May 19, 2010
Fireweed, Far and Wide.
Europe and North America have only a few wild plants in common. This means that for the most part our plant lore and traditional foraging experiences are very different. A few familiar species have been introduced into America by European immigrants, some deliberately, such as Watercress (Nasturtium officinalis) and others by accident; for example Greater Plantain (Plantago major), which became known to the indigenous people as ‘White Man’s Footsteps’ or White-man’s Foot’ because of the way it sprang up in his wake. Either way they were quickly assimilated into Native American culture, and their culinary and medicinal potential thoroughly utilised.
Fireweed, also known as Rosebay Willowherb (Chamaenerion [Epilobium] angustifolium) however, is hemisphere -spanning herb that is native to both sides of the Atlantic, with a long history of uses in many cultures. It is a pioneer species with wide powers of dispersal and is particularly adapted to colonising ground that has been burnt. It became a familiar sight on ‘bombsites’ in London in the first couple of decades after the Second World War and it was one of the most abundant early settlers to the area devastated by the eruption of Mount St. Helens in Washington state in 1980.
From a forager’s perspective it is often plentiful where it grows and is versatile in its edibility. The spring shoots have been consumed in this country for hundreds of years. The tender top 6-8 inches (15-20cm) are snapped off, stripped of most of their leaves except a small tuft at the tip and the stems peeled. They may be eaten raw, or cooked, by boiling, steaming or frying first in butter then steaming in the same pan like spinach. They are especially delicious when added to an omelette.
Now is the time to harvest, so go seek a patch and watch it through the summer.

detail of Rosebay Willowherb shoots - learn to recognise the willow-like leaves that give the plant its name
Apart from some medicinal uses, there ends our native knowledge, it seems. To use this wonderful resource to its fullest potential however we must look to tribes far and wide.
Indigenous Canadians also ate the young shoots. Yupik Eskimos preserved the stems in seal oil to prolong their viability. In addition the Blackfeet ate the fresh roots in spring. The gelatinous pith of both younger and older stems is sweet and prized as food by many northern tribes. It was consumed after splitting the stem open with a fingernail. The people of Kamchatka add the sweet inner tissue to ale that they brew and also use it in vinegar. As Fireweed began to bloom in summer Fisherman Lake Slave People ate the raw flowers and present day Alaskans make Fireweed Jelly from them. Now why don’t we?
Russians make a tea known as Kaporie from the dried leaves, though this, if attempted, should be drunk in moderation as various sources report that it causes drunkenness, nausea or stupefaction! Later in the year the down from willowherb seeds can be used as tinder, though in the past they also have been woven into a delicate fabric with other materials. In autumn the dry stems produce a fibre that can be used as cordage. Fireweed truly is ‘a plant for all seasons’.
February 12, 2010
The Bushcraft Magazine meets Fergus the Forager
The Bushcraft Magazine meets Fergus Drennan whilst he is out foraging for seaweeds on the North Kent coast.
January 20, 2010
Velvet Shanks / Enokitake
Velvet Shanks (Flammulina velutipes) are a genuine Winter mushroom that don’t begin fruiting until December or even January. They grow on dead wood particularly the stumps of Elm, where they can be frozen solid by frosts but are still good to eat when they thaw. Often the clumps are small but occasionally Velvet Shanks turn up in profusion. Provided your specimens are young and fresh I find that their supposed toughness is overstated. Generally they are an ingredient, rather than a meal in themselves because of their small size.
Velvet Shanks are very recognisable because so few other fungi are fruiting (Judas’ Ears and Oyster Mushrooms being exceptions) but forage for them well outside the main mushroom season and check to make sure your specimens don’t have a hint of a ring, or they might not be what you think. If in doubt do not eat them.
October 18, 2009
Shrimping and Cockling Seaside Forage; October 11 2009
Shrimping in shallow waters at low tide means a long walk with some fairly hefty shrimp nets. Even on a neap tide, the water was probably more than half a kilometre out and can retreat as much a 1 kilometre on a good spring tide.

A calm day thankfully, imagine if these were catching the wind.
You dont have to wade out into deep water. Many people managed wearing just wellies. Brave souls had bare legs but not bare feet.
Sandy bays are the favourite haunt of (Lesser) Weever Fish (Echiichthys vipera) so footwear was mandatory. The weever buries itself in the sand with eyes and head protruding. It has a venomous dorsal fin which if stepped on can be as mild as a bee sting or as serious as an Adder bite.
Lesser Weever with dorsal fin raised.
September 13, 2009
Jams, Jellies and Saucy Sauces
So after yesterday’s excellent day’s foraging I ended up with some of the fruit left over.
So I decided to have a day making stuff and seeing what I could produce.
First up was the haws, decided to follow Huw’s recipe he got from the Really Wild food festival.
First step, stew the haws in water and vinegar.
While they were stewing I cut up 3Kg of crab apples I had foraged on the Friday, to make some crab apple jelly.
By this time the haws had stewed down into a nice mush and it was time to force them through a sieve.
to produce a nice thick orangey liquid.
Sugar was added to this as well as various seasonings and boiled down to a thick sauce.
I also boiled up a mixture of the bullaces, sloes, damson, blackberries and elderberries for a hedgerow jam.
Once the apples had stewed down into a mush,
thay were transferred to a muslin bag and allowed to drip for a while.
More to come on the apples later….
The hedgerow fruits were also strained through a colander to remove the pips, skins and stones.
Again sugar was added and the result boiled till the setting point was reached.
So far we have a fabulous haw sauce that reminds me of HP fruity sauce and goes really well in a bacon sarny,
a hedgerow jam of a marvelous colour and that’s sweet but not too sweet…
seen here alongside a glass of last year’s blackberry wine…
and still to come, turning the apple juice into jelly and whatever happened to the damsons….
















