EcoBeneficial Interview: Edible Native Plants with Russ Cohen

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  • Опубликовано: 5 янв 2025

Комментарии • 7

  • @tadblackington1676
    @tadblackington1676 4 года назад +4

    Great interview. Any bit of our own needs we can meet at home can help spare a bit of land far away. And the fuel needed to move it. One native that wasn't mentioned was aronia. Black chokeberries are a beautiful and easy fruiting shrub. Beyond that not all exotics are created equal, apples are great for wildlife on a number of counts. One of my favorites is Dolgo crabapple. Its intense little fruit makes great jelly and juice. Its fragrant flowers attracts a good number of pollinators. Its leaves support a good variety of professor Tallamy's caterpillars and any fruit that we don't pick has a tendancy to hang on throughout the winter and the birds love them.

    • @EileenHagerman
      @EileenHagerman 4 года назад +1

      There are a few species of crabapple native to North America. The one native to eastern North America is Malus coronaria, I believe. 😊

    • @tadblackington1676
      @tadblackington1676 4 года назад +1

      @@EileenHagerman You are absolutely right. There are a few North American species of apples. I'm a big fan of Dolgo because it really does do a good job both producing fruit and providing wildlife habitat but if you could certainly use a strictly nearctic apple instead. Go for it and garden with love.

  • @adiposerex5150
    @adiposerex5150 4 года назад +5

    Elderberry bush has edible fruit also.

    • @tadblackington1676
      @tadblackington1676 4 года назад +2

      Elderberries have a couple neat features. They cope with wetter soil than most other fruit trees/shrubs (aronia is in the same league). It plays very well with other fruit trees because it supports a species of aphids that is exclusive to it. These aphids can help support a population of hoverflies. The larval stage is a voracious predator of aphids on apples as well as elderberries. Then adult hoverflies useful pollinators. Elderberries also have those pithy stems that stem-boring bees like. And I just wouldn't want to face cold/flu season without a stach of syrup or tincture.

  • @EileenHagerman
    @EileenHagerman 4 года назад +7

    Great interview. Russ Cohen is awesome! If you're interested in expanding on this topic, check out Indigenous Landscapes. They have a RUclips channel, and they just put out a book on Native Plant Agriculture. 😊

  • @susannastephens1177
    @susannastephens1177 4 года назад +1

    Looking for sources to buy organic healthy crops