foraging wild edibles, wild edible plants around our yard

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  • Опубликовано: 24 авг 2024
  • Check out my other foraging videos.......And subscribe..
    I have been trying to learn more about wild edible plants. (weeds) It's good to learn new things. Never eat wild plants unless you are 100% sure of what your doing.
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Комментарии • 277

  • @foleydave26
    @foleydave26 2 года назад +4

    Well done. I want to teach the homeless the same info in my area. I have been foraging for years and think the homeless would benefit from the knowledge.

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  2 года назад

      ,,,, thanks, I believe that the homeless would benefit from this knowledge

  • @UNoBugMe1
    @UNoBugMe1 6 лет назад +9

    I love this video. My 6 yr old grandson knows many wild edibles around my home and thanks me constantly for showing him what to look for and what to stay away from. Good times in Massachusetts. Our best to you and yours.

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  6 лет назад

      ,,,,,,,,, Thanks, it’s a lot of fun learning about wild edibles. We just have to be very careful.
      ruclips.net/p/PLkNmtmLVKaIzK0DO-vQ6kRsBBG5e4j0Fm

    • @cristineconnell7803
      @cristineconnell7803 2 года назад +1

      Same with my grandkids. 10,11, & 12. They play carrying buckets around to make their own dinners. LOL We enjoy those while the regular dinner cooks, or use at as salads after!😋 They have come up with some amazingly delicious recipes!❤😋🌹

  • @Shiftready
    @Shiftready 6 лет назад +7

    Foraging Texas is an EXCELLENT resource for southern/southwestern plants~

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  6 лет назад +1

      Taygete of Algorab ,,,,,
      I love it, his plant classes are really good also.

  • @nathangagnon4950
    @nathangagnon4950 6 лет назад +13

    I’ve eaten the plantain the are great steamed with wild onions. Great while camping they both grow around walk paths.

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  6 лет назад +6

      I really like the seed stalks

    • @Susileedean
      @Susileedean 4 года назад

      Can you eat the plantain leaves? or just use them for insect bites?

    • @inverseelity1972
      @inverseelity1972 3 года назад

      The thumbnail of the video is broadleaf plantain (all parts of the plant is edible)

  • @scheck1727
    @scheck1727 4 года назад +4

    So after doing a bit of research I found that there is another plant called English Plantain which is what he shows in the above video. Learn something new every day!

  • @HermitMoth
    @HermitMoth 7 лет назад +18

    Very informative, I love learning about this kind of stuff 🍃

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  7 лет назад +2

      Ya me too , it has become my new obsession.

  • @brianmoore8933
    @brianmoore8933 8 лет назад +9

    I'm from NY so it's fun to see so many wild edibles that are from the same family but that we don't get up here. We have different chickweeds, sorrels, thistles. We have a similar nightshade that I wouldn't touch with a ten foot pole! When I'm in my field guide and see the skull and crossbones I think "yeah, I'm not going to bother." Haha.

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  8 лет назад +5

      Hey Brian, that's cool. I read that there is two nightshade, Deadly nightshade and black nightshade. Everyone must be very careful when foraging wild plants.

    • @izzhipp4971
      @izzhipp4971 6 лет назад +1

      go outside 🍅 and eggplants I believe are nightshade.

    • @quercus4730
      @quercus4730 6 лет назад +1

      Solanaceae Tomatoes, potatoes, peppers .

  • @Susileedean
    @Susileedean 4 года назад +3

    Very interesting video. We have different plants in New England, than you do in Texas. but we have lambsquarters here too. I ate some today sautéed in butter and they were so good. One of my favorite wild plants. They were brought here by the early settlers as seeds to be grown as potherbs.

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  4 года назад

      Susileedean ,,,,,, that is very interesting, we have it growing a lot now

  • @kaymaycurven5596
    @kaymaycurven5596 5 лет назад +6

    Thanks for your video, I love wild veggies, eating them all my life, free too!

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  5 лет назад

      I love learning about wild edible plants.
      Thanks for lookin.

  • @lamorenacancook3116
    @lamorenacancook3116 3 года назад +2

    Black nightshade is eaten in central america. My husband cooks the leaves. He makes a soup and adds onions, tomato, and chicken stock. Very tasty!!

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  3 года назад +1

      ,,,,,, that sounds nice. A lot of people on here tell me ,, “Never eat black nightshade !!! “ But I know it’s edible if you prepare it properly.

    • @lamorenacancook3116
      @lamorenacancook3116 3 года назад

      @@gooutside6055 you're right about that. We're actually growing some at home because it's hard to find (in the city, they poison the "weeds"). I made a soup this afternoon and he'll eat the leftovers, refried, like refried beans.

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  3 года назад +1

      @@lamorenacancook3116 ,,,,, we used to live in a medium size town. During the 17 years we lived there I never put weed killer or fertilizer on the yard so my edible weeds would be ok.

    • @lamorenacancook3116
      @lamorenacancook3116 3 года назад

      @@gooutside6055 Ive only been in the city for 3 years. I'm from a VERY small town...no red lights and all highway, cattle and horses. I never noticed any of this free and nutritious food before now.
      We were walking our dog and my husband spotted the nightshade and was thrilled. They call it planta mora.
      Now I'm fully engaged in foraging. It's amazing!!

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  3 года назад +1

      @@lamorenacancook3116 ,,,,, this is my favorite foraging site.
      www.foragingtexas.com/

  • @hannastenros6009
    @hannastenros6009 4 года назад +1

    I have eaten a lot of wild plants berries and flowers in my life, most grow either in the garden or in the forest nearby. Some make excellent tea too If dried.

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  4 года назад

      Hanna Stenros ,,, it’s really good to have the ability to go out and find plants for food or medicine. The learning never ends.

  • @freedomfighters1236
    @freedomfighters1236 6 лет назад +17

    I live in texas and had no idea about these plants and ive seen all of them lol

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  6 лет назад +1

      mark hodsdon ,,,,,,
      It’s a lot of fun learning about wild edible plants. We just have to be very careful.

    • @ms.s1321
      @ms.s1321 4 года назад

      Me too. I'm getting ready to go find some plants to eat.

  • @mickcarson8504
    @mickcarson8504 6 лет назад +7

    Interesting to be reminded of most of the weeds I used to eat in the 60's right until mid 70s, all cooked by my grandmother and he two daughters, my mother and my then auntie (both passed away), when they were children. Their mother (my great grandmother) survived the harsh conditions of WW1 and WW2 where food was scarse due to the Depression of the 20's and living conditions that were hard for many right through the coming of WW2. My great grandmother was the only daughter in the family, her two older brothers were killed during the end of WW1, and she and her mother struggled penniless to survive. According to my grandmother, she told me that, to survive, they had often gone out in the fields and grasslands to dig out weeds and edible plants to add them in their diet for many reasons, including the beneficial and medical quality of basically all the weeds ever collected. But there was a rule of thumb, never eat too many mixed ones in one serve, alway one, two or three types at the same time or you'll get bad digestion. That's how professional these women of the fields were. And they did swear just as much as I have seen for myself that the medicinal properties that most of these weed are great for many body ailments, too many to mention here. It kept us all away from most known cases of infections, intestinal worms and other problems known and cured by weeds and native herbs alone. I remember eating the leaves of this plant on the thumbnail in Europe that my grandmother cooked and added at dinner as part of her home made pasta, a type of Gnocchi made by milled wheat flour at her farm, with fresh beef in tomato sauce, onion and garlic. The stems of this plant turn into seed that we fed our European Finches and Canaries. The plant tastes nice if cooked and prepared correctly, and so are many others if eaten singly or with a couple of others sauteed in olive oil, lightly salted with crushed garlic, herbs, oregano, etc.

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  6 лет назад +2

      Mick Carson ,,,,, that is an interesting story, I have been having lots of fun learning about wild edible plants.

  • @sirdukeusa3289
    @sirdukeusa3289 7 лет назад +6

    We have yellow flowers on our wood sorrel, in which we call it sour grass, such a pretty dog

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  7 лет назад +1

      I like the little seed pods, they look like tiny okra. Coco is a funny dog.

    • @drdoofenshootz7
      @drdoofenshootz7 6 лет назад

      What you have with the yellow flowers is wood sorrel. Purple flowers and no main stem is actually oxalis, a close relative. It's also edible and tastes almost exactly the same, so it's commonly confused with wood sorrel.

  • @vajraayudha5062
    @vajraayudha5062 3 года назад +1

    @ 0:47 , isn't that penny wort . I think it is.. @9:12 Carolina Wren and her big mouth .. lol very active bird , bright and early morning singer..

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  3 года назад

      I believe it is ponyfoot. Not penny wort.
      Here is penny wort...www.eattheweeds.com/a-pennywort-for-your-thoughts-2/

  • @nanibly
    @nanibly 7 лет назад +1

    Thank you for your very helpful tour, I am trying to identify plants on my property. Please consider making a follow up video and maybe use a tripod, to help with the focus, as it was difficult to get a really good look at many of the plants. It was helpful to see where they are planted in your yard and the scale to surrounding plants.

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  7 лет назад

      Nani Blyleven ,,,,
      Thanks, I have lots of other wild edible plant videos.

  • @jithanarath5057
    @jithanarath5057 4 года назад +1

    Our backyards have many weeds that are medicinal! 👍👍👍

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  4 года назад

      ,,,,, it’s lots of fun learning about all of them.

  • @juliegogola4647
    @juliegogola4647 4 года назад +1

    My yard is "Lambs quarter heaven" in summer in many places. I also have seen plantain in my yard. The spiky stuff I will NOT be eating, nor the NIGHTSHADE. I now have "chickweed" growing and it is NOT spring yet here in SW Pa. Now wood sorrel is a plant I'd like to try, BUT, I do NOT know IF it will grow here in Pa zone 6a. I may, or may NOT. You have Oleander growing there, I would have to pot one up and protect in a greenhouse, so YOU are so LUCKY, and the banana plant (if not a Musa basjoo) would NOT grow here, BUT, the Musa Basjoo will grow here with lottsa protection basically mulching really well, and stopping too much rain from hitting the dormant roots. When I was a kid I used to eat some clover looking plant with yellow tiny flowers, it was sour, Maybe it is a form of "sorrel" I thought it was an Oxalis type, maybe it is REALLY a "sorrel" of sorts? When I was a kid eating it, I wondered IF it would kill me though:) I LOVE your pooch (dog) in Texas he or she must be so hot, I'm GUESSING you are in Texas.

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  4 года назад

      ,,,,,, yes we are in Texas. Everything is starting to grow and turn green. Spring time is here !!!

    • @juliegogola4647
      @juliegogola4647 4 года назад +1

      @@gooutside6055 We have about 1 1/2 months before it starts to STAY warm, maybe even 2 months IF you figure when the last frost is supposed to come, that is after Mothers day for us here in Pa.

  • @choimdachoim9491
    @choimdachoim9491 4 года назад

    "Hi Coco. What are you doin?" "Woof. I'm gittin ready ta season some more a yer wild foragin stuff. Woof"

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  4 года назад

      choim dachoim ,,, ya your right. It probably all tastes like dog pee.

  • @notfoolediknowthetruth3101
    @notfoolediknowthetruth3101 3 года назад +1

    Lambs Quarters gives a better buzz than Columbian gold but don't tell anyone.

  • @kipaatung2529
    @kipaatung2529 4 года назад +1

    We grow lambs quater in our farms and black knightshade is my favourite. I didn't know the English names of them until today 😂

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  4 года назад

      Kipa Mama ,,,, people keep telling me, DONT tell people to eat nightshade. But I read that it is fine if you cook it.

  • @gooutside6055
    @gooutside6055  7 лет назад +1

    I have lots of other wild edible plant videos. Go to my channel and check them out.

  • @saraswatkin9226
    @saraswatkin9226 3 года назад

    That Deadly nightshade is poison and should not be touched let alone eaten. You have a nice garden.

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  3 года назад

      ,,,,,,, this is where I learned about black nightshade, www.foragingtexas.com/2007/10/black-nightshade.html

  • @barbibutton9619
    @barbibutton9619 6 лет назад +12

    Wild lettuce can be used as an opiate replacement for pain also cslming abilities

    • @herbcraft
      @herbcraft 5 лет назад +2

      wild lettuce CAN NOT be used as an opiate replacement. It's a mild relaxant, not a sedative narcotic. It has nowhere near the strength of opiates.
      I've used wild lettuce in my herbal practice for over 20 years... this is not my unfounded opinion, I actually use and make wild lettuce tinctures & extracts.
      The US Dispensatory (1918) stated, regarding the concentrated wild lettuce concentrate Lactucarium:
      "It is claimed for it that it has, although in a very much inferior degree, the anodyne and calming properties of opium, without its disposition to derange the digestive organs. It has been employed in this country to some extent to allay cough and quiet nervous irritation, but we believe that the general experience is in accord with our own in finding it to be almost devoid of narcotic properties. We have never been able to obtain any good results from its use. Water distilled from lettuce (eau de laitue) is used in France as a mild sedative, in the quantity of from two to four ounces."
      ` www.henriettes-herb.com/eclectic/usdisp/lactuca.html

  • @louisevaughan2165
    @louisevaughan2165 2 года назад

    The best thing everyone can do is get a very good , printed book for foraging wild edibles for their region ( other regions also ) & then don't let it out of your possession! There will come a time when we will not have access to the internet & it will be invaluable to you & othere . Please keep passing on your knowledge to the responsible people you know .

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  2 года назад

      ,,,, there are a couple more books I need to get. Thank you for making me think of this.

  • @andywhite12345
    @andywhite12345 6 лет назад +3

    Don't confuse black nightshade with deadly nightshade!

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  6 лет назад

      Your correct, we have to be very careful. Learning about wild edible plants can be dangerous without lots of research.

  • @MsOrionsmom
    @MsOrionsmom 3 года назад

    I make plantain salve and goldenrod and dandelion salve. Alot of fun.

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  3 года назад

      ,,,, I have not tried that yet, sounds great.

  • @stuartoneill2663
    @stuartoneill2663 4 года назад +4

    Just remember one golden rule, everything is edible, apart from poison

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  4 года назад +1

      Stuart O'Neill ,,,,
      Or, Everything is edible, but some of it will kill ya. :)

    • @Zackylorin
      @Zackylorin 4 года назад

      No dont eat sand

  • @dnwaokocha1
    @dnwaokocha1 6 лет назад +1

    Awesome finds in the backyard

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  6 лет назад

      Djuana Okocha ,,,,,
      Thanks, it’s fun learning about wild edible plants.

  • @plantgirl2861
    @plantgirl2861 6 лет назад +4

    What a pleasant accent! I love foraging here in Indiana. We have some similar plants

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  6 лет назад

      Sachi Davis ,,,,,
      It is fun to find new wild edible plants. Keep learning .

    • @Adornbeautify
      @Adornbeautify 6 лет назад

      Can you give me a name of some that are. I live out here. All I can Identify is hogweed lol

  • @jessicaleser8822
    @jessicaleser8822 5 лет назад +4

    love this video.

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  5 лет назад

      Thanks, I have several other videos about wild edible plants

  • @41degreesN12degreesE
    @41degreesN12degreesE 5 лет назад +3

    That lambs quarter! I know we've seen it in our yard but now that we've discovered you can eat it it's nowhere to be found. Maybe it's still to early....

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  5 лет назад

      CNG On The Move ,,,,,
      Some of these weeds are hard to find. You can see what time of year to find it at www.foragingtexas.com/2007/05/lambsquartergoosefoot.html

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  5 лет назад

      Rebecca Conn ,,,,,
      That’s awesome, I brought some of the lambs quarter in the video to our new property. It just started growing a few weeks ago.

  • @jimsizemore1673
    @jimsizemore1673 4 года назад +1

    Lambs Quarters!...

  • @pamelagonzalez9567
    @pamelagonzalez9567 6 лет назад +2

    loved your video been surching for wild edibles, some of those look familiar, I'm in Florida so some of the others I did not recognize, thanks for sharing my friend.

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  6 лет назад

      Pam's Great Outdoors Adventures ,,,,,,
      Thanks, it’s fun learning about wild edible plants. We just have to be really careful and do lots of research before eating wild plants.

    • @artistaloca4
      @artistaloca4 6 лет назад +1

      Pam's Great Outdoors
      I'm in SW Florida; have any good read suggestions?

    • @MysMystery13
      @MysMystery13 5 лет назад

      @@artistaloca4
      I'm Near Bottom Of Okeechobee. .. Most Of These Don't Grow This Far South.
      Figures! I'm From TN, And Have Seen Most Of What He Shown!

    • @artistaloca4
      @artistaloca4 5 лет назад

      @@MysMystery13 Thank you 😁

  • @VeraAubert
    @VeraAubert 6 лет назад +1

    "Sow thistle is also called "wild opium lettuce" and has more pain killing ability than morphine

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  6 лет назад

      Vera Aubert ,,,,
      I have eaten lots of sow thistle stalks. I have not found any wild lettuce yet.

    • @pcolvin4235
      @pcolvin4235 5 лет назад

      Waya tondry it.and does it preserve the painkilling part? There has to be a use for those.miserable poky things.

  • @keithguidry2841
    @keithguidry2841 3 года назад +1

    Cocoa is pissing on all the plants your eating!

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  3 года назад

      That’s why they taste funny !!!!! :)

  • @FarahMahardika
    @FarahMahardika 7 лет назад +2

    Found some similar weeds grew here in Indonesia with the ones in your video, but can't tell if it's the same species. Great video! Would love to see some more

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  7 лет назад +1

      Thanks for looking. Have you seen my other edible plant videos ? We must
      be 100% positive about edible weeds. It can be very dangerous if we get
      it wrong.

  • @cristineconnell7803
    @cristineconnell7803 2 года назад

    Looks like you have Self Heal all over too! Will find it around the wood sorrel, in grass etc! Mint family, mint shaped leafs, purple flower heads, all edible & highly nutritious! Mine usually grows low to ground, but also get tall 1 -2 ft shoots! I find it everywhere in my yard! It does well under the cherry & apple trees. 😋

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  2 года назад +1

      ,,,,, I love finding new wild edible plants.

    • @cristineconnell7803
      @cristineconnell7803 2 года назад

      @@gooutside6055 😋❤😋

    • @cristineconnell7803
      @cristineconnell7803 2 года назад

      @@gooutside6055 My poor son! 25 years of hearing " GO MOW THE LAWN!" Now he hears me hollering out the window, "DON'T MOW THERE!" 🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂😂😂👍

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  2 года назад +1

      @@cristineconnell7803 ,,,, I’m 17 years live in our house we never used weed and feed or any lawn products. Just let it grow.
      Mow sometimes

    • @cristineconnell7803
      @cristineconnell7803 2 года назад +1

      @@gooutside6055 uses dried coffee spread on lawn sure seems to help keep fleas & etc under control!

  • @MushtaqAhmad-jg3bn
    @MushtaqAhmad-jg3bn 7 лет назад

    Masha'Allah very good thanks so much
    I got plenty in my Farm God bless you

  • @IknowGodIs
    @IknowGodIs 4 года назад +1

    What is the plant on the screen lead picture before you click the video on the search page? I have watched it three times and didn’t see it.

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  4 года назад

      ,,,,, the one on the thumbnail is broad leaf plantain. In the video I show some narrow leaf plantain. www.foragingtexas.com/2008/08/plantin.html

  • @bernardpopp541
    @bernardpopp541 6 лет назад

    Well i guess Texas is good for something after all...Eastern TX? We stayed a few months in the Texas Hill Country...ok except for the FIRE ANTS!
    Very nice edibles tour!!!
    Your yard is a wild edibles farm!!!
    👍🍀😄

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  6 лет назад

      Bernard Popp ,,,,,
      Texas hill country is awesome.
      We are about an hour from Austin.
      Thanks for lookin.

  • @Kobe29261
    @Kobe29261 6 лет назад

    You totally left-swiped some sweet annie -methinks, at 5:23-ish? Love that stuff! It's bitter if you catch a mouthful but I've been throwing a few sprigs in my wild-foraged salad and I have no complaints!

  • @QueenlySweetpea
    @QueenlySweetpea 8 лет назад +3

    The plantain looks quite narrow scrawny in your area, here in Ontario the plantain is about 4 to 6 inches wide & has the little ropes growing out of them ..

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  8 лет назад +2

      You must have broad leaf plantain. we have the narrow type.

    • @QueenlySweetpea
      @QueenlySweetpea 8 лет назад

      That's a good description ..

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  8 лет назад +1

      I would love to find some broad leaf variety

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  7 лет назад +1

      QueenlySweetpea ,,,
      Now I have broad leaf plantain in our yard. It does look much better than the other type. Made a new video about it.

    • @jillfarkas
      @jillfarkas 7 лет назад

      I have the broad leaf kind, I always thought they were weeds. This is *very* helpful , and I'm going to try the insect bite trick.

  • @Minxyminx68
    @Minxyminx68 Год назад

    I found your video trying to see which edible plants i have in my back yard n along my woods...boy is it hard tl tell the difference between dandilion leaves n all the other ones that look exactly like them

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  Год назад +1

      There are lots of edible plants that look like dandelion.

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  Год назад +1

      www.foragingtexas.com/
      My favorite wild edible plant site

    • @Minxyminx68
      @Minxyminx68 Год назад

      @@gooutside6055 i live in PA so idk if theres a big difference in area or not🤔 i try to use my google camera to check all the different plants to see what they are n their purpose, but cant tell if its the right thing coming up on google or if its something that looks similar but it just grew a little different, ya know like if the leaves are squished down or half eaten by bugs or something, or what stage its in...its hard to fugure it out lol

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  Год назад +1

      @@Minxyminx68 ,,, I also use an app called “picture this, “ it costs $20 per year but it’s pretty good. You have to be very careful with wild edible plants.
      I have lots of other videos on this subject.

  • @chachab9239
    @chachab9239 6 лет назад

    Geezzz what took me so long to FIND your site.? Anyway I’ve got a smorgasbord to good eating on my many acres of countryside land... yummmmi thanks again, hear?😁

  • @shewho333
    @shewho333 3 года назад +1

    Is there a green gnome behind the lambs quarter at 2:10 on the tree bark?

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  3 года назад

      ,,,,,I think that was a green tree fairy. It helped me with the rest of the video.. :)

  • @robertbrunston5406
    @robertbrunston5406 7 лет назад +1

    I have seen some of those plants! Thank you.

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  7 лет назад

      Robert Brunston ,,,,,
      Thanks for looking. Have you seen my other wild edible plant videos ?

  • @finkang5001
    @finkang5001 6 лет назад +1

    방가지똥,명아주,질경이 등등 한국에서도 먹어요. This weeds can eat in Southkorea. soup or salad or boiled after squeeze and mixing with oil soysauce.

  • @mishap00
    @mishap00 6 лет назад +15

    You should be very, VERY careful recommending nightshade as an edible. They can be very difficult to tell apart the edible from the poisonous and the toxicity can vary from plant to plant and by location and growing conditions. The American native was reported as being edible, however the European which was imported can be deadly and there are some reports of them hybridizing and what appears to be edible may NOT.
    Personally I don't feel they are worth the risk to keep on your property if you have children or animals which may come into contact. There are far too many other wild edibles which are safe and tasty 100% of the time for me personally to bother with one that is of dubious value.

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  6 лет назад +4

      mishap00 ,,,,
      Yes you are correct. The black nightshade is kinda not worth it.

    • @dthao76
      @dthao76 5 лет назад +1

      I believe he is showing the wrong black nightshade. The edible one has pointy tips around the leaves.

    • @pattiannepascual
      @pattiannepascual Год назад

      exact same here.

  • @Sweet87671
    @Sweet87671 4 года назад +1

    Thank you for the video, next time slow down the camara because so e of them was hard to see.

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  4 года назад

      ,,,,, I will try and do that. I have lots of other wild edible plant videos if you are interested. ruclips.net/p/PLkNmtmLVKaIzK0DO-vQ6kRsBBG5e4j0Fm

  • @tonyminnichsoffer7401
    @tonyminnichsoffer7401 5 лет назад

    YOUR Closing lines should come at the opening of this show. "Don't eat anything unless you're absolutely sure!" You were kind of iffy with nightshade. VIEWERS: DO NOT EAT ANY PART of NIGHTSHADE!! NEVER EVER, unless you are able to sleep with fire ants and rattlers. Although related to potato, tomato and tobacco, nightshade is deadly.

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  5 лет назад

      Tony Minnichsoffer ,,,,,
      This is where I got information about black nightshade.
      www.foragingtexas.com/2007/10/black-nightshade.html
      I probably should have left it out of this video because you have to prepare it properly to remove toxins.

  • @kathleenbyers932
    @kathleenbyers932 6 лет назад +1

    Thanks much. I really enjoyed your video.

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  6 лет назад

      ,,,,,thanks, I hope it was helpful. I have other videos like it .

  • @rayraymontoya78
    @rayraymontoya78 5 лет назад

    Thank you. I have learned much from videos like this.

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  5 лет назад

      Ray Ray Montoya ,,,,, thanks, I have been having lots of fun learning about wild edible plants.

  • @inverseelity1972
    @inverseelity1972 3 года назад

    Every part of the greenbrier plant is filled with protein. A better way to identify is the thick shiny rounded (no teeth) heart shaped leaves without hairs.

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  3 года назад

      ,,,,,, it’s a good plant

    • @inverseelity1972
      @inverseelity1972 3 года назад

      Yes, I have them all over the place in my yard lol

    • @inverseelity1972
      @inverseelity1972 3 года назад

      It's my favorite plant

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  3 года назад

      @@inverseelity1972 ,,,, ya, we have tons of it on our property. I like to snack on the tips while walking in the woods.

    • @inverseelity1972
      @inverseelity1972 3 года назад

      @@gooutside6055 I have recently taken down my briers after finding out they have been climbing up into my trees, There were some honeysuckles twining around the vines.

  • @michaeldelaurentis1875
    @michaeldelaurentis1875 Год назад

    Looks like some young sycamore trees to me

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  Год назад

      I’m not sure what plant you are talking about.

  • @chachab9239
    @chachab9239 6 лет назад +1

    Poke sallett been eating it many years.. come on spring... I pick it young, wash it, bring to rolling boil perhaps 10 minutes, drain it, and fry it in lil hot veggie oil along with sliced onions, salt, pepper...yummmi... bring out the cornbread😋😋

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  6 лет назад

      Char Brady ,,,,
      Man that sounds good. I think we saw some poke weed sprouting up today at the back of our property.

  • @felicitytoad
    @felicitytoad 4 месяца назад +1

    😮

  • @aurielseraphinianus7442
    @aurielseraphinianus7442 5 лет назад

    Very educational, thank you.

  • @BobHansler
    @BobHansler 8 лет назад +14

    Good stuff.

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  8 лет назад +3

      +Bob Hansler ....thanks for looking, looking for wild edibles seems to be my new obsession.

    • @BobHansler
      @BobHansler 8 лет назад +1

      go outside
      It can take a lifetime. There's more out there than we realize.

    • @lonewolfe4067
      @lonewolfe4067 6 лет назад

      great stuff m8

  • @izzhipp4971
    @izzhipp4971 6 лет назад

    Can I ask where you are located. In in the deep South and having a lot of trouble finding eatable plants. Dandelions are plentiful but only a few months a year .... Wild onions grow in some places ... NO mushrooms are eatable here. HELP please.

  • @cathleensmith5473
    @cathleensmith5473 7 лет назад +5

    Coco says
    "I'm makin a McDonald's run"lol!

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  7 лет назад +1

      Cathleen Smith ,,,,,
      Ha that's funny. She would like a 1/4 pounder

    • @cathleensmith5473
      @cathleensmith5473 7 лет назад

      go outside I can't remember the last time I had one! :-(

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  7 лет назад +3

      Cathleen Smith ,,,,
      My wife and I stopped at macdonalds a while back. Quarter pounder was disappointing . Of course

    • @cathleensmith5473
      @cathleensmith5473 7 лет назад +1

      Let me guess, cold fries too. Maybe I'll try my own.

    • @williewills3297
      @williewills3297 7 лет назад +1

      Cathleen Smith McDonald's = mcpeople....

  • @scheck1727
    @scheck1727 4 года назад

    Are there two types of Plantain? I've never seen this kind with such skinny leaves. In Pennsylvania we have a Plantain with very fat leaves (AKA known as Pig Ears) and the seeds grow up the complete stalk, not just an inch or so at the top.

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  4 года назад

      scheck1 ,,,, for a while all I could find was the narrow leaf plantain. But all of a sudden the broad leaf version showed up in our yard.

  • @MD-cd7em
    @MD-cd7em 6 лет назад

    HE LIKES TO DO THIS...YOU CAN TELL...I WOULD MUCH RATHER PLANT SOME GOOD VEGGIES!

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  6 лет назад +1

      It's fun to learn new things. We also have a vegetable garden.

    • @MD-cd7em
      @MD-cd7em 6 лет назад

      go outside YOU'RE CORRECT!

  • @Tadashiiiii1
    @Tadashiiiii1 4 года назад

    Thank you very much 🙏🙏🙏❤️❤️

  • @christall-in-all3235
    @christall-in-all3235 6 лет назад

    "Black nightshade is highly variable, and poisonous plant experts advise to avoid eating the berries unless they are a known edible strain."-en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solanum_nigrum

  • @431gigi
    @431gigi 6 лет назад +2

    1 Peter 1:6 In all this you greatly rejoice, though now for a little while you may have had to suffer grief in all kinds of trials.

  • @fernandotontodonati5274
    @fernandotontodonati5274 7 месяцев назад

    Can you flash the name of the plants on the screen?

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  7 месяцев назад

      I’m not able to edit that video anymore. It’s too old.

  • @christinearmington
    @christinearmington 5 лет назад

    I used to have a big old Turks cap. Sorry it’s gone!

  • @adamadkins4485
    @adamadkins4485 7 лет назад +6

    do you ever pick poke weed and make poke sallet?

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  7 лет назад +2

      I have not cooked any yet. I see it all the time. Just have not tried it yet. Have to be careful with it.

    • @QUEENATHAND
      @QUEENATHAND 7 лет назад +5

      Adam Adkins Poke *salad is delicious!!!!!!

    • @oovii808
      @oovii808 7 лет назад +1

      QUEENATHAND yes it is...I like it butter and onions.

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  6 лет назад

      I made a Poke weed video a couple months ago. It tasted great !!!

    • @minihaha3940
      @minihaha3940 5 лет назад +1

      Adam Adkins my neighbor was a chemist for proctor and gamble. She had me pick poke for her to make a salad. I was excited to try it until she poured pig grease all over it. At least it made her happy, she was in her seventies and it was an old Kentucky dish she missed.

  • @mablebartlett1988
    @mablebartlett1988 6 лет назад

    Prickly lettuce: do you snip off the spines and eat it raw?

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  6 лет назад

      Mable Bartlett ,,,,
      The little spines are not very stiff.

  • @stanlindert6332
    @stanlindert6332 4 года назад

    Don’t eat any part of nightshade.

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  4 года назад

      ,,,,,,, I probably could have left that out. Did you know that tomatoes are nightshade ? Here is where I read about it. www.foragingtexas.com/2007/10/black-nightshade.html

  • @carolinacountryhomesteading101
    @carolinacountryhomesteading101 6 месяцев назад

    What is the name of the plant used as your thumbnail? Is it edible? If so, is it eaten raw or cooked? They grow in abundance on my property. No one locally can tell me what it is and if it can be eaten?

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  6 месяцев назад +1

      Plantain,
      www.foragingtexas.com/2008/08/plantin.html

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  6 месяцев назад +1

      It’s one of my favorite. I eat the seed stems.

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  6 месяцев назад +1

      There is two kinds, thin leaf and broad leaf.

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  6 месяцев назад

      Just be very careful, I have almost misidentified plants before.

    • @carolinacountryhomesteading101
      @carolinacountryhomesteading101 6 месяцев назад

      Thank you so much for your help. @@gooutside6055

  • @pn3940
    @pn3940 Год назад

    B's are vitamins, not minerals.

  • @ItsKardamin
    @ItsKardamin 7 лет назад

    Do you have any suggestions of places that have information about the edible plants in Illinois

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  7 лет назад

      CocoaAndTea ,,,,
      Hi, you can google "wild edible plants, Illinois " I found this place. midwesternplants.org/2015/03/12/99-edible-plants-for-the-midwest-forager/

  • @carolinalomeli9128
    @carolinalomeli9128 4 года назад

    Pony's foot? Is that edible?

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  4 года назад

      Check it out here. www.foragingtexas.com/2007/05/ponys-foot.html

  • @iisunny7218
    @iisunny7218 5 лет назад

    Wild lettice good for pain

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  5 лет назад

      We found some on our property last year. I hope it comes back in the spring.

  • @neolapeterson4011
    @neolapeterson4011 5 лет назад

    Thank you for this

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  5 лет назад

      We are glad you liked it. Here are more of our wild edibles videos.
      ruclips.net/p/PLkNmtmLVKaIzK0DO-vQ6kRsBBG5e4j0Fm

  • @willycat7445
    @willycat7445 4 года назад

    What are B minerals?

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  4 года назад

      I’m going to go back and look at that.

  • @zinatghani2767
    @zinatghani2767 7 лет назад

    thank so much

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  7 лет назад

      Zinat Ghani ,,,,,
      Thanks for watching. I have lots of other wild edible plant videos if you want to check them out.

    • @zinatghani2767
      @zinatghani2767 7 лет назад

      yes I will t Thank you so much

  • @selenajones1712
    @selenajones1712 5 лет назад

    PLEASE DON'T TELL ANYONE TO EAT NITE SHADE.

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  5 лет назад

      Selena Jones ,,,,,
      Yes, I probably should have left that one out. Here is where I learned of it.
      www.foragingtexas.com/2007/10/black-nightshade.html

  • @Jlind9335
    @Jlind9335 7 лет назад

    Thanks for the info, but what was the tree at .55?

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  7 лет назад +1

      that is a mimosa tree . China calls it the happiness tree.

  • @3089280288
    @3089280288 7 лет назад

    The weed in your thumbnail us what we have new England. I plan on removing them but you eat those? What's the name of that one?

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  7 лет назад

      3089280288 ,,,
      That weed is called Plantain. It is an awesome plant. Google the name and you can find out lots of info about it.

  • @mrbinford1012
    @mrbinford1012 4 года назад

    Does anyone know the name of the plant on the cover of this video and if that is edible? because I see it around my house.

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  4 года назад +1

      Christopher Stover ,,,, that is plantain, there are different varieties of it. It is edible. Broad leaf and narrow leaf. Here’s a link,,,,,www.foragingtexas.com/2008/08/plantin.html

    • @mrbinford1012
      @mrbinford1012 4 года назад

      go outside, thank you

  • @jillfarkas
    @jillfarkas 7 лет назад

    *awesome*

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  7 лет назад

      Thanks, you should check out my other videos.

  • @nancynahnigoh3550
    @nancynahnigoh3550 6 лет назад

    Is moss roses edible??? Some said it is edible not so sure

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  6 лет назад +1

      Nancy Nahni Goh ,,,,,, I read that wild purslane with yellow flowers is edible. They said the multi colored flower type from plant stores may not be edible.

    • @nancynahnigoh3550
      @nancynahnigoh3550 6 лет назад

      go outside thank you for your infos

  • @organicmedicinalherbsfarmr9876
    @organicmedicinalherbsfarmr9876 4 года назад

    I have lots of herbs in my farm.... but most of them I don’t know their names but I do in my dialect. Can anyone help me with it , I can send pictures or upload their pics

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  4 года назад

      Real Time world #Raising ,,, I use two things for plant identification. I bought an app called “PictureThis “ , you take a picture of the plant and it try’s to tell you what it is. I learn most things from,, www.foragingtexas.com/search?q=Green+carpetweed

  • @louboogardner7785
    @louboogardner7785 3 года назад

    Too many guess about what he found...wouldn't trust it at all...

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  3 года назад

      ,,,,,everyone that plans to harvest wild edible plants needs to double check and then check again. It is best to do lots of research. I saw some of those plants for the first time while making this video.

  • @izzhipp4971
    @izzhipp4971 6 лет назад

    Anyone know of a book with pictures for wild eatable plants in the southeast that I can purchase? Nobody down here forages unless they have knowledge handed down through thier family. Its too dangerous. The south surprisingly doesn't have many foods naturally growing. Wild onion dandelion black berries honeysuckle and a few stems from plants around fresh water ( cattails. ) ate about it. NONE of the mushrooms are eatable here which breaks my heart because I love mushrooms but can't GET any of the wild ones here. Is love to try them ALL. Anyone know where I could ORDER some maybe?

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  6 лет назад +1

      izz hip ,,,,,
      Go to foragigtexas.com
      Or try Botany in a day , the new one with color pictures

    • @izzhipp4971
      @izzhipp4971 6 лет назад

      go outside thank you so MUCH !!!!

  • @ToddSloanIAAN
    @ToddSloanIAAN 6 лет назад

    You came across 1:51 this in your yard that day...?

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  6 лет назад

      I made the video over a few days period. Does something seem wrong ?

  • @bobmarshall3700
    @bobmarshall3700 5 лет назад

    This video could be highly dangerous since it encourages people to use
    garden plants as medicine. Someone could mistakenly identify toxic
    plants as the ones shown in the video and end up poisoning
    themselves......

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  5 лет назад

      Yes, foraging wild plants can be very dangerous. I talk about being very careful.

    • @pcolvin4235
      @pcolvin4235 5 лет назад +1

      Yes, but a person is ultimately responsible for themselves. A concept we have all but forgotten.

  • @plainsimple442
    @plainsimple442 6 лет назад +1

    thought I saw some milkweed in your yard at 2:34 - 2:39?

  • @ccccclark2605
    @ccccclark2605 Год назад

    ❤️✝️🙏❤️❤️❤️

  • @kevinawilliams9703
    @kevinawilliams9703 5 лет назад

    B IS A VITAMIN..not a mineral

  • @TruckTaxiMoveIt
    @TruckTaxiMoveIt 6 лет назад

    You really should clean or at least wash your wild edibles before you eat them

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  6 лет назад

      yes you are correct. It would be bad if a cat peed on them or something. : )

  • @MickeyMouse-rs1xf
    @MickeyMouse-rs1xf 6 лет назад

    I'm not going to take your advice on this video if they were safe to eat you should eat some so that we know that you are sure at what you doing

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  6 лет назад

      Mickey Mouse ,,,,,
      Hi, after this video I started doing taste test videos of the wild edible plants that I find. You can find them on my channel. But you must do extensive research on your own before eating wild plants. Thanks for watching.

  • @bigfootbillunknown9511
    @bigfootbillunknown9511 6 лет назад

    What color is God's skin?

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  6 лет назад

      Big Foot Bill Unknown ,,,,,
      That’s a good question.
      Maybe we will find out for sure when we go home.

  • @Dollapfin
    @Dollapfin 7 лет назад

    U missed a wild carrot

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  7 лет назад

      Matthew Niedbala ,,,,,
      Hi, I didn't see the carrot . But I don't mess with wild carrot because it looks close to poison hemlock.

    • @Dollapfin
      @Dollapfin 7 лет назад

      go outside I can tel the difference I've seen both a lot.

    • @elenastennett8660
      @elenastennett8660 7 лет назад

      Matthew Niedbala I can't tell the difference between first year hemlock and first year queen Anne's lace

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  7 лет назад

      Ya, I'm not familiar with Hemlock and wild carrot. I may research it soon. thanks for lookin

  • @obsie1021
    @obsie1021 6 лет назад

    It's NOT milk thistle

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  6 лет назад

      Stella O ,,,,,
      So, do you think it was Italian thistle?

  • @evankizer3448
    @evankizer3448 6 лет назад

    Directions not clear enough I ate my thumb...

  • @tbdeniaryawibisana2234
    @tbdeniaryawibisana2234 4 года назад

    KI URAT

    • @gooutside6055
      @gooutside6055  4 года назад

      ,,,, I don’t know what you said, but thanks for commenting. :)