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I love spring foraging. After a winter of cold and snow, it's incredible to see how much food is popping up everywhere. And it's nice to eat fresh, green plants while you're waiting for your garden to start producing.Â
I'm a huge advocate for learning to forage, even if it's only a couple of specific plants. Once you learn how to identify a few plants, you'll be amazed at how often you see them when you're out and about.Â
I was explaining this to my two young boys on Saturday. We were out on a hike, and I brought my foraging basket and gardening gloves with me. I had seen stinging nettle growing along the path earlier in the week and wanted to make fresh nettle soup.
I was pointing out all of the plants we were walking by that were edible or medicinal – garlic mustard, purple dead nettle, yarrow, violets, dandelions, stinging nettle, daylily shoots and even wild catnip—all of these growing within feet, sometimes mere inches, of each other.Â
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