Woke up with a sore throat yesterday morning, went out to my yard harvested enough white pine needles for a gallon of tea drank that all day long and woke up this morning completely cured of all ailments. True story.
@@anti-ethniccleansing465 holostic medicines are the hidden secret of the world they dont want you knowing about. Theres a book by nicole apelian , ph.d & claude davis called the lost book of herbal remedies. A very high priced book (ofcourse) but its a gamechanger. Check it out.
Given the time and place we are in with rising food costs and the government saying we are headed towards famine... everyone in America needs to see this video. We need to learn to think outside of supermarket box. Thank you for this video. This video is freaking amazing.
I never realized until recently just how expensive pine nuts are until a recipe called for them. They are CRAZY expensive! It was interesting to read about why that was. They are so damn delicious though - for whatever reason I never made the connection that they were from pine trees until I went to do that research ha ha. Silly I know.
You like the taste of pine nuts? You can use the inner cambium of a pine tree dry it and chop it up very fine and it's pretty similar to pine nuts but not really the same texture not as oily. Keep in mind unless you know how to window a pine tree if you remove the inner cambium you're probably going to kill the tree.
Pine sap very good fire starter even in the pouring rain build a shelter for your fire in that case pine branches make good bedding when you build a shelter ,,,make signal fire green pine branches make a lot of smoke.
@@janicecrowell1537 Working with it is kinda tricky, but you could add it to the warm oils to melt it, then do your mix as you normally would. It will seize very fast, so you need to be quick. :)
@@SoapAcademy do you have to calculate the weight of it as part of your oils? I only have very basic soap making knowledge from a couple of videos and watching my daughter make a batch.
@@JaniceCrowell Hi Janice. I guess that would depend on how much you are adding. I don't calculate it as part of my fats. I just add it in as an additive super fatting the soap even more. If it were to make up more than 10% of the fats maybe I would tweak the formula a bit.
THANK YOU Cody for this extremely informative video. What you are sharing might come to be something that all people will need to know in order to survival. People laugh at statements such as mine, but even if this isn't the case, everything we find that survives in nature has so much more nutritional and health benefits than anything in the grocery store. Keep sharing and God bless you for spending your precious time to enlighten us.
@@CavemanCody Oh yes and I eat it all summer and dehydrate it to eat all winter and make salve from it. Like most of nature, many beneficial properties.
I'm not sure if you know this but if your gonna eat the inner bark, don't make it wider than a third of the tree. Otherwise your killing all the veins going up the tree
Glad I stumbled apon your channel. You should start posting weekly or biweekly atleast to stay in the algorithm. Most people these days don't know the things you teach, so you have allot to offer, there is unlimited video ideas you could make that are very informative. If u get in to the RUclips algorithm you'll make allot of money. Cheers from the back woods of WV
Yew, Norfolk island pine, ponderosa, are the three most common tree species that people mistake for edible pine when in doubt don't eat it. It's also a good idea to soak the pine cone or pine needles first before consuming them and discard the water so that any pesticides bacteria or funguses are less likely to be on the item you're eating.
A great description that I was not previously aware of over here in Western Australia, the main pine tree is the Pinus Pinaster and Pinus Radiata and Norfolk Island Pine....How are they different to northern hemisphere pines and are they edible similar to white pine or the variety of Pinon pines. Thanks
Nice vidoes about edible vegetation. Keep it up! Love the description. Facts are very good. If you did a whole series of edible vegetation im sure you would get tons of hits. Especially right now in these times when people are missing resources and food shortages.
Plausibly. I think it is useful given some areas are experiencing food supply shortages. But I'm a fairly small channel in the grand scheme of things. If I help just one person then it was a successful video.
@Julie Buhite my best video has over 850k views. I do not know where who or how that one jumped like it did but it is solely responsible a lot of new subscribers. Most of my videos average 500 to 1k views with the ones I make on more popular subject branding 1500 to 4k. I've figured out that there is such thing as "cool" survival. Something a lot more people are gonna click on so they can show off to their friends on the next hiking or camping trip. According to my analytics this holds true as my not as cool videos such as certain plant identification or signal and rescue tactics are commonly blown off. It is what it is but its fascinating to watch. I put the time and money into producing them anyway cause they are important.
@Julie Buhite I try to produce what others dont. I had a hard time with identification videos because of shaky video not enough close ups or something of the like. So I try to incorporate more of that
@Julie Buhite I have a array of video ideas from basic to not so basic. But some of my dreams ones will just require a lot of pieces to fall in place at once. Real world stuff like a house fire or getting stuck in a rip current
Pine flour to my taste buds was kind of sweet. I really enjoyed it. I also like to toast my pine nuts over the fire, but I’m not sure if it takes out some of the nutrients? lol sure tastes good though!
So we have to harvest many pine trees because they will be falling down on our house. I want to know, is the wood good for biochar in the soil. From the book by John Mc Phee about the pine barrens just outside of NYC, people did make charcoal from those pines. Are there any poison concerns? We have a tribe near us that uses whole trees in their compost. The EPA inspects it regularly for arsenic quantities. I would appreciate any resources that you can tell me about.
Hello, I am aromatic farmer and have "Steam distillation unit for essential oils extraction" I am looking for trees to grow on farm boundaries from which I can extract essential oils with steam distillation of leaves. Could you please suggest me trees whose leaves can be used to extract essential oils that are aromatic or medicinal ?
Pine needles and pine needle oils are good expectorants! If you have chest ,bronchial or lung congestion sip the tea or take 1-2 drops of the oil in honey or on sugar
Don't forget to look for doghty, rotted pine logs on the forest floor where the limbs entered the trunk will be pine knots, which are pure fat wood. Perfect for starting fires and as torches.
Thank You for the video. I do have a question tho. I heard you and some others say that Loblolly is edible, but if I Google that, there are a couple of sources that lists it with the yew tree and the ponderosa pines as ones to stay away from. Is this tru or a typo ?
Pines are so good at making it so nothing can grow on the ground around them, so it's weird that if a woman drinks a bunch of pine needle tea and eats a bunch of pine nuts, they can even inhibit the growth of a baby human.
@@SoapAcademy I collect pine tears from pitch pine trees melt them down in clear alcohol and applied often and at night took about a year I also recommend turkey tails tea
@@bigtupholsterygardeningbee4170 very cool. It sounds like you are using the pine gum, which is virtually the same thing. Just different extraction method. I will try your suggestion. What proportions and did you use isopropyl alcohol?
@@SoapAcademy I used homade bourbon the ratio was from feel of the liquid just a little tacky I now place that pine in coconut oil and use as body rub awesome smell
Ok I am liking this, but here's the thing - it may be easy to identify edible pines, but it's very very very easy to identify a pine/conifer tree wrong. To many millions upon millions of people, a tree is a tree is a tree. Distinguishing between a flat leaf that turns color in fall and an evergreen needle is about as far as many folks ever get. Just a dose if truthful honesty.
Learning local hazardous lookalikes first is helpful for this reason - it’s usually quite doable to learn the handful to avoid! Where I live, as long as you don’t mix pine up with yew (pine smell, downward-hanging cones, needles in bunches of 2-5 with papery sheath at base indicates you do have pine), it’s edible/drinkable. That said, I usually don’t feel fully comfortable ingesting until someone knowledgeable has confirmed my ID in person 😬 But I consume pine very often now that I’m confident it’s what I think it is!
Lots of self-proclaimed survival experts rave about "fatwood" which is simply seasoned heartwood from a resiny tree such as most pine. It's not magical, it's just dry wood that has that flamable resin embeded in it - not unlike many common match sticks. I'm glad that this guy doesn't dwell too much on this point - more respect to him.
Ever heard of what modern food does to you. If i was pregnant id be worried about everything in the grocery stores.They don't use radiation to preserve the pine😂
pines trees are edible.... LMFAO... no sir.... no they are not... they are every bit as edible as paint chips... those 30 million ppl that starved to death durring maos cultural revolution... bellies full of pine needles and grass....
Just 3oz of pine nuts contain 633 calories. But, if you eat too much of the bark, it can lead to severe dehydration. It's a short-term, supplemental survival food. Edible, but not a good main source of calories.
Woke up with a sore throat yesterday morning, went out to my yard harvested enough white pine needles for a gallon of tea drank that all day long and woke up this morning completely cured of all ailments. True story.
During flu season I will often drink pine tea and yarrow tea every few days before bed.
@demonbushcraft 570
Nice! Glad to hear you are feeling better and that it was successful. :)
@@anti-ethniccleansing465 holostic medicines are the hidden secret of the world they dont want you knowing about. Theres a book by nicole apelian , ph.d & claude davis called the lost book of herbal remedies. A very high priced book (ofcourse) but its a gamechanger. Check it out.
demonbushcraft 570
Thx for the tip.
@@comeandtakeit_bushcraft5705 I'm in the process of reading that book. I just bought it.
This man is authentic and the knowledge he shares is actually useful. This is why I keep watching this channel!
Caveman Cody, keep it up my man!💪
Given the time and place we are in with rising food costs and the government saying we are headed towards famine... everyone in America needs to see this video. We need to learn to think outside of supermarket box.
Thank you for this video.
This video is freaking amazing.
I freaked out, thinking there was a bear behind him, but it was just the dog lol 😂… love your videos man definitely learning a lot
Experience is a great teacher thirty years using these methods follow and outdoor friends
Very Informative. Thank you! This should have 100 times the amount of views
I never realized until recently just how expensive pine nuts are until a recipe called for them. They are CRAZY expensive! It was interesting to read about why that was. They are so damn delicious though - for whatever reason I never made the connection that they were from pine trees until I went to do that research ha ha. Silly I know.
You like the taste of pine nuts? You can use the inner cambium of a pine tree dry it and chop it up very fine and it's pretty similar to pine nuts but not really the same texture not as oily. Keep in mind unless you know how to window a pine tree if you remove the inner cambium you're probably going to kill the tree.
Same lol 😂
pine tea and spruce tea are good for sore throats and flu's , good video
Pine sap very good fire starter even in the pouring rain build a shelter for your fire in that case pine branches make good bedding when you build a shelter ,,,make signal fire green pine branches make a lot of smoke.
Kiddo, you are an old soul. All schools in America should show your videos to all students 💯
Awesome! I make a Pine Gum soap, and a Pine Tar soap. Extraordinary lather and very medicinal.
My daughter makes soap. How would you add pine gum?
@@janicecrowell1537 Working with it is kinda tricky, but you could add it to the warm oils to melt it, then do your mix as you normally would. It will seize very fast, so you need to be quick. :)
@@SoapAcademy do you have to calculate the weight of it as part of your oils? I only have very basic soap making knowledge from a couple of videos and watching my daughter make a batch.
@@JaniceCrowell Hi Janice. I guess that would depend on how much you are adding. I don't calculate it as part of my fats. I just add it in as an additive super fatting the soap even more. If it were to make up more than 10% of the fats maybe I would tweak the formula a bit.
THANK YOU Cody for this extremely informative video. What you are sharing might come to be something that all people will need to know in order to survival. People laugh at statements such as mine, but even if this isn't the case, everything we find that survives in nature has so much more nutritional and health benefits than anything in the grocery store.
Keep sharing and God bless you for spending your precious time to enlighten us.
Even the noble dandelion walks all over mainstream greens in terms of nutrition.
@@CavemanCody Oh yes and I eat it all summer and dehydrate it to eat all winter and make salve from it. Like most of nature, many beneficial properties.
@@jojow8416 The saying goes, a plant will often grow where it is most needed.
Amen to God’s provision!
It’s amazing how detached we have become from nature.
One video and subd. Now binge watching. Thank you for sharing your information Cody
THANKS FOR THE GREAT INFORMATION MANY BLESSINGS ❤❤❤❤
I'm not sure if you know this but if your gonna eat the inner bark, don't make it wider than a third of the tree. Otherwise your killing all the veins going up the tree
Dude, I discovered your channel very recently and absolutely love your content. You've earned a new subscriber!
Glad I stumbled apon your channel. You should start posting weekly or biweekly atleast to stay in the algorithm. Most people these days don't know the things you teach, so you have allot to offer, there is unlimited video ideas you could make that are very informative. If u get in to the RUclips algorithm you'll make allot of money. Cheers from the back woods of WV
Good stuff
Great information. Thanks much!
Yew, Norfolk island pine, ponderosa, are the three most common tree species that people mistake for edible pine when in doubt don't eat it. It's also a good idea to soak the pine cone or pine needles first before consuming them and discard the water so that any pesticides bacteria or funguses are less likely to be on the item you're eating.
Awesome info
Very thorough. Thank you
love your work brother. thank you.
you absorb knowledge like a sponge.
Thank you Very much from North West England UK 👍
A great description that I was not previously aware of over here in Western Australia, the main pine tree is the Pinus Pinaster and Pinus Radiata and Norfolk Island Pine....How are they different to northern hemisphere pines and are they edible similar to white pine or the variety of Pinon pines. Thanks
Well, this is very informative. 👍
thank you, bro! great information!
Excellent content, thank you sir!
Great stuff mate,regards
Beautiful video, thanks
I appreciate you.
This is a must save video thanks
Excellent video very informative 👍 have now subscribed to the channel
Ponderosa pine is not poisonous!
Ponderosa pines - not toxic. FYI
Love these types of videos, great job.
You are impressive as always---keep up the great work!
i was down by the river gnawing on a pine tree and a beaver came up and bit me in the patootie. thanks a lot
Thank you for this content so useful 🙏
thanks bro
Nice vidoes about edible vegetation. Keep it up! Love the description. Facts are very good. If you did a whole series of edible vegetation im sure you would get tons of hits. Especially right now in these times when people are missing resources and food shortages.
Plausibly. I think it is useful given some areas are experiencing food supply shortages. But I'm a fairly small channel in the grand scheme of things. If I help just one person then it was a successful video.
@Julie Buhite my best video has over 850k views. I do not know where who or how that one jumped like it did but it is solely responsible a lot of new subscribers. Most of my videos average 500 to 1k views with the ones I make on more popular subject branding 1500 to 4k.
I've figured out that there is such thing as "cool" survival. Something a lot more people are gonna click on so they can show off to their friends on the next hiking or camping trip. According to my analytics this holds true as my not as cool videos such as certain plant identification or signal and rescue tactics are commonly blown off. It is what it is but its fascinating to watch. I put the time and money into producing them anyway cause they are important.
@Julie Buhite I try to produce what others dont. I had a hard time with identification videos because of shaky video not enough close ups or something of the like. So I try to incorporate more of that
@Julie Buhite I have a array of video ideas from basic to not so basic. But some of my dreams ones will just require a lot of pieces to fall in place at once. Real world stuff like a house fire or getting stuck in a rip current
@@CavemanCody Thanks for all the videos!
Pine flour to my taste buds was kind of sweet. I really enjoyed it. I also like to toast my pine nuts over the fire, but I’m not sure if it takes out some of the nutrients? lol sure tastes good though!
Cooking anything usually kills at least some nutritional value but dang if cooking doesnt make some things taste rather good
Cooking mainly kills the enzymes in foods, which isn't a good thing, but a necessary evil so to speak
Thank you.
Thank you, Cody! I live in East TX woods, so this is good information.
love it.
Hello, can the inner edible bark be harvested all year?
Does pine needles with two or three needles edible?
I only found with two n three needles.
Ponderosa and Lodgepole pines are edible and medicinal, and have long been used as such. They are NOT poisonous.
So we have to harvest many pine trees because they will be falling down on our house. I want to know, is the wood good for biochar in the soil. From the book by John Mc Phee about the pine barrens just outside of NYC, people did make charcoal from those pines. Are there any poison concerns? We have a tribe near us that uses whole trees in their compost. The EPA inspects it regularly for arsenic quantities. I would appreciate any resources that you can tell me about.
Are chit pines edible? Region Uttrakhand.
Thanks for the useful video man.
Deadly stuff buddy. We've lots of pines in Ireland some not native to here.
Maybe a few pine nuts with your potatoes isn't such a bad thing is it?
Pine needles are high in vitamin C! :)
I would like to add, harvest your pine more than 150’ feet from major roadways! This will keep down pollutants from exhaust and diesel !
Hello,
I am aromatic farmer and have "Steam distillation unit for essential oils extraction"
I am looking for trees to grow on farm boundaries from which I can extract essential oils with steam distillation of leaves.
Could you please suggest me trees whose leaves can be used to extract essential oils that are aromatic or medicinal ?
Hi brother. Can i ask you a big favor? Can you send me a.few white pine cuttings? Id like to plant them here in malaysia.
Interesante
Pine needles and pine needle oils are good expectorants! If you have chest ,bronchial or lung congestion sip the tea or take 1-2 drops of the oil in honey or on sugar
great video man. keep them coming. do you ever eat the pinyon pine?
I've never had it and it doesnt grow in my area.
Don't forget to look for doghty, rotted pine logs on the forest floor where the limbs entered the trunk will be pine knots, which are pure fat wood. Perfect for starting fires and as torches.
Thank You for the video. I do have a question tho. I heard you and some others say that Loblolly is edible, but if I Google that, there are a couple of sources that lists it with the yew tree and the ponderosa pines as ones to stay away from. Is this tru or a typo ?
so the pine nuts from the ponderosa pine, Monterey Pine, and Lodgepole pine are toxic?
I also am wondering whether this is true, as I thought they were edible.
Which part of the pine is not edible? And what causes its ingestion?
Rip, from oregon so it's mostly Ponderosa :'-)
Are loblolly pines poisonous for tea?
Ok for tea on ga
Box sings.
>>Pine Trees Are Edible
Pines are so good at making it so nothing can grow on the ground around them, so it's weird that if a woman drinks a bunch of pine needle tea and eats a bunch of pine nuts, they can even inhibit the growth of a baby human.
Couldn't the bark give you "termites" ?
Unless your body is made out of wood I would not worry about it.
@@CavemanCody Just kidding around, really enjoy your videos, however, I couldn't pass that up..
@@dukeman7595 haha. That's what you tell to kids when they try to play beaver
@@CavemanCody There you go, see you at the next video.
Can the bark give u a dog the price of purebreeds is really high
Are you familiar with a study by a professor at Carnegie Mellon University? He says pine trees are bad for the environment.
...and!...I'm confused about "Cabbage-Pine-and-Palm"?!....😃
Use pine tar sap to kill toenail fungus
Could you tell me how you go about doing this. thank you
@@SoapAcademy I collect pine tears from pitch pine trees melt them down in clear alcohol and applied often and at night took about a year I also recommend turkey tails tea
@@bigtupholsterygardeningbee4170 very cool. It sounds like you are using the pine gum, which is virtually the same thing. Just different extraction method. I will try your suggestion. What proportions and did you use isopropyl alcohol?
@@SoapAcademy I used homade bourbon the ratio was from feel of the liquid just a little tacky I now place that pine in coconut oil and use as body rub awesome smell
@@bigtupholsterygardeningbee4170 Wow you make your own bourbon? I will give this a try. Thank you
Ok I am liking this, but here's the thing - it may be easy to identify edible pines, but it's very very very easy to identify a pine/conifer tree wrong. To many millions upon millions of people, a tree is a tree is a tree. Distinguishing between a flat leaf that turns color in fall and an evergreen needle is about as far as many folks ever get.
Just a dose if truthful honesty.
Learning local hazardous lookalikes first is helpful for this reason - it’s usually quite doable to learn the handful to avoid! Where I live, as long as you don’t mix pine up with yew (pine smell, downward-hanging cones, needles in bunches of 2-5 with papery sheath at base indicates you do have pine), it’s edible/drinkable. That said, I usually don’t feel fully comfortable ingesting until someone knowledgeable has confirmed my ID in person 😬 But I consume pine very often now that I’m confident it’s what I think it is!
I had a dream one time that I was eating a pine tree, and it tasted like chicken.
Ok
Lots of self-proclaimed survival experts rave about "fatwood" which is simply seasoned heartwood from a resiny tree such as most pine. It's not magical, it's just dry wood that has that flamable resin embeded in it - not unlike many common match sticks.
I'm glad that this guy doesn't dwell too much on this point - more respect to him.
Dood you can even dry out the inner bark, grind it up, and make bread out of it.
Don't burn pine in wood stove or in chimney it has rawsum like glue that will stick to chimney start fire
Ever heard of what modern food does to you. If i was pregnant id be worried about everything in the grocery stores.They don't use radiation to preserve the pine😂
The caption dont match. Your words.. 🤟 Cody..
I hear whit pine tree removes whatever"s in the covid jab.
OH BOY, HOW MANY PEOPLE WILL GET CONFUSED AND DIE OVER THIS
pines trees are edible.... LMFAO... no sir.... no they are not... they are every bit as edible as paint chips... those 30 million ppl that starved to death durring maos cultural revolution... bellies full of pine needles and grass....
Just 3oz of pine nuts contain 633 calories. But, if you eat too much of the bark, it can lead to severe dehydration. It's a short-term, supplemental survival food. Edible, but not a good main source of calories.