ONE OF THE WONDERS of gardening is the reliable generosity of the earth, sun and plants themselves, which offer up fruits, leaves, berries, seeds and roots for our delight and sustenance year after year. In return, all we need to do is keep the soil healthy, feed and water the plants and provide physical support for vines that require it. Growing food (and flowers too) ties us intimately to the seasons and cycles of the natural world of which we are part. It roots us to a place, and the longer we garden in the same location, the deeper our taproot of intimacy with that place grows. Foraging further strengthens that intimacy with place.
"Whether you forage every day or once a month or only one time, the experience of foraging will change the way you look at your world," says Iso Rabins, founder of forageSF, a San Francisco-based organization that offers classes in the sustainable harvesting of edible plants, mushrooms and seaweeds.
"Knowing what you can eat in your local landscape connects you to a place more than anything else." Foraging also provides gardeners with unique, specific information about what grows well in the native soil and climate of a particular location. By foraging, you can note what plants and plant families prosper in your corner of the world. When it's time for you to choose something to plant in your own garden, you can select the natives you've observed thriving in your area, or you can focus on species that you've learned do well in the wild where you live.
This story is from the November - December 2022 edition of Horticulture.
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This story is from the November - December 2022 edition of Horticulture.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.
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JARED BARNES is an award-winning professor of horticulture at Stephen F. Austin State University in Nacogdoches, Texas. He also hosts The Plantastic Podcast and publishes a weekly e-newsletter called plant ed, both of which can be found at his website, https://www.meristemhorticulture.com. At home, he gardens with wife Karen and daughter Magnolia.
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