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| wild:wild_food [2026/03/11 14:27] – [Related topics] Simon Grant | wild:wild_food [2026/04/22 06:06] (current) – [What are the benefits of wild food?] Otto Hague | ||
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| - | # Wild food | + | This topic is part of [[gt: |
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| - | ## What is wild food? | + | ===== What is wild food? ===== |
| Wild food is anything edible that has had no management to increase its production. This subject really also encompasses [coastal foraging](/ | Wild food is anything edible that has had no management to increase its production. This subject really also encompasses [coastal foraging](/ | ||
| Wild food was once necessary for human survival, but now most traditional knowledge of wild food has been lost. In recent years there has been a widespread revival in foraging, and you can now do [courses](/ | Wild food was once necessary for human survival, but now most traditional knowledge of wild food has been lost. In recent years there has been a widespread revival in foraging, and you can now do [courses](/ | ||
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| + | Wild food harvesting in Britain and Ireland is mostly done by individual hobbyist foragers. While this is the most straightforward way to integrate wild food into your diet, it might risk over-harvesting, | ||
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| - | ## What are the benefits of wild food? | + | ===== What are the benefits of wild food? ===== |
| As long as we are sensitive when collecting wild food and consider other species, harvesting wild food can be beneficial to the environment. Wild food has no packaging, no chemicals to force it to grow, and can be picked local to your area, minimising food miles and pollution from vehicle exhausts. | As long as we are sensitive when collecting wild food and consider other species, harvesting wild food can be beneficial to the environment. Wild food has no packaging, no chemicals to force it to grow, and can be picked local to your area, minimising food miles and pollution from vehicle exhausts. | ||
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| - | There are health benefits too, as seasonal food matches the body’s needs. For example the spicy peppery leafy greens that arise in spring are good for renewal after the winter, and clean out the digestive tract. Our prehistoric ancestors browsed on wild foods from their local area, gaining the nutrients needed for healthy immune systems. Collecting wild foods is also thought to have a therapeutic value and is a great incentive to enjoy the countryside. | + | There are health benefits too, as seasonal food matches the body’s needs. For example the spicy peppery leafy greens that arise in spring are good for renewal after the winter, and clean out the digestive tract. Our prehistoric ancestors browsed on wild foods from their local area, gaining the nutrients needed for healthy immune systems. Store-bought food has been bred for transport, appearance, and sweetness, not nutrition, so wild food often contains more nutritional value than store-bought food (Stark et al., 2020) and also poses a lower risk to diabetics. Collecting wild foods is also thought to have a therapeutic value and is a great incentive to enjoy the countryside. |
| - | Collecting, processing and eating food from your landscape, in the season it grows, can provide a real sense of connection to the land and time of year. | + | Collecting, processing and eating food from your landscape, in the season it grows, can provide a real sense of connection to the land and time of year. An interesting exercise is to start writing down a personal foraging calendar, based on what wild foods //you// can find in //your area//, and when. This will "tune you in" to the changing of the seasons in your specific landscape. |
| Plus it's free! | Plus it's free! | ||
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| + | {{personal_foraging_calendar.jpg? | ||
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| + | _A personal foraging calendar is built piece by piece, as you encounter wild foods in your landscape. They take information floating around in books and on the internet and ground-truth them in your landscape._ | ||
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| - | _Wild garlic (or ramsons) is thought to be healthier than cultivated garlic due to it’s | + | _Wild garlic (or ramsons) is thought to be healthier than cultivated garlic due to its green pigment chlorophyll. It grows in abundance in spring, giving off a strong smell. It is delicious in salads or used as a flavouring in cooking. However, wild garlic is being pushed out in areas by invasive species like *Allium paradoxum*._ |
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| - | ## What can I do? | + | ===== What can I do? ===== |
| Foraging for wild food is exciting, as you never know what you are going to find. Wild plants and fungi grow in many places, even on wasteland in towns. Wild food is not only free but has also grown without us having to do any work. | Foraging for wild food is exciting, as you never know what you are going to find. Wild plants and fungi grow in many places, even on wasteland in towns. Wild food is not only free but has also grown without us having to do any work. | ||
| - | Learning from someone who knows about wild food is a great start - a mentor or course provider. Being shown the plants in their natural habitat is really helpful when wanting to find and identify them later. | + | Learning from someone who knows about wild food is a great start - a mentor or course provider. Being shown the plants in their natural habitat is really helpful when wanting to find and identify them later. |
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| - | Getting a good [book](/ | + | Getting a good book or two will really help - especially if you can take them with you when you go out foraging. It can be a good idea to have a field guide and a wild food book - as field guides are often much more accurate for identification, |
| Anyone can pick their own wild plants and fungi; however there are some simple principles, and laws, that must be followed, for your own safety, and the preservation of plant populations. | Anyone can pick their own wild plants and fungi; however there are some simple principles, and laws, that must be followed, for your own safety, and the preservation of plant populations. | ||
| - | ### Safe foraging | + | ==== Safe foraging |
| - Be 100% sure of your plant identification... 'if in doubt, leave it out'. We have some seriously poisonous plants in the UK, so get to know them, as well as getting to know the edible ones. | - Be 100% sure of your plant identification... 'if in doubt, leave it out'. We have some seriously poisonous plants in the UK, so get to know them, as well as getting to know the edible ones. | ||
| - | - Double check the location you are foraging - avoid pesticides or other toxic substances, and foraging beside busy roads. | + | - Double check the location you are foraging - avoid pesticides or other toxic substances, and foraging beside busy roads (as cars can shed cadmium, lead, and microplastics (Stark et al., 2020). Forage above knee level if close to a trail, unless you want some dog urine in your diet. |
| - If you are foraging water plants, always cook them - the risk of Liver Fluke and other water-borne illnesses is high in the UK. | - If you are foraging water plants, always cook them - the risk of Liver Fluke and other water-borne illnesses is high in the UK. | ||
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| - | ### Responsible foraging | + | ==== Responsible foraging |
| - Take only what you need and can realistically eat. | - Take only what you need and can realistically eat. | ||
| - | - Leave plenty behind. Different people have different proportions they like to leave - always leave some for wildlife and other foragers. | + | - Leave plenty behind. Different people have different proportions they like to leave - always leave some for wildlife and other foragers. If it's out of reach, take that as a hint to leave it. |
| - Don't pick rare or endangered plants - even if they' | - Don't pick rare or endangered plants - even if they' | ||
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| - Be aware of where you're treading - be careful of damaging other plants as you reach for the juiciest blackberries! Try to damage the plant you're picking from as little as possible. | - Be aware of where you're treading - be careful of damaging other plants as you reach for the juiciest blackberries! Try to damage the plant you're picking from as little as possible. | ||
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| + | There is a philosophical or spiritual angle to foraging, if you would find it useful. [Robin Wall Kimmerer](https:// | ||
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| - | ## Further resources | + | ===== Wild Food Commons ===== |
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| + | We mentioned in the introduction that most wild food harvesting in Britain and Ireland is done by individuals. When the number of people doing this is low, the possibilities of harming the environment is small, but the more people harvest wild food, the more of an impact it has. | ||
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| + | For example, wild garlic harvesting is increasingly popular, and some people uproot the plant, making its populations more sparse. At the same time, its habitat is favourable to the invasive garlic, //Allium paradoxum//, | ||
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| + | The most responsible way to harvest wild food is to avoid acting individually. Connecting with your community opens up possibilities for educating each other and for management of wild food resources. You may not have known about the few-flowered leek until you read about it just now: //we badly need networks to circulate information and responsibilities!// | ||
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| + | . Many communities of First Nations people would burn, cut, and tend the landscape in ways that created food-rich forest-gardens that do not resemble the labour-intensive agriculture of the colonisers. For decades, and even now, this has been misconstrued as First Nations people being “backwards, | ||
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| + | Andy Ciccone of [agroecologies.org](http:// | ||
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| + | This surrounding bounty was not “untouched wilderness, | ||
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| + |  is opened up as a resource. Additionally, | ||
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| + | I would encourage every private landowner reading this to put their food resources up on fallingfruit.org, | ||
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| + | ### Example 3: “Forestizenship” and the extrativistas in Brazil | ||
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| + | //Reservas extrativistas// | ||
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| + | RESEX are structured both by the social and environmental conditions impacting the “interspecies common” (a term used by Barca, 2024) (Brown, 2001). Connectivity to other settlements, | ||
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| + | Moreover, the mature forest provides essential goods to the communities, | ||
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| + | ### Example 4: Thengapalli and the jungle loko in Odisha, India | ||
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| + | Singh (2013) describes a community in Odisha, India, that is protecting its forest, even while economic and legal incentives push them in the other direction. The community respects and cares for the forest, and in exchange, foraging is a prominent part of their lives and provides psychological, | ||
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| + | Forest-care is a community ritual that strengthens interspecies and intra-community bonds. One component of this care is // | ||
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| + | [David Bollier interviewed Singh about her publication on Odisha](https:// | ||
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| + | . //Workers of the Earth//. Pluto Press. | ||
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| + | - Brown, I. F. (2001). Extractive Preserves and Participatory Research in as Factors in the Biogeochemistry of the Amazon Basin, in McClain, M. E., //The Biogeochemistry of the Amazon Basin//. Oxford University Press. | ||
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| + | - Kimmerer, R. W. (2013). //Braiding Sweetgrass// | ||
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| + | - Pinzón Rueda, R., & Ruiz Murrieta, J. (1995). // | ||
| + | - Singh, N. M. (2013). The affective labor of growing forests and the becoming of environmental subjects: Rethinking environmentality in Odisha, India. // | ||
| - | ## Specialist curators | + | - Stark, P. B., Miller, D., Carlson, T. J., & Rasmussen de Vasquez, K. (2020). Open-source food: Nutrition, toxicology, and availability |