on the spot.  Fruiting starts around April and ends by the end of June.  Young leaves for food are steamed though they do have a texture issue. You can also chop them up and boil them as well. The larger leaves can be used to wrap food in for cooking.

At one time the Paper Mulberry was grouped with other mulberries, and is closely related, but was given its own genus Broussonetia named after Pierre Maria August Broussonet (1761-1807) a professor of botany at Montpelier, France.  In the US the tree can be found From Massachusetts south to Florida, west to Nebraska, Oklahoma and Texas.

Green Deane’s “Itemized” Plant Profile

Ripe fruit

IDENTIFICATION: Paper mulberry is deciduous with milky sap to 45 ft. (15 m.). Twigs hairy reddish brown, on young trees zebra striped, older trees tan, smooth, furrowed. Wood is soft and brittle. Leaves are hairy, lobed or mitten-shaped, alternate, opposite or whorled along stem. Leaf edge sharply toothed, base heart-shaped to rounded with pointed tips, upper leaf surface is rough feeling. Separate male and female flowers in spring. Male flower clusters are elongate, pendulous, 2 ½ to 3 in. Female flowers globular about one inch in diameter. Fruits orange to reddish purple.

TIME OF YEAR: In Florida April to June, summer in northern areas, February to April in warmer climates.

ENVIRONMENT: Open sunny fields but also low areas such as ditched and gullies. Grows very fast and can be fruiting within 18 months.

METHOD OF PREPARATION: Fruit out of hand (orange parts only.) Young leaves steamed or boiled. Bark can be used to make paper and cloth (tapa).  The fruit (grown in Thailand) is very high in calcium, potassium and magnesium. It also has trace amounts of arsenic (0.62 ppm) as many foods do.  Deer like to nibble on the leaves.

 

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Nows a good time to be looking around for some wild edibles that like cooler weather. In this case wild lettuce. Photo by Green Deane.

Now’s a good time to be looking around for some wild edibles that like cooler weather. In this case wild lettuce. Tender and not too bitter at this age. Photo by Green Deane.

Someone once joked I remember the location of every plant I’ve ever talked about. I’m not sure that is completely true but I do recall four (almost) unique encounters.

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The Osage Orange is lumpy and grapefruit-ish.

In Jacksonville there is an Osage Orange tree. I had heard for many years there was one in Gainesville but no one knew where. And they weren’t native to New England where I grew up. They are solid mid-westerners and a common site to those who live in the middle of the country. I do believe my website was the second on earth to report the seeds as edible. Everyone reported them as poisonous except for one state naturalist. And for a long time only we reported the seeds edible. The fruit was reported as toxic for two reasons. One, it was used to keep insects out of houses. And secondly because of the size farm animals would choke on the fruit. Long prized for its wood, the Osage Orange is as good if not better than yew for making bows. The one in Jacksonville is on Euclid Street. I even found it once on Goggle Earth (after having visited it in person after a class there. )  To read more about the Osage Orange go here.

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Ginkgos are male and female and quite foul-smelling in season.

The first Ginkgo tree to make an impression on me was at the (then) University of Maine in Gorham (about 20 miles west of Portland.) Actually a pair, they were in front of Bailey Hall. As I had always associated Ginkgos with southeast Asia I was surprised to find them alive in frigid Maine. Current images on the internet do not show that entrance to the hall so I can’t report if the trees  are still there some 43 years later. However a Google Earth view suggests they still are. The classroom hall was named after the college’s president whose arthritic wife, Nina, I had to take piano lessons from for two years and pass a proficiency (I am also one of the few men you know who passed a Gregg shorthand proficiency. I still have my shorthand dictionary and take notes in shorthand!)  Anyway… The Ginkgos, I recall, were male trees in that they never fruited during my three years there. (I managed to graduate a year early.) I had lived in Japan a few years before that where intentional Ginkgos are far more common. It was the out-of-placeness that caught my eye in Maine. The problem with Ginkgo seeds is they smell and have to be prepared correctly for consumption. Even then some writers pen stern warnings about eating them. These days usually male Ginkgo trees are planted to avoid the smell and mess of the female tree. However, one city that has a lot of them for harvesting is New York City. To read more about Ginkgo go here.

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Cashews have two edible parts and toxic shells.

A fruiting cashew tree has been my latest unique find. And truth be known it was a student in one of my West Palm Beach classes who said there was a cashew tree nearby did we want to take a look at it? Absolutely. Only a block east of the park in a residential area, it was mature and fruiting at the end of October. Cashew tress belong to a rather toxic group of trees, all closely related: Poison Ivy, Poison Sumac, Mangos, Brazilian Pepper, Pistachios, and Cashews. While the cashew “apple” and roasted seed are edible the shell liquid is extremely toxic. Mother Nature does not want you eating those seeds and protects them mightily. Not surprisingly the tree itself looked mango-ish. In fact, not a half a mile north of the Cashew tree there is a mango orchard. Many people get a poison ivy like rash from touching mango peelings. They can, however, usually eat the fruit if someone else peels it. Something like the Ginkgo tree, if you don’t  clean up after the Cashew it can leave a lot of toxic litter.

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distinctive Pineapple Guavas

Another fruiting tree that I have seen only one of is the very common Pineapple Guava. I say it is very common because it was a shrub that was championed by landscapers for decades. Perhaps no fruiting tree has been so recommended.  The blossoms are edible as are the fruit. The distinctive green fruit stays green as it ripens. It just grows softer and does have a hint of pineapple. I suspect the invasiveness of a relative, the Strawberry Guava, has something to do with the failure of the Pineapple Guava to catch on. That species is a problem plant in warm but well-fed areas.  In its native Brazil the fruit is used for pies, cakes, puddings, jams, jellies, ice cream, mousses. The blossoms are added to salads or eaten out of hand.  To read more about guavas go here.

Malvaviscus_penduliflorus1A common shrub that is blossoming heavily now is Malvaviscus penduliflorus. While it can blossom all year there are seasonal ebbs and flow. A couple of common names are Turk’s Cap and Sleepy Hibiscus. The blossom never fully opens but the red parts are quite edible and often sweet. There is also usually a bug or two inside which you can either shoo out or consume. Extra protein. I have read a few internet posts that say the green portions of the plant — like the leaves — are edible but I have never found any credible reference to that. I also have not tried the leaves and do not intend to.  As a genus Hibiscus are not a dangerous group but I have no desire to be even mildly sick if I can avoid said. To read more about Hibiscus go here. 

Foraging classes held rain or shine except for hurricanes.

Foraging classes held rain or shine except for hurricanes.

Foraging Classes:

Sunday, Dec. 13, Mead Garden,1500 S. Denning Dr., Winter Park, FL 32789, 9 a.m.

Sunday, Dec. 20th, Dreher Park, 1200 Southern Blvd., West Palm Beach, 33405, 9 a.m.

Sunday, January 17th, 2016, Mead Garden,1500 S. Denning Dr., Winter Park, FL 32789, 9 a.m.

To learn more about the classes go here.

Eat The Weeds On DVDAll of Green Deane’s videos are available for free on You Tube. They do have ads on them so every time you watch a Green Deane video I get a quarter of one cent. Four views, one cent. Not exactly a large money-maker but it helps pays for the newsletter. If you want to see the videos without ads and some ins lightly better quality you can order the DVD set. It is nine DVDs with 15 videos on each. Many people want their own copy of the videos or they have a slow service and its easier to order then to watch them on-line. They make a good Christmas or birthday gift. Individual videos can also be ordered. You can order them by clicking on the button on the top right of this page or you can go here. 

If you read the Green Deane Forum you'd know what this blossom is. Photo by Green Deane

If you read the Green Deane Forum you’d know what this blossom is. Photo by Green Deane

Want to identify a plant? Perhaps you’re looking for a foraging reference? You might have a UFO, an Unidentified Flowering Object, you want identified. On the Green Deane Forum we — including Green Deane and others from around the world — chat about foraging all year. And it’s not just about warm-weather plants or just North American flora. Many nations share common weeds so there’s a lot to talk about, such as the one to the left. There’s also more than weeds. The reference section has information for foraging around the world. There are also articles on food preservation, and forgotten skills from making bows to fermenting food. Recent topics include: Dichotomous Key: This made me smile, Foraging “For Real,” Spiky Fruits, Pine Cough Drops and Needles, Skullcap, Malodorous Plant? Another NJ Tree, Maypop? Roadside Plant, Unknown in Sudan, Please Help Identify, Preserving Prickly Pear Bounty. When I was Five Years Old, and Bearberry.  You can join the forum by clicking on the button on the upper right hand side of this page.

This is newsletter 186. 

To donate to the Green Deane Newsletter click here.

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Che berries are related to mulberries

Che berries are related to mulberries. Photo by Michale Kesl

Che is not the tree it used to be.

Che's thorns are inconsistent

Che’s thorns are inconsistent

At one time there were just he and she Che trees. Then a few decades ago along came a self-fertile seedless Che then Ches grafted onto a close relative the Osage Orange. The he’s and she’s have also escaped from cultivation in North Carolina and coastal Georgia. I don’t think the seedless escape. Ches are planted from about New York south and west. Your best chance of seeing one is in landscaping in the southern half of the United States and up the west coast. Whether to include Che as a wild edible was a bit of a debate. It’s wild in Asia and has been around North America for more than a century thus it was included. One reason why you might not have seen a Che is birds. They aren’t too interested in the berries so they don’t spread the tree around.

Leaf shape can vary from 3 lobs to none

Leaf shape can vary from 3 lobes to none

The Che is native from the Shantung and Kiangson Provinces of China to the Nepalese sub-Himalayas. It was naturalized in Japan many years ago which is where I first saw one back in the early 70’s. Che (Cudrania tricuspidata) was introduced to France in 1862, England in 1872 and to the United States about 1909. There was one growing at the P. J. Berckman’s Nursery in Augusta Georgia by 1912 and fruiting, which is another issue. Both male and female trees can fruit, she more than he while the grafted seedless fruits the most.

Che benefits from pruning

Che benefits from pruning

The seedless Che is a small tree. The natural species is shrubby and can produce many suckers. By grafting the Che onto an Osage orange a superior single-trunk fruit tree is created. It bears a large crop of red, juicy fruit clusters reminiscent of round mulberries about an inch through, ping-pong ball-ish in size. The flavor is a cross between a mulberry and a fig, which it not remarkable as it is related to both. It is also distantly related to Breadfruit (Artocarpus altilis), Jackfruit (Artocarpus heterophyllus), Fig (Ficus spp.), Mulberry (Morus spp.), African Breadfruit (Treculis africana), Paper Mulberry (Broussonetia papyrifera) and the aforementioned Osage Orange (Maclura pomifera.)

Bonsai Che

Bonsai Che

While the Che has been promoted outside of China as the up-and-coming fruit tree for decades in China its reputation varies from valuable to intolerable. This might be because of erratic thorns. The tree is backup food for the silkworm and the leaves have to be picked by hand which means braving thorns. Worse, the tree is not consistently thorny so there’s no pattern to help you avoid them. Silk made from the leaves, however, is reported to make high quality lute strings of pure tone. The Che is also a favored tree of for bonsai. (On a personal note a life time ago I visited Bonsai Machi in Japan, the heart of the bonsai culture. There were amazing specimens there. There was also a small city laid out with miniature buildings and bonsai tress for landscaping. The effect was to be a giant walking down the street. And when I see specials about bonsai they show specimens I saw some 40 years ago, still alive and craggy.)

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Che berris store well

Besides “Che” the tree is called Cudrania, Chinese Mulberry,  Cudrang, Mandarin Melon Berry, Silkworm Thorn, and Storehousebush (why it is called that no one knows.)  As for the botanical name Cudrania tricuspidata no one knows where Cudrania came from either or what it supposed to mean. It was named by one Dr. Hance in 1877 and he left no clue as to why his chose that name for the genus. I suspect it has something to do with the common name of Cudrang. Tricuspidata means three pointed as in the leaves though even Dr. Hance said the leaves vary so much calling it Tricuspidata was inaccurate. “Che” (said like the Cuban revolutionary) means “stony ground,” a reference to the tree’s natural habitat of poor, dry soil. But it likes warm, rich soil as well.

Incidentally an intergeneric hybrid exist between the Che (Cudrania tricuspidata) and the Osage Orange (Maclura pomifera) called Macludrania hybrida. Mostly from France they were planted in the US National Arboretum in 1960 and have large orange-like fruit and no thorns.  Other than that planting the hybrid seems to have been largely ignored by everyone.

Green Deane’s Itemized Plant Profile: Che

IDENTIFICATION: Cudrania tricuspidata. Deciduous trees to 25 ft. height, often a broad, spreading bush or small tree.  rarely to 60 feet. Immature wood thorny, female trees larger than males. Leaves alternate, resemble mulberry but smaller, thinner, pale yellowish-green, trilobate, with central lobe sometimes twice as long as the lateral lobes, frequently unlobed. Flowers dioecious, male and female flowers on different plants, green, pea-sized. Fruit is aggregate, looks like a round mulberry crossed with a lychee, knotty, ripens to red or maroon-red, juicy, rich red flesh, 3 to 6 small brown edible seeds per fruit. Flavor varies from fig/mulberry cross to watermelon.

TIME OF YEAR: Flowers in late spring or early summer, fruit in early fall in cooler areas, later in warm areas. In warmer areas it is an evergreen. In cooler areas the leaves turn red in the fall and persist.

ENVIRONMENT: Likes a sunny, warm location with rich, well-drained soil but can grow in rocky dirt. Planted in zones 5-9, can tolerate -20F. Treat them like a mulberry tree. Fruit stains like mulberries.

METHOD OF PREPARATION: Trees mature early and can produce up to 400 pounds of chewy fruit. Let the fruit stay on the tree until they are soft and dead ripe. Ripening is continuous for about a month. Fruit is eaten out of hand or used like mulberries or figs. Good shelf life.

Grafts are better than raising trees from seeds. Seed planted immediately from ripe fruit germinate at a high rate. Stored seeds must have a period of cool, moist stratification. Plants from seeds can take up to 10 years to fruit. Cloned plants bear very young.

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The only edible part of the Osage Orange for us humans is the seeds

The only edible part of the Osage Orange for us humans is the seeds

There are many edibles that are barely known and near the top of that list would be the Osage Orange. Not an orange and actually closely related bread fruit and paper mulberries, the Osage Orange is an extremely common native tree in parts of the mid-western United States. Thanks to government intervention it is the most intentionally planted tree in the United States.

Osage Orange wooden bowl.

Osage Orange turned bowl.

Because the fruit is large farm animals often choked on them leading to the belief they are toxic. They are not although they do a good job at repelling insects. If the fruit is  broken up many animals can eat it. And the seeds are edible for us humans after processing  One archaeological project found it was easier to locate old homesteds by finding Osage Orange trees rather than abandoned wells. The tree has many uses and is highly esteemed for making bows. While teaching a foraging class in Jacksonville this weekend one person mentioned there was one growing near where she lived. An excursion was in order and indeed it is an Osage Orange. I brought some home to work with. To read more about the Osage Orange go here.

Saw Palmetto berries are at their best when ripened to black.

Saw Palmetto berries are at their best when ripened to black.

Rotten cheese soaked in tobacco juice. That’s how Jonathan Dickerson described the taste of saw palmetto berries in 1692 and they haven’t changed since. Nutritious, they”ll be coming into season soon. Most of the fruit I see now are full-sized but green. In two to six weeks they’ll turn golden then black. That’s when they’re good, in theory. If tastes are acquired, then saw palmetto berries is a very acquired taste. I think I am the only person on video in the world actually eating one. My article on them is here.  That said they are a $70 million plus crop in Florida and a major source of poaching arrests and deaths as well. It can get up to about 115 F in pine scrubs where they grow, they are covered with sharp thorns (hence the “saw” in saw palmetto) hide nests of wasps and are the favorite hot day retreat of rattle snakes. Not exactly a work-friendly environment. If you are tempted to pick some always… ALWAYS… rattle the palm first with a long stick to any rattlers can slither off.

tree-dwelling-goatsNew foraging instructors have been added to the collection on my “resource” page. It now lists over 100 teachers  both in North American and Europe. The list started out much smaller in a book by Dr. Peter Gail then moved over to a website by Sunny Savage where it grew. It’s been expanded, had pictures added, and has been on this site for some five years now. It might be the most comprehensive list of foraging teachers on the planet! However, several states still do not have any teachers mentioned so if you know of some please let me know. To visit the page click here.

Foraging classes this week: Saturday, Aug 10th., John Chestnut State Park: 2200 East Lake Road, Palm Harbor, FL 34685, 9 a.m; Sunday, Aug. 11th, Mead Garden, 1500 S. Denning Dr., Winter Park, FL 32789, 9 a.m; Saturday, Aug 17th, Dreher Park, 1310 Southern Blvd., West Palm Beach, FL, 33405, 9 a.m; Sunday, August 18th, Bayshore Live Oak Park, 23157 Bayshore Rd., Port Charlotte, FL 33980, 9 a.m;Satuday, August 24th, Colby-Alderman Park,  1099 Massachusetts Street, Cassadaga. Fla. 32706, 9 a.m. For more details go here

Phylloporus rhodoxanthus, the Gilled Bolete

Phylloporus rhodoxanthus, the Gilled Bolete

Recent rains have brought out mushrooms but most of what I’ve found so far is not edible. The toxic False Green Parasol (Chlorophyllum molybdites) has been popping upon on lawns and fields. It is the source of the most common non-deadly mushroom poisonings in North America because it looks similar to an edible one but it has green spores. In fact I just started two facebook group pages, Florida Mushroom Identification Forum and Southeastern US Mushroom Identification. It’s the only mushroom on them so far but that will change. Can’t do everything at once. I also found a large tan boletus in Winter Park that does not have a common name (Tylopilus tabacinus.) It’s in a genus not known as deadly but this particular mushroom’s edibility is unknown which means leave it alone. And in Jacksonville I saw a wonderful clump of Collybia luxurians whose edibility is also unknown. The only edible mushroom I found this week was one old “Gilled Bolete” Phylloporus rhodoxanthus ssp. americanus growing under Southern Cedars in Port Orange. Never try to identify for consumption any mushroom from pictures on the internet. Mushrooms are a context heavy identification often involving minute details. That needs to be done in person with an instructor.

A pet turtle in a hamburger bun did not make it onto the plane.

A pet turtle in a hamburger bun did not make it onto the plane.

And as Paul Harvey used to say, “for what it’s worth…”  A man walks into a bar with a hamburger… no, that’s an old joke. Let’s update it: A man tries to walk onto an airplane with a hamburger, a Kentucky Fried Chicken hamburger. That alone should give one cause to pause. Actually when the burger in a KFC bag went through the x-ray machine the operator saw unusual corners. It wasn’t a beef burger. It was a turtle burger. The turtle was alive. In a hamburger bun. Swimming with relish… The passenger said he didn’t want to leave his beloved pet turtle behind. Authorities separated the… turtle dove and sent him on his way terrapinless. I have various articles on my website about eating various animals which is part of the “other thing, too” title. But the only hate mail I get is from turtle lovers. To read more about the edibility of turtles go here.

 

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Loquat are ripening

Loquat, exotic local fruit, photo by Loquat World

Heads up, literally: Loquats are ripening. First you will see just an occasional ripe fruit, then noticeably more. Then the fruit flood gate opens. Loquats, planted and naturalized, are a much-anticipated tasty fruit that do not travel well. One rarely sees them in local markets. They bruise easily and begin to lose their bright yellow color within hours of picking. The refrigerator does not treat them well, either. While loquats can be canned I think the best way to preserve this bounty is by dehydration. I cut around the fruit’s equator, remove the seeds for other use, then dry the two halves. Some people dip the halves in a sulfur solution first but I have not found that to improve looks, flavor or preservation. The reason why I recommend dehydrating them is you end up with a delicious product. Some fruits do not dehydrate well, loosing flavor and or texture. Mulberries are a good example. They are best fresh. And while dried loquats don’t taste like fresh loquats — as prunes don’t taste like plums — they are good dehydrated and store well. I have a video on them here and a large article here.

Poison hemlock smells like mice, or do mice smell like poison hemlokc? Photo by Favim.com

Poison hemlock smells like mice, or do mice smell like poison hemlock? Photo by Favim.com

I had to share this next snippet with you. On the Green Deane Forum a book was mentioned, Weeds of the South. So I ordered it, not expensive. All in all it is a good book written for farmers and livestock breeders et cetera. One distraction is the near-paranoia the writers and editors have over wild edibles, listing most if not all of them as toxic. A bad attitude towards edible weeds is basically institutionalized in the United States. If one can ignore that ugly little entry on each page it’s a good book with excellent descriptions and pictures. Sometimes however the description just misses the mark. Under “special identifying features” for the deadly Poison Hemlock it says: Herbage has a mouse-like odor… Mouse-like odor? Who smells mice? Have you ever smelled a mouse? Do you know anyone who has? I haven’t. That’s the writer and the editor not thinking about the reader.  The closest I’ve ever come to smelling a mouse is my grandmother had a pet rat who got a bath with a toothbrush once a week in a warm oven.

Trukey Berries, photo by GardeningwihtWilson

Turkey Berries, photo by GardeningwitjWilson

Showing up in a few back yards in south Florida is the The Turkey Berry, Solanum torvum.  It’s an iffy plant. The Turkey Berry has been used for roots stock for eggplants. Its bitter immature fruit are eaten but they might cause liver tumors (Balachandran and Sivaramkrishnan, 1995, Induction of tumors by Indian dietary constituents.).  Turkey Berry was first found in Florida in 1899 and is now identified in nine counties. It’s also a weed in 32 countries and is invasive in Australia and South Africa. Armed with spines, it has gray bark, and green pea-sized fruit that ripen to yellow. The half-grown green immature fruits are used in Thai cuisine and are an essential ingredient of Thai yellow curry. In India, the fruit is consumed directly, or as cooked food. Young shoots are eaten raw or cooked. In Jamaica the immature fruit are boiled and eaten. That said the Turkey Berry contains a number of potentially harmful chemicals. And while I could not find any reference about this its fruits might become more toxic as they ripen as the Tropical Soda Apple does. The Turkey Berry’s lobed leaves alternate and are broadly triangular. However there are no thorns on the top part of the leaves. Ripe berries are drab yellow drying to black.  A far more edible member of the nightshade family escaped in south Florida and cultivated in northern climes is the Litchi tomato. You can read about it here.

NOT EDIBLE Solanum Mammosum, photo by Prota4u

NOT EDIBLE Solanum Mammosum, photo by Prota4u

A perennial question on the Green Deane Forum’s UFO page (unidentified flowering objects) is about prickly plants growing what looks like tomatoes. Sometimes the fruit is red, sometimes yellow. The quick answer is “it’s some kind of ‘soda apple’ and not edible.” We could leave the discussion right there but usually people want to know more. At least seven prickly “non-tomatoes” show up regularly on the forum. A few are native, most are imported. To read more about them and help you identify “toxic tomatoes” go here.

February is conference month for me, first the Florida Earth Skills two weeks ago and this past weekend Florida Herbal Conference. I want to thank Emily Ruff for having me as a presenter again. Foraging in Florida in February is a challenge but we found about two dozen species to talk about. I also had the opportunity to chat with Mycol Steven, who organizes the Florida Earth Skills gathering and who also taught at the herbal conference. While these conferences are over for this year, mark your calender for next year and look into attending either or both, as many people do.

Lake Woodruff National Wildlife Refuge, photo by Stetson University

Lake Woodruff National Wildlife Refuge, photo by Stetson University

I also had the opportunity to hold a class at Lake Woodruff National Wildlife Refuge. I don’t do that too often because it is a long walk, more native than imported edibles, and no facilities. But, it is wet and that creates a different group of plants. We had a large class and good time including seeing quite a few sunning alligators. Lake Woodruff has dikes that are also roads. Thus while we find native edibles in the local woods we find the weeds of man and sun-loving native edibles on the dike roads. One curious distribution was the sow thistles. Spiny Sow Thistle was common on the southwest side of our walk and the Common Sow Thistle on the northeast side of the walk. There were also a lot of bull thistles and ground cherries, American Nightshade, as well as blackberries and dew berries. Definitely a place to visit for snacking in the months to come.

The homely osage orage

The homely osage orage

From the positive email:As a retiree I spent several years as a Passport in Time volunteer with the Forest Service. On one project we were searching for house remains to map a mill village that had existed between 1790 and 1890. After spending much time looking for stone piles and fireplace remains a fellow worker and I were talking about the site when it came to our attention that each of the house sites we had located had had a Osage Orange tree near by. We began looking for the trees instead of the foundations and were very successful. “The Question” why were these people planting this tree? The insect repellent is to date the most logical answer I have been given.”

Conversely I receive regular hate email from turtle lovers because I wrote an article on their edibility.  I like turtles other than in a stew and found this story from the Mirror enjoyable:

“Manuela the tortoise has been found alive – after more than 30 years locked in a storeroom. She was finally spotted after being put out for the binmen in a box of rubbish. Manuela, middle-aged for her species, was reunited with her amazed owners as they described her survival as “incredible”.

Manuela, misplaced for 30 years.

Manuela, misplaced for 30 years.

She vanished from her home in Rio de Janeiro in 1982 and was given up as lost forever despite a lengthy search. Her owners assumed she had crawled away after builders working on the house left the front door open. It was only after their father Leonel Almieda died that his children began clearing out a second-floor room he had filled with broken electrical items and always kept locked. Son Leandro was astonished to find Manuela shuffling around in a cardboard box containing an old record player.

Back in good hands

Back in good hands

“I put the box on the pavement for the binmen to collect, and a neighbor said, ‘You’re not throwing the tortoise out as well are you?’ I looked and saw Manuela. And at that moment I turned white. I just could not believe what I was seeing.” His sister Lenita, who had been given the tortoise as a childhood pet, said, “Everything my father thought he could fix, he picked up and brought home. If he found an old television he thought he might be able to use a part of it to fix another one in the future, so he just kept accumulating things. We never dared go inside that room. We are all thrilled to have Manuela back. But none of us can understand how she managed to survive for 30 years in there – it’s just unbelievable.”

Local vet Jeferson Pires explained that Manuela is a red-footed tortoise, a species that can go for up to three years without eating. He said she may have survived by nibbling termites from the wooden floor and licking condensation off smooth surfaces. He added: “They are particularly resilient creatures.”

My thought was perhaps dad fed her all those years. Regardless, Manuela is back with the rest of the family who recognized her immediately because they have … (wait for it)…  turtle recall.

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Chinese Elm Samaras

From The Village Green

Sometimes looking down gets you to look up. Recently the sidewalks have been covered with debris under Chinese Elms. The squirrels are stuffing their tummies, and so can we. Chinese Elms fruit in the fall and their genus sibling, the Siberian Elm, fruits in the spring. Convenient, and a lot of food.

Both elms have several edible parts. When they start to fruit they make what is called a “samara” (SAM-ah-rah) which is a round paper-like envelop, slightly smaller than a dime. That is edible raw or cooked and the trees are loaded with them. Over time a seed develops in that samara which is about the size of a lentil and can be used the same way. When the samaras are brown the seeds can be winnowed out.  They can be used just like a lentil. Young leaves are also edible year round as is the cambium.

Locally Chinese Elms are numerous, used in landscaping with some naturalization. The Siberian Elm was planted by the millions as part of the Work Project Administration during the depression and are common in the mid-west. To read more about them click here.

Goat Grazing in Suburbia

  I am constantly meeting people who want to reduce the entire realm of foraging down to one sentence: “If the animals can eat it you can eat it.” That advice can kill you and or make you very ill. Birds can eat arsenic, squirrels strychnine, poison ivy is high-protein deer food. Conversely day lilies kill cats and avocados crash canaries. There’a quite a list, actually. Then you hear “all black berries are edible.” Wrong. “Most red berries are edible,” Wrong. The best you can do with berries is that almost all white berries are toxic. Not all but almost all, or enough of them to leave white berries alone. In the satirical novella Animal Farm, by George Orwell, the final rule is “all animals are equal but some are more equal than others.” That might be said about eating plants. Goats can eat almost anything. They are the garbage scows of the world, putting pigs to shame. However avocados will kill goats, but not us. As things go we humans are fairly limited compared to animals, tolerance-wise, another reason to know your plants and use the I.T.E.M. system. I had a fellow email me from a Mediterranean country. He said his foraging method was if it tasted good he ate it, if it tasted bad he did not eat it. He asked me what I thought of that. I replied I hoped he had good life insurance.

Drymaria cordata

In the Mail Bag:  This weed has totally invaded my lawn and I am desperate to get rid of it. Do you have any suggestions? Yes, it was a serious question about an edible,  Drymaria cordata. It’s not as edible as regular chickweed and has some medicinal uses, but it is an edible. I receive a lot of emails like that. Maybe I should change the website’s name to “Kill The Weeds.” I’ve also noticed an odd trend, the most visited pages this past month were not about weeds but critter cuisine, you know, eating slugs and lizards and the like. Maybe it’s seasonal or some biology class logged on. I had over 400 inquiries about the Osage Orange, a very obscure edible that was lucky to see four visit a year. Analytics can be strange.

Speaking of mail. The new newsletter has been sent out twice on Monday evenings, and twice Tuesday afternoons. When do you think is the best time to mail them, not only day of the week but hour of the day?

Dandelion Pappas

  Botany Builder: Pappus (PAP-us)  a ring of fine feathery hairs surrounding the fruit in composite plants, such as the dandelion. It takes advantage of the wind for dispersal of the seed. Not all pappus are as light as the dandelion one. They can be short and bristly as well. Pappus is dead latin bastardized from the living Greek pappous, literally, grandfather, read gray beard or ring of white hair. Pappus spelled Pappas is also translated from the Greek meaning priest or father. A Greek with “papa” in their last names usually means there was a priest in the family tree.

Did you know that one of the most common toxic principles of plants is alkaloids, some 5,000 of them, and they are almost universally bitter to the taste. There are many bitter foods that don’t have alkaloids but bitterness in a plant should always raise a concern that should be addressed. Is it a bitter edible or have you just tasted an alkaloid? Bitterness does not exclude a plant from edibility but it is a huge warning sign to make sure you have exactly the right plant and that it is definitely an edible.

Passiflora lutea

During a class the John Chestnut Park this week we saw a fruiting Passiflora lutea, not that common in my experience. It is an edible though the flavor is neither here nor there. Some of the student’s sharp eyes also noticed Pepper Grass just starting its winter run, as are the native Plantagos and Pellitory. Our winter species will be showing up between now and Christmas and are usually around for a few months, varying with the species. Chickweed shows up around Christmas and is gone by Valentines Day, the mustards are around longer as is the False Hawksbeard. To learn more about the Passifloras click here.

Upcoming classes this week which includes a Friday class and Sunday class, none on Saturday:

Friday, November 25th, Jervey Gantt Recreation Complex, 2390 SE 36th Ave., Ocala, FL, 34471, 9 a.m.

Sunday, November 27th, Colby-Alderman Park, 1099 Massachusetts Street, Cassadaga. Fla. 32706, 9 a.m.

For more information click here:

_______________________

Green Deane’s in the striped shirt, bottom row.

On a personal note: Some people will always remember where they were when the World Trade Center was attacked. Others will remember when the shuttle blew up. Less of us each year remember what they were doing when President Kennedy was assassinated, 48 years ago Tuesday. It was perhaps the first national memory after the attack on Pearl Harbor. I was in the 7th grade, above, going to school in a one-room school house in Pownal, Maine, with no running water, no phone, no radio and no TV. It did, however, have electricity and one teacher, Mrs. Arlene Tryon, for three grades and a total of 32 kids.

In those days high school students rode a school bus. They got out of school at 2:30 p.m. and the rest of  us at 4 p.m. The bus driver was en route to pick up the older kids when he stopped at the school to deliver the news that Kennedy had been shot but was alive. All was well. As history would record he was by then dead two hours but communications were much slower and different in 1963. People were more personally independent then but from a communication point of view far more dependent. TV had only recently surpassed radio as the largest medium and up until Kennedy assassination more people got their news from newspapers than any other source. We would not get a phone for another seven years. Affordable personal computers and the Internet were nearly 40 years away.

When I got home at five the news was that Kennedy was dead. The country shut down, literally, and the countdown to the funeral began. It was to be the first national tragedy shown on, and united by, television, carried non-stop on both our channels. We had an occasional third channel from Mt. Washington if the weather was right and you held the antenna just so. Oddly, the 22nd of November that year was a Friday and Thanksgiving was not until the following Thursday, the 28th. Between the assassination and the end of Thanksgiving weekend was 10 days in which people basically stayed at home. Most businesses were not open. People did not go to work. We did not go to school. It was if the country simply paused for ten days.

Now the assassination is a historical conundrum followed by so many aftershocks with that family. The assassination of Robert, the marriage of Jackie to Aristotle, Ted and Mary Jo at Chappaquiddick, and the ironic watery end to John John. I don’t remember what I was doing when the rest of those things happened but for some of us the assassination of the president is a moment embedded in ones memory, even after 48 years.

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