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Trillium: Wild Edibles
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Добавлен 29 май 2015
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Do You KNOW These 5 Plants?
There are a lot of plants to learn and know when you're a forager but do you know these 5? Plants like the Grey Headed Coneflower, Common Milkweed, Rattlesnake Master, and Compass Plant are commonly found growing in prairie like environments and they can be easy to learn if you know how to identify them. In this video we'll take a look at each one up close so you'll know how to spot them in the field, next time you're out.
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www.patreon.com/trilliumwildedibles
Support the channel on Patreon!
www.patreon.com/trilliumwildedibles
Просмотров: 3 566
Видео
You NEED to Learn These 4 Poisonous Plants
Просмотров 17 тыс.14 дней назад
Poisonous plants are not only part of our ecosystem, but are something that all foragers should learn so they can keep themselves and their loved ones safe. Learn these 4 poisonous plants to help you on your foraging journey. Mayapple is a plant that is unique in toxicity and edibility because the entire plant is poisonous EXCEPT the flesh of the fully ripened fruit. Horsenettle is a commonly f...
Poison Ivy or Virginia Creeper? The Answer Will SHOCK You
Просмотров 2,4 тыс.21 день назад
Virginia Creeper and Poison Ivy are both poisonous plants that frequently grow together. However Virginia Creeper has a unique growth pattern that mimics poison ivy when it's young. This is a surprising phenomenon known as leaf mimicry. A few months ago I would have thought it was completely crazy, until I did some up close investigation and learned about this unique feature of Virginia Creeper...
7 BEST Plants to Forage RIGHT NOW!!
Просмотров 10 тыс.Месяц назад
Summertime we hear so much about foraging berries but their are 7 plants you're overlooking that you should be foraging now. The Wild Carrot is often harvested for its roots in fall but many aren't aware that the stems and flowers are edible too and right now is the time to harvest them. The flowers can be made into a delicious fritter and the young stems can be harvested to add in salads makin...
4 Mushrooms You NEED To Know!
Просмотров 2,4 тыс.Месяц назад
There are many mushrooms out there but these 4 are mushrooms you need to know if you plan on foraging. These mushrooms are very commonly found throughout the world and are incredibly easy to identify, making them good choices for beginners to learn. The Chicken of the Woods mushroom is very commonly found because its bright orange color makes it easy to spot from a distance which attracts prosp...
5 BEST Plants For PAIN And INFLAMMATION!!
Просмотров 27 тыс.Месяц назад
There are many plants that can be used for pain and inflammation and in this video we'll discuss the 5 best plants to use to get rid of pain and inflammation. Whether your pain is caused by arthritis or cuts or wounds, these plants are sure to help you ease the discomfort and get to feeling better. Solomon's Seal is a plant commonly found in moist woodlands and has long been used for treating t...
5 Poisonous Plants You NEED TO KNOW!!
Просмотров 46 тыс.Месяц назад
When foraging, poisonous plants are important to know and in this video we'll cover 5 different ones for you to look out for. Plants like Jimsonweed can look like a couple other edible plants but it is a dangerous poison. Its leaves look like other nightshade species but it is far more dangerous to consume. Blue flag Iris is a very beautiful plant however it often grows next to cattail and it l...
How To Make A Stunning Mulberry Syrup
Просмотров 2,2 тыс.Месяц назад
Mulberry season is here and there are lots of recipes for using them and in this video we'll make a stunning mulberry syrup. This recipe is rather easy even though a bit time consuming. The first thing we need to do is to take our Mulberries we harvested, cleaned, and removed the stems from and then get them into a pan on the stove. Turn the pan on to about a medium heat to start the process of...
How to Harvest Mulberries FAST!
Просмотров 2 тыс.2 месяца назад
Mulberries are an abundant source of food and in this video we'll cover how to identify them, how to harvest them, and how to process them for recipes. The White Mulberry is a common tree found in urban areas and the berries are very prolific. Identification is easy this time of year as the berries are a sure sign, however the leaves are easy to learn as well. The leaves are egg shaped, glossy ...
THIS IS NOT MILKWEED!!
Просмотров 2,1 тыс.2 месяца назад
When looking for Milkweed there is an imposter that you need to know about. That imposter is Dogbane and it looks very much like the Common Milkweed that you may want tot forage. Dogbane is a poisonous plant that often will grow in the same environments and exudes a milky sap as well. However foraging this plant is going to make you very sick. We'll talk about the ways to tell the two plants ap...
How To Identify Wild Comfrey - Cynoglossum virginianum
Просмотров 2,6 тыс.2 месяца назад
In this video we take a look at the popular Wild Comfrey and its identification features. Wild Comfrey or Cynoglossum virginianum by tis Latin name is a really easy plant to identify. The plant will have a hairy appearance and texture on all parts except the flowers. The Basal leaves are large and egg shaped with smooth margins but these leaves change size and shape as we go up the plant. The r...
Lots of Wild Plants and A CAVE!! - Vlog
Просмотров 1,2 тыс.2 месяца назад
Let's take a short hike through Leonard Springs Nature Park and look at the loads of wild plants and the caves in the park. Leonard Springs Nature Park is just south of Bloomington and is a unique geological feature in southern Indiana. This park boasts waterfalls, caves, and a lot of native wild flowers, as well as a marshland that used to be a reservoir for the town of Bloomington. Along the ...
4 Myths of Foraging DEBUNKED
Просмотров 3,6 тыс.2 месяца назад
There are many myths about foraging and while some of these stem from good intentions, others are from a place of misunderstanding because foraging seems esoteric to some. In this video we'll go over 4 common myths and I'll debunk each one. Myths like foraging is dangerous or destructive to the environment are ones that come from a place of good intentions by people who care about the environme...
Butterweed Identification - Packera glabella
Просмотров 3,1 тыс.3 месяца назад
In ths video we'll take a look at Butterweed, or Packera glabella. Butterweed is a common plant that is found along roadsides, in agricultural fields, and even lawns and gardens. Some people will confuse this plant from a distance with Wintercress but once you get up close and personal it's easy to tell the difference between the two. Packera glabella is just one plant known as Butterweed but i...
A Video Field Guide To 10 Edible & Medicinal Plants
Просмотров 35 тыс.3 месяца назад
A Video Field Guide To 10 Edible & Medicinal Plants
Roasted Potatoes with Wood Nettle - Wild Food Under 2 Minutes
Просмотров 8233 месяца назад
Roasted Potatoes with Wood Nettle - Wild Food Under 2 Minutes
5 BEST Plants to Forage RIGHT NOW!!
Просмотров 6 тыс.3 месяца назад
5 BEST Plants to Forage RIGHT NOW!!
How to Identify Virginia Bluebells - Mertensia virginica
Просмотров 1,3 тыс.3 месяца назад
How to Identify Virginia Bluebells - Mertensia virginica
Morel Illness Outbreak? Not What You'd Expect. Here's What To Know
Просмотров 3,2 тыс.4 месяца назад
Morel Illness Outbreak? Not What You'd Expect. Here's What To Know
The Time I Got Lost + A Few Tips For NOT Getting Lost
Просмотров 7974 месяца назад
The Time I Got Lost A Few Tips For NOT Getting Lost
Early Spring Hike and Wild Edible Vlog
Просмотров 1,6 тыс.4 месяца назад
Early Spring Hike and Wild Edible Vlog
How To Identify Jimson Weed - Datura Stramonium
Просмотров 7 тыс.8 месяцев назад
How To Identify Jimson Weed - Datura Stramonium
How to Identify Jerusalem Artichoke - Helianthus tuberosus
Просмотров 4,8 тыс.9 месяцев назад
How to Identify Jerusalem Artichoke - Helianthus tuberosus
Wood Nettle Seeds - The BEST Trail Nibble You've Never Heard Of!!
Просмотров 2,3 тыс.10 месяцев назад
Wood Nettle Seeds - The BEST Trail Nibble You've Never Heard Of!!
How To Identify Solomon's Seal - Polygonatum spp.
Просмотров 11 тыс.Год назад
How To Identify Solomon's Seal - Polygonatum spp.
Public Class Coming Soon! Mark Your Calendars!
Просмотров 1,5 тыс.Год назад
Public Class Coming Soon! Mark Your Calendars!
How to Identify Blue Flag Iris - Poisonous Plant
Просмотров 3,7 тыс.Год назад
How to Identify Blue Flag Iris - Poisonous Plant
The BEST Wild Edible You've (Probably) Never Tried!
Просмотров 7 тыс.Год назад
The BEST Wild Edible You've (Probably) Never Tried!
How to Identify Purple Dead Nettle - Lamium purpureum
Просмотров 135 тыс.Год назад
How to Identify Purple Dead Nettle - Lamium purpureum
Plants in the buttercup family, including the buttercup itself, is in fact a toxic lookalike. The flowers are deceiving, so the importance of distinguishing the rest of the plant such as the leaves, is very very important.
I have both Queen Anne's Lace and poison hemlock growing on my property. They actually grow intermixed in my right of way. It's really very easy to tell them apart once they are mature, but I have one hell of a time telling them apart when they are just coming out in the Spring. I've gone so far as to "simulate" a forage for young Queen Anne's Lace by trying to pick it out from the young Hemlock and tag the plants with my attempt to identify them. I then DO NOT harvest them but let them grow to maturity so I can test my ability to tell them apart and my skills at differentiating the young shoots are NOT GOOD. I'm about 50/50 at differentiating before the easy differentiators set in. How might I improve my skills at telling YOUNG Queen Anne's Lace from YOUNG poison hemlock?
The point in trying to learn how to differentiate them when they are very young is to be able to destroy the Hemlock before it has a chance to spread without destroying my Queen Anne's Lace. Right now, I destroy after the stalks develop their purple splotches but it is a lot more labor to cull it after it grows to maturity.
Thanks!
I have described this Biblically a few times on my CH . Yes youre not speaking incorrectly. Will of the human us still there . . but will is subjugated to SPIRIT . Thats the one point of knowledge that some dont understand .
these are great wild flower plants and do not have to be babied like most plants
oxeyes love abandond gravel pits
Thank you sir!
Very informative 👏 thank you
Thankyou - for plantain and yarrow advice as in UK not all plants you show are here - you're sooooo brilliant really love your no nonsense straight forward approach
Very useful information. Thanks
I just watched a survival guy (about 120 years old) say only cut okra crosswise. Cutting it lengthwise makes it poisonous. 🤷♀️🤦♀️. Oi Vey
I ate my first ripe mayapple the other day. It was honestly the tastiest thing I've ever foraged.
This is so awsome as I live out in the bush and have lots of wild rabbits running around and now I just found out I have wild carrots all over ...tonight's dinner hossinffefer !!!!
Great video!! Thanks
Yummy yummy
Is it just me or does wild carrot also have an upside down crown of stems under the flower which the hemlock lacks? This is how ive been telling them apart, also up here the hemlock finishes a month before carrot season. Im gonna start to use the hairy stems as an identification. If i remember correctly the hemlock has hollow stems with purple blotches around the nodes? Any reply is appreciated. Thanks for the video.
Ornamental yarrow will instantly stop bleeding… just as quickly as the wild both in the North American south, though the Greek version is also pain relieving
Good video! Thank you
If you ever rubbed shark skin? Sir 😅
Oh how I’d love to go out for a harvest with you! 👍😁♥️
Good informational video, thanks for sharing YAH bless !
You're very welcome!
Thanks for peaking my interest in Rattlesnack Master. I see a bunch of it and knew it had to have a use.
You're absolutely welcome and I'm glad you found it helpful!
I noticed mate, ‘you’re not covering the edibility of these pants. Why? It really does someone no good if they know something is edible, but don’t know what parts are edible. Knowing what’s edible or, knowing something that is Poisonous and can, or can not, be eaten. You’re not mentioning the parts of Plants that are and or are not edible.😮 (WHY)? Is it because you don’t really know?😢 why you don’t just show. ‘gathering up Edible and Poisonous plants, then prepare the Edible ones for consumption, then eating said plants so all will know what’s edible?😅 well, anyway. Thanks for sharing your knowledge with me.😊
I'm well aware of these plants uses as I've been foraging since 2008, but each video has a purpose and this video, like many on my channel is to get people familiar with identification of Wild plants. I've done several preparation videos and they perform terrible especially for the amount of time they take. To do your suggestion, which believe me I've thought about plenty of times over my 9 plus years of having this channel, it would take days to weeks for one video and in some cases years. For the way preparation videos perform it would just not be feasible to do that for every video.
Ouch! I wish we could all ask questions more diplomatically, especially when someone puts out knowledge for free.
@@TheKingdomcome But the wrong or incomplete knowledge could cause bad things to happen. This is why I put my question the way I put it. I didn’t mean to come across rude. Sorry if I offended anyone.
@@kennedy67951 Wrong knowledge was not presented here, and “incomplete knowledge” is called a “lesson”; this was a lesson on plant identification. The passive aggression was really uncalled for.
@kennedy67951 I have several videos that don't cover the uses of each plant but it appears that while people say they want that information, everytime I've covered it in depth barely anybody watches. That has lead me to not cover it much because as a youtube channel I have to try to provide what my audience wants. To do that I use analytics. For example, over 6 years ago I did a video on making ice cream from spicebush, a video that took 30 plus hours, and it still has less than 1000 views. I wasn't offended by your question at all, though it seems that again I have people requesting content that they don't watch. It's all confusing and becoming tiresome. Basically I'm left thinking that no matter what, people will insinuate I just am not good at teaching this subject and or want something and then not watch. Yet they watch other foraging channels covering the same thing. I've spent thousands of hours on this channel over 9 years trying to provide for an audience and it's not good enough. One video I just cover identification and it's great! The next video I do the same and people complain. To film this video I spent 4 hours in 100 degree heat in 70% humidity and it still seems in vain. Honestly you weren't offensive at all I hope this explains why I film the videos the way I do. I'm just trying my best.
Beautiful! Side note re the waterhemlock: just did a very quick search; the Greeks supposedly used it to execute prisoners, it does however have respiratory benefits. Since there a lot of much safer plants for respiratory use I won't be using/testing Hemlock😂 I don't even know where there might be any, i just grow queen Anne's lace. I grow it on purpose to rehome swallowtail caterpillars from my parsley etc.
With how poisonous it is it's sure to end any respiratory ailments for life, lol! I usually find water Hemlock near lowland areas or areas that stay rather moist. For example I found some growing on a hill but in a depression on that hill that stayed fairly wet despite drought.
That’s interesting.
Helpful stuff. I think there’s at least one of these that I’ve been misidentifying…
Glad it was helpful for you!
Could u do a side by Side comparison between foxglove and mullin
If I find foxglove I'll try to.
The blossoms alone are totally different!
Great video
Thank you I'm glad you enjoyed it!
Has anyone else tried these and noticed an aftertaste of carrot but also a cooling sensation in the mouth and throat?
LOVED YOUR NO NONSENSE good vibe...just got a good vibe.loads of you tube advisers ou there but liked your directness
Very good information
Waterhemlock, must have a use, going to see what I can find😊
You could give it to someone you don't like, lol! Just kidding, don't do that.
@@TrilliumWildEdibles 🤣🤣👍 however noone comes to mind!
Makes me want to live in the woods😊
Thank you for the informative video! You mention that the leaves and the unopened flower buds can be boiled and eaten. I was wondering if you can also eat it raw, in salads or snoothies? Also, do you know if there are any safety concerns about toxicity when using it as feed for livestock? I am asking this because this spring, I had two goslings that I fed the leaves of this lettuce to. They absolutely loved them, but then they both inexplicably died! Any thoughts on that? Thank you!
Accidentally ate two of those yesterday in my cousin garden 😬. Good to know they're not poisonous
Mi è cresciuta una piantina che oramai mi creace ha vista d'occhio e beve molta aqua non sapevo che pianta fosse e alta 1,70 in due settimane e cresciuta tantissimo ho scaricato li scanner delle piante e mi dice che e questa nel video ma non so nemmeno io come e cresciuta , vorrei sapere se la butto che non serve ho la tengo 🙏❤️chi mi risponde
We used to eat so many of these as kids in the 80s are skin on our hands and face were dyed purple 😂😂
I found your video to be fascinating! But, one thing I was wondering was if these mushrooms can be frozen if I was able to find a large patch or harvest. I think I have seen the first one mentioned, and I wish I would have known it was edible because it was huge! Can they be made into soup? In may I think I found a morel in my lawn. It was hollow, but there was only one, and it was in the direct sunlight. I looked it up on the internet, to see if it was a morel, but it was growing a few feet away from a Blue Spruce, and I got the impression, they don't grow by fir trees, so I did not eat it. Thanks for explaining these so well!
Commercial 's. ! 👎
I have yet to ever find a ripe May apple. The wild animals always beat me to them.😅
I was able to forage them a few times as a kid in Ohio. They will continue to ripen after picking, and will take on a pungent sweet apple-like scent. Discard the skin and seeds, the pulp can be quite good. One batch I left in the fridge too long, and the sweet scent became nauseatingly powerful, quite unique.
The white-bottomed Chicagos are tastier, IMO.
Its posion to everyone!!!!
It's not it just seems that way because about 85% of people are allergic to it. To your other, rather rude and misinformed comment that got hit by my comment filter: Poison Ivy contains an oil called urushiol which causes an allergic reaction in MOST people. No antihistamine doesn't stop the rash or the itching because that's not how urushiol works. Saying that it's not an allergy is plain wrong and while it's okay to be wrong as long as we learn from it's not okay to call people names. Since I doubt you'll believe me about the allergic reaction, here's a link to the page on poison Ivy, oak, and sumac from John Hopkins, one the leading medical institutions in the world: www.hopkinsmedicine.org/health/conditions-and-diseases/allergens-poison-ivy--poison-oak
What happens if I put more plant matter and fill up my jar to the top! Does that matter!
That's perfectly fine and most people recommend it actually, I just didn't have enough for that. Just make sure to leave some space between the alcohol and the metal lid because that can cause some bad reactions when being left for so long.
@@TrilliumWildEdibles thank you
thanks for sharing. do you have knowledge of S.E. Asia flora as well? greetingd from Thailand
I do not unfortunately. Though sometime I'd love to visit Thailand and explore your nature, it's a beautiful country. Plus the food! Maybe I can learn some plants if I'm ever able to go there.
Does water hemlock also have hollow stems? I thought I had hedge parsley, but it looked exactly like that. I still bagged it up and was careful as if it were deadly toxic as a precaution.
Very informative 🎉❤🎉
Thank you!
This is probably going to get me in trouble. But can you do a video specifying water hemlock and queen Anne's lace aka wild carrot root. People use wild carrot root for a purpose and because these two look similar we would love to get a good taxonomy
Nah you're good, no trouble here! That's a really good idea! I'll try my best to get something done on that. Thank you!
@@TrilliumWildEdiblesWhat about hedge parsley? That looks even more similar, and I don't see videos on comparing them.
@@TrilliumWildEdibles I found some poison hemlock near me, and it's almost identical to all of the cow parsley nearby. That would be another great ID video.
@@decyattysyachpchyol I saw an older British man do some excellent videos on all of these apiaceae plants, but I can't remember is channel, and I didn't like or subscribe...
Great video, thank you! Awesome attention to details. Thanks for helping us learn.
You're very welcome and I'm glad you enjoyed it!
If you don't have anywhere to be you not lost just exploring old Indian saying 😊
I love it because that's a much better way to look at it!
Thank you.
You're very welcome!
Thank you my friend bren eating wild plans over 70 years love your program
You're very welcome!