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Fruits and Berries ... Learning to identify the plants takes a little time and a lot of patience. The number of species is large and the variety even larger. Before pulling out your flower book (or pulling up this site), take a few moments to examine your new friend.
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www.mountainnature.com/Plants/LearnToID.htm
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A few varieties of wild berries need cooking, but the most common and plentiful can be eaten fresh out of hand. They can be cooked up in pies or tarts, or they can be dried, frozen or canned for preserves or whole fruit.
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www.motherearthnews.com/Organic-Gardening/1999-10-01/Ed...
www.motherearthnews.com/Organic-Gardening/1999-10-01/Edible-Wild-Plants.aspx
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Learn to identify wild berries and you'll have an essential survival skill that will serve you in case of an emergency. ... Knowing how to identify wild berries is a good survival skill to have. With the number of poisonous berries out there, it can be intimidating to determine whether a berry is edible or not.
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www.life123.com/home-garden/trees-shrubs/berry-bushes/i...
www.life123.com/home-garden/trees-shrubs/berry-bushes/identify-wild-berries.shtml
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Getting started identifying wild berries is fairly easy. ... Peterson’s Field Guide to Edible Wild Plants – these come in many editions, each specific to a region of North America. Pages include color plates for easy identification, habitat and growth information, and much more to help you correctly identify wild edibles.
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herbs.lovetoknow.com/Wild_Berry_Identification
herbs.lovetoknow.com/Wild_Berry_Identification
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It might be hunting for morels in the spring, berries in the summer, or boletes in ... Try to identify the edible wild plants right outside your back door. Odds are you'll have no trouble finding half a dozen or so. The most likely are dandelion, chicory, amaranth, rumex, chenopodium, and milkweed. These, along with cattails,
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www.backwoodshome.com/articles/cywin47.html
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In Stalking the Good Life, the late naturalist Euell Gibbons wrote about wild berries. "Actually," he wrote, "I begin picking berries about the time the last spring snow melts away." He then describes in one chapter a succession of harvests of wild wintergreen berries (teaberries), strawberries, red raspberries,
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winemaking.jackkeller.net/plants.asp
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Where can you find blueberries, strawberries, chokecherries, pin cherries, raspberries, and thimbleberries growing wild? The Gunflint Trail in northeastern Minnesota is the place. Find and identify wild berries, pick them -- and just try to save a few for your favorite berry recipe.
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www.gunflint-trail.com/planner/berrypicking.html
www.gunflint-trail.com/planner/berrypicking.html
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Forest Foragers for your natural and wild foods, herbs and arts & crafts materials ... I am primarily a forager of raw materials for your medicine, wild foods or crafts needs. I hope you enjoy the Nature Picture section and that it is an aide in identifying plants and mushrooms. The Moose and Animal pictures will be of...
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Before you can use wild plants for food, you must learn how to clearly and accurately identify them. ... Wild Berries of the West; by Betty Derig and Margaret Fuller; An important book for a wild food library. This is a high quality photographic guide focusing on the 'identification' of wild plants that produce berries.
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www.wildfoodadventures.com/bookplantidentification.html
www.wildfoodadventures.com/bookplantidentification.html
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