I've just added a few books to my Amazon wish-list.
I was reading the SAS Survival Handbook (John Wiseman) and that has some extensive wild food identification information. I'm inexperienced so I'm not sure how useful this info is. I notice there is a Collins Gem SAS Survival book.
BD
Wild, edible foods?
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Daveb
Wild food
I've just finished reading a brilliant book called 'the wild life', by john lewis stemple, it's about a man who buys a remote farm and land and lives for a whole year on only what he can forrage or catch/shoot, really interesting as he explains all of the foods in season throughout the year and good ways to preserve them for winter. Well worth a read, pretty cheap off amazon.
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firepower
Re: Wild food
On the way to my house nowDaveb wrote:I've just finished reading a brilliant book called 'the wild life', by john lewis stemple, it's about a man who buys a remote farm and land and lives for a whole year on only what he can forrage or catch/shoot, really interesting as he explains all of the foods in season throughout the year and good ways to preserve them for winter. Well worth a read, pretty cheap off amazon.
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Reservior
Re: Wild, edible foods?
Just last week I bottled up just short of a gallon I'd sloe gin that's been sat in a demijohn for 2 years.
I do mine slightly differently to maddiecat, but only in a small way. I do freeze mine first but find it doesn't always burst the skins, so while still frozen I just slice the skins with a sharp knife. Much easier than faffing about with a needle! Traditionally you are supposed to prick the berries with a thorn from the tree they were picked from, but a sharp knife is far easier
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I'm being pedantic I know but it's not a sloe tree, it's a blackthorn tree
I do mine slightly differently to maddiecat, but only in a small way. I do freeze mine first but find it doesn't always burst the skins, so while still frozen I just slice the skins with a sharp knife. Much easier than faffing about with a needle! Traditionally you are supposed to prick the berries with a thorn from the tree they were picked from, but a sharp knife is far easier
I'm being pedantic I know but it's not a sloe tree, it's a blackthorn tree
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the7ps
Re: Wild, edible foods?
Ive just seen this in the DM. Reader comments seem to disagree but my (
Blackthorn tree) sloe berries are still hard as marbles. Might be usefull ammo for the sling shot?
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article ... rning.html
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article ... rning.html
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Reservior
Re: Wild, edible foods?
The7ps, head over to your tree and take a berry. Have a small bite into it, don't chomp down, they have a large stone inside so just a small bite of the flesh round the outside. Go on, I dare you 
Re: Wild food
Very good book, and shows what is possible! Brother and I doing the same thing one meal a week.Daveb wrote:I've just finished reading a brilliant book called 'the wild life', by john lewis stemple, it's about a man who buys a remote farm and land and lives for a whole year on only what he can forrage or catch/shoot, really interesting as he explains all of the foods in season throughout the year and good ways to preserve them for winter. Well worth a read, pretty cheap off amazon.
In three words I can sum up everything I have learned about life: It goes on.
Robert Frost.
Covid 19: After that level of weirdness ,any situation is certainly possible.
Me.
Robert Frost.
Covid 19: After that level of weirdness ,any situation is certainly possible.
Me.
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the7ps
Re: Wild, edible foods?
O.k, I'll be brave...Reservior wrote:The7ps, head over to your tree and take a berry. Have a small bite into it, don't chomp down, they have a large stone inside so just a small bite of the flesh round the outside. Go on, I dare you
Re: Wild, edible foods?
Dooooooont! They're not ready, its only September! They'll definitely be slingshot material at the moment 
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jameswhite
Re: Wild, edible foods?
Hi All great thread and i would like to contribute, as a profession i run wild food courses so any queries just ask i know pretty much every wild edible in the uk and the poisnous ones. Horse chestnut for example is not chestnut family but oak. Make a tea from the bark for treating lose bowels but best use is the leaves which are high in sapponins so when made damp and scrunched up will turn to soap, it is antiseptic as well so great to wash with. You can eat hawthorne berries tast like red apples try to spit pip out though. Makes a great haw sin sauce! Used medicinally for treating heart arythmia but you would need loads. Beech leaves are edible best in spring taste like green apple peel. All thistles are edible and every part is edible. Just ask about any others or if you want me to slowley put up a list of easiest to find and use happy to do so. I also have a degree in herbal medicine so will give medicinal uses as well if anyone wants.