The foraging day
It's been a while, and frankly I'm running out of food. I need fresh groceries. So I decided to go foraging with 3 goals in my mind: Pine needles, chickweed, and wild onons. Those are in 3 different locations, and I'm only feeling secure in pine needles because they are gonna be there in February. Not so sure about the other two.
If I suceed, I'm making a potato salad with chickweed and wild onions, and a pine needle tea!
My enemies are the cold (will the plants grow in zero temps?) and exhaustion (I'm sleepy and its cold). Requirements for these are a) Knowing where these plants grow and b) getting there and finding it.
I know a few pine trees in the city but those grow next to busy roads and I want fresh untainted needles. And for that I have to hike! Climbing the hill was strenuous but beautiful. And finally I found what I came for; a beautiful pine tree:
My first goal is done! I have my tea ingredients. I learned recently from a library book that the needles on evergreen trees are regarded as leaves in biology, and they do the exact same function as well! They photosynthesize and generate food for the tree and oxygen for us. They're also not forever on the tree! While deciduous trees drop their leaves every year, needly trees keep their needles for 4-5 years, and then also drop them and grow new! So me stealing a bunch of needles, while a bit mean, won't be continuously harmful; the tree will grow new ones eventually.
Ok I'm still not too cold so I'm off to the forest; there should be a chickweed patch at the entrance:
While this is my most trustworthy patch, the plants are fairly small! This isn't a lot of food but hey. It's not nothing. And this plant is filled with vitamins and minerals past what any of my garden plants have going on. I'm taking it.
At this point I ventured into the forest to look for crocuses (which I found!) and then also visited this pretty stream because it sounds so lovely:
And look what else was there. A mossy patch of wood sorrel! I wasn't counting on sorrel but it is delicious in a salad. I picked that too!
I then visited the only meadow that has wild onions and - found none. I remember finding them in February previously, but I imagine it's too cold right now. I considered taking some dandelion greens but they were all red-grey in color and that put me off. I'm not sure if red plants are still good to eat.
But the overall mission is successful! I have enough for a good salad. I came home and immediately had my colorless but delicious tea, and put potatoes to cook:
I did forget about potatoes because I wrapped the boiling pot in towels and let it cook on the chair. But an hour later I remembered, cut the potatoes without peeling (I need all the nutrients ok. and less work for me), added all my chickweed and wood sorrel and had a fantastic meal! In absence of wild onions I added some chopped garlic cloves. I love you potato salad, I love you forest greens.















