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31 Comments
Wish my dirt looked like yours mine is sandy loam and clay why I do metal beds would cost a fortune to plant inground with digging out and replacing or till in good grow dirt and I am to old for that lol
I love the beauty berry bush because I can crush the leaves and rub the oil on me and it keeps the mosquitoes and ticks away and they don't bite me.
Have you ever tried yaupon Holly as a caffeinated tea or roasted as a caffeinated coffee ? It's the only caffeinated plant in America the native Americans used it. l love it.
Thank you for sharing this information. That’s interesting. I remember my mother saying they had huckleberries by their house when she was a little girl.
I agree with you. I've been collecting physical books on wild edibles and medicinal plants for awhile now, and also putting them into practice. I'm a land surveyor and I'm in the woods all the time. I love trying to find plants while we are out working. I keep books to pass on and to have if LCE happens.
Danny, I apprecite your knowledge and tour of the woods. I didn't kow that huckleberry's were edible. We live in the foothills of North Carolina and I don't know that that bush thrives here or not. Always a good time watching your videos.
Pecan grove reminds me of the farm I grew up on in central Mississippi. Foraging videos would be wonderful. I remember picking wild dewberries, wild plums, apples pears just wandering the woods looking for things.
Good luck with the Huckleberry if anyone can grow it’s you can. Thank you and Wanda for taking me around the property, y’all are always teaching us.
Brother, ANY video you wanna make I am good with it.
I really enjoyed your vid. More foraging please. Thanks!
I made some Youpon tea last year. Don’t need a lot for a cup. More caffeine than coffee. Made beauty berry jelly, and a tincture with it also. I made a sumac berry tincture too. My grandmother used to make sumac lemonade for us. Good stuff!
Wanda I was wondering when you made your cornbread recipe did you use cornmeal or corn flour also how much
We only have 5 kinds of mountain huckleberries here in n. Idaho and overbin n. e. Washington stste. You have to buy plants cause the mountain plants dont grow at lower altitudes.
Its acfun tradition that my son and I have to take a couple days in the end of July or in August to go huckleberry picking in the mountains here!
Do you have currant bushes there?
Beautiful! Thank you.
When Miss Wanda zoomed in on you planting a little bush before you said anything about what you were planting, I knew right away what it was, and it has been about 63 year since I have seen a wild huckleberry. We use to go pick them yearly and the only place we knew they grew was way out in the woods on a piece of ground that was idle that belonged to a friend of my Uncle's we all would sit in the back of his old pickup and he would drive to the end of his property and we would climb over the fence walk down the hill deep in the woods and there was huckleberries every where. One year I was about 5 or 6 and my Grandma's oldest sister came down to visit my Grandma with her daughter and her two daughters and Aunt Florence lived in the city about 4 hours away and she wanted to go pick huckleberries so my Mom, Grandma, Uncle, and my oldest brother went with Aunt Florence and her daughter to pick, I and Aunt Florence's 2 Granddaughters wasn't allowed to go, I remember crying because I always went but they made me stay at home with the 2 girls that were older than I was. It was a nice warm day no wind perfect day to pick berries, so we thought, my brother heard something and looked up to see a big healthy tree starting to fall he yelled at my Aunt she saw it but didn't move just covered her with her arms. They carried her to truck on a cot my brother had came to house to get and stopped to get neighbor to call for ambulance to meet at the house. Just think back then you did your own rescue and the ambulance was the hearse from the funeral home medical help in back was a family member washing your face and holding your hand for the 40 mile trip to hospital, she died a few minutes after getting to hospital she was crushed. But there were no more picking huckleberries for our family except Mom and I walked the 3 miles and picked one time after that but I think the memories was too much for my Mom we didn't long. No one else I know picked huckleberries we were the hillbillies that still lived off the land. Here in SW Missouri the huckleberries were very small but the taste was amazing. There was also a berry that grew where the huckle berries were that grew on a small bush I believe they were called buck berries bigger but didn't taste as good. We had a lot of dew berries they tasted ok looked like blackberries but grew on a thorny vine on the ground. I am only 71 but I grew up in a different world.Sorry about the book
Most land is privately owned with no trespassing signs. There's very few places where you can go to forage. I'm 78 now ,but when I was a kid, there were open woods all around us. We'd go and pick black berries and mayhaws for jelly. Can't do that anymore.
I live an hour south of you and planted 3 in my blueberry orchard 5 years ago. There in full sun about 8 ft tall and produce like crazy. Try it you’ll be surprised.
I want blueberry seeds from your wild blueberry. I always want to learn how to forage!
Yaupon coffee better than coffee no Jitter
I would love to see more videos on What’s in the Woods , Since moving to Mississippi it’s been a learning experience , it is a truly a lost art , so much to see and learn about what we can forage and cultivate from what God has provided 😊
I grew up on Huckleberry Springs Road, and still attend Huckleberry Springs Church. Guess what we had an abundance of 😁
As for types of videos – whatever you put on, I'll watch!
Ha. I remember watching that video. The day of posting. 😮 Time goes by, too… fast.
I put a 5 gallon bucket with a "perfect 4ft stick" stake in it. All birds that use it. Leave seeds they eat in it. I grow the sprouts and get every wild and domestic plants in that birds area. Just some food for thought.
would those plants live in the north say Ma.
My Grandma Lela was from the south. She did a lot of wild crafting in the woods.
If you dig at my place, you could dig to China and never hit a rock or root and it's so black and rich.
It's great for growing but not so much for foundation's or post's.
Can't find any wild huckleberry around here
My dad used to talk of foraging during the depression
I wish I had inquired more of what plants they ate and how they were prepared
I have a small garden and letting wild things grow for pollinators
I don’t see much growing around my neighborhood
I love to go out and forage year around . From greens to blackberries to mushrooms to wild persimmons . There is a different satisfaction when you get home and have a basket full of goodies you can't buy in the store.