These 7 wild plants are common across North America and they’re more than just weeds. Learn how to spot and use plantain, dandelion, yarrow, jewelweed, chickweed, pine, and mullein. These plants offer everything from emergency food to powerful medicinal benefits like stopping bleeding, soothing poison ivy, easing coughs, and more. Whether you’re lost in the woods or just want to be more self-reliant, this is survival knowledge every outdoorsman should know.
👉 Survival is in the details. Know the land. Trust yourself.
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You ever get lost in the woods? These seven plants might help you in a pinch or save your life. First up is Plantego Major Plantain. You’ve probably stepped on this one a thousand times. Some people use it for inflammation and to stop bleeding. I personally use it to pull out toxin from bee stings and wash stings and stuff of that nature. Next up is danaline. This is a powerhouse. It has a lot of vitamins and is a superfood for survival. Jeweed impatience compens. Sometimes you can find it around poison ivy. If you get poison oils on you, you can crush it and use it as a wash to dilute those oils and get them off your skin. Kickweed Stellaria media. Tiny but mighty. It is an edible plant. One of my favorites actually. It’s packed with nutrients. Some people put it in sav and use it for skin enhancement. Pine trees. You can steep the needles for a really good tea that is rich in vitamin C. You can also eat the inner bark, the cambium layer of the bark. Pioneers did this as a survival methodology. It tastes like pine bark though. Mowing for basicum thapsis. First year mowing has a base. Second year mowing has a stalk. You can use this for congestion and other throat issues and stuff of that nature in a tea. Yaro achilia milithium has been used by soldiers for centuries to help stop bleeding and some people suggest you can use it for a fever or pain reducer as well. This is just a taste of what is in our edible medicinal plants instruction in our online membership. Check it out. I’ll have a link for you attached here. That way you can come get wild with me online. The Craig Codle NRS Nation at Nature Law
18 Comments
Nice
Thank you I love this
Awesome information
Informative. Could you perhaps tell us what parts of the plant are edible on each plant as you go through them in your future videos? A quick two or three fast suggestions on how to cook them spice wise wouldn't hurt.
Completely unrelated, but you have an issue with your liver. A lot of men do, FYI.
Show us how too usethem… pls.
Rag weed, poke weed
Neet info
I will follow to virgie!
😢
You can make flour with pine and it makes good flat bread.
I’m not trying to be a troll, but it seems to me that the medicinal value in these plants are psychosomatic mostly. It seems like we’re better off with modern medicine for these kind of problems that you mentioned.. however I do agree that plants are cool
what about the athalas plant? you know, King's foil?😂
Don't drink pine needle tea if you're pregnant.
I wouldn't show yarrow because it looks similar to poison hemlock which can even cause death. Queen Anne's lace which isn't poisonous but can cause skin rashes also looks similar to yarrow.
I love dandelion. My aunt grew it under tarps and in the winter would sweep the snow off the tarp and have fresh tender greens. Dandelion in a sweet and sour bacon dressing is amazing.
I absolutely love your content. ❤
You are the coolest guy I’ve ever met in my whole life or had the experience to experience. God bless you and I only hope that I can learn all I can from you. God bless you my name is East you’re very interesting.
I have the majority of these growing in my yard and flower beds. I guess I'll survive 😂❤
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