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16 Feb 2026 | looking forward to summer again, when my job will make me spend a million hours outdoors. but for now, i stay inside and write.
Pickleweed
This is a weird native plant appreciation post tell me your favorite weird plants in you area I’ll start
This is pickleweed!!! It’s vital to salt marshes because it can take in salt water. Those red tips are where they put the salt they separate out and they get redder until they fall off (or you can eat them for a Salty Snack, hence the name) and the fresh water is kept in the main stems.
Pickleweed
Find:marshs, bays with ocean water.
Description:Each plant consists of round, branching stems that are divided by joints into individual segments. The leaves and flowers are so tiny that you will probably never notice them.
Edible parts and uses:plant is edible raw or when cooked.top-half of stems can be harvested, allowing the bottom to grow a new shoot.plant is best when gathered before flowering.
Precautions:no side effects.
#2192 - Salicornia quinqueflora - Beaded Samphire
AKA Sarcocornia quinqueflora, bead weed, beaded glasswort, ureure in New Zealand or simply glasswort. The genus are also called Pickleweeds.
A succulent halophyte found wetter coastal areas of Australia and New Zealand, although it's not native to the latter. Oddly enough it's also found in two places in Central Otago in New Zealand, which is nowhere near the coast, but did use to have extensive salt pan habitat.
Historically, people used to burn glassworts to collect the ashes, for the soda content which was used to make soap and glass. It's also edible and the newer shoots quite palatable. Certainly the orange-bellied parrot (Neophema chrysogaster) thinks so - the seeds are a critical food, so the ongoing loss of samphire flats is a disaster for the 180 remaining birds.
Mascot, Sydney, New South Wales
The Ridgway's Rail (Rallus obsoletus), not to be confused with the Clapper Rail is an interesting species of Bird. Also known as the Marsh Hen these once abundant birds are now decreasing in population rapidly. Actually, depending on your source, this species is either threatened or endangered. According to the ICUN Red list it is considered threatened. Likely the reasoning for such confusion is the fact that the Clapper Rail, Ridgway’s Rail, and the Mangrove Rail were considered the same species until 2014 (Berkley).
These indicator species are found in Marshes in Southern California, San Francisco, and Mexico. They are most threatened by habitat loss and predation. “ The population in California's San Francisco Bay has been severely compromised as up to 90% of its original 285 square miles of marsh has been filled, destroyed, or diked, and much of the remainder is degraded. (Cornell)”
Ways you can help:
If you live in the area be sure to walk with dogs leashed around marshes, and don’t let cats roam freely
If you come across free roaming cats in these areas, don’t feed them
Volunteer or Donate to the Living Coast - An organization based in San Diego, California which as the head of a major Rail Breeding Program. It’s also the only zoo in the world you can see a Ridgway’s Rail in person
Pick up Trash
Check out the Links below and learn more about the importance of salt marshes and support conservation of the vital habitats
Sources:
https://rfs-env.berkeley.edu/restoration/ridgways-rail-conservation
https://www.fws.gov/refuge/san_diego_bay/wildlife_and_habitat/Light-footed_Ridgways_Rail.html
https://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Clapper_Rail/id
https://www.thelivingcoast.org/saving-the-endangered-ridgways-rail/
https://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Ridgways_Rail/lifehistory
https://www.audubon.org/field-guide/bird/ridgways-rail
About the Illustration
The rail above is pictured with Native Flora around it’s habitat
The California Poppy (Eschscholzia californica)
Silverweed (Argentina anserina)
Pickleweed (Salicornia pacifica)
The San Diego Sunflower (Bahiopsis laciniata)
Pizza Port’s Pickleweed Point IPA (Picked up at Bev-Mo). A 3 of 4. Quite a lot of tropical and light fruit qualities in the nose as well as a faint herbal quality. Relatively bitter up front and dry with some oily hop qualities behind it. Refreshing, dry, and bitter -- easy-drinking for a while, but the bitterness sneaks up in such a lighter-bodied beer.