Foraging for Wild Food
By woodlandstv
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Naturalist John Rhyder takes a walk along the woodland track where he works, identifying different plants along the way and giving us information about their uses, where and when they grow and how best to eat them. http://www.woodcraftschool.co.uk An Adliberate film http://www.adliberate.co.uk for WoodlandsTV http://www.woodlands.co.uk/tv
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Discussion
What a brilliant video,. this guys knowledge is amazing,.
John, I like the video and information however you are not always clear or direct enough on naming the plants. I think this could be an area of improvement thats all. Thanks.
who's watching these because of the collapse that is about to happen?
Big shout out from Aussie land.. I think they just opened a branch of Future Forage in UK. Big here in Australia. Its like a volunteer based initiative that plants fruit and nut trees on neglected public land, for future foraging… The trees are basically free of charge and come from cuttings taken from heavy cropper trees (in the local area). The funding comes from selling some of these trees to local residence in spring/summer season…. Don't know the site for it. Just google the word FutureForage UK đŸ˜‰ BTW: woodlands.co.uk is awesome…. keep up the good work you guys!!!!!
he mentions that nettles have a multitude of uses and then he doesn't explain a single one. i wish he would explain some especially if he mentions how many there are
nettles are great , you can make soup and rope from them. good vid, would have preferred if you actually ate some of the plants though
Very insightful, thank you. So many plants I wasn't familiar with – then again, studying plants is a life long mission!
Would really appreciate the proper names like geum or carex pendula. Great video thanks
lovely,thank you.
Very informational, much appreciated.
E K
July 6, 2015