Foraging - can food just grow?: Kevin Feinstein at TEDxConstitutionDrive

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 24 июл 2024
  • Kevin Feinstein, also known as "Feral Kevin" is an author, teacher, forager, and naturalist residing in Walnut Creek, CA. He is the author of the book "The Bay Area Forager" and the E-book "Crash Course in Wild Mushroom Foraging," With nearly a decade in the field overall leading wild food walks and related classes, Kevin and his work have been featured in Time magazine, Wall Street Journal Online, AP, SF Chronicle, The Travel Channel, KWMR, KPFA, The Examiner and several more. He has also managed a children's center garden in Lafayette for the past 8 years, using ecological techniques well beyond organic standards.
    **
    In the spirit of ideas worth spreading, TEDx is a program of local, self-organized events that bring people together to share a TED-like experience. At a TEDx event, TEDTalks video and live speakers combine to spark deep discussion and connection in a small group. These local, self-organized events are branded TEDx, where x = independently organized TED event. The TED Conference provides general guidance for the TEDx program, but individual TEDx events are self-organized.* (*Subject to certain rules and regulations)

Комментарии • 38

  • @teresalynne2326
    @teresalynne2326 Год назад +1

    Very informative conversation. Thank you.

  • @natureisallpowerful
    @natureisallpowerful 2 года назад +1

    You know I've been a forager and mushroom enthusiast (some call it a mycologist)Imoat of my life, but really deeply in the last 5 years and I'm still learning every day. Habitats,sustainability, relationships of the plants,flowers,fruits and fungi us mind blowing. It's all connected and I'll never know everything, which I accept. Get out there people, I'm not a professional, I dont need to be, im self taught.

  • @duffymeadows5110
    @duffymeadows5110 5 лет назад +11

    Good stuff. We can feed more people with foraging IF we plant more food giving TREES. Most wild greens are good but provide almost no calories. Roots, tubers, nuts, wild rice, and fruit are the most calorie dense.

    • @roscly83
      @roscly83 4 года назад +1

      So, I love this concept... You get really healthy while losing weight. What more could I ask for?

    • @somaalchemy1154
      @somaalchemy1154 3 года назад

      But it's nutrient dense, you get more bang for your buck.

  • @reptilez
    @reptilez 5 лет назад +1

    Awesome stuff. Thank you so much

  • @DylanBegazo
    @DylanBegazo 4 года назад +7

    Permaculture Food Forests for all.

  • @stupidman9774
    @stupidman9774 7 лет назад +5

    there they go folks,
    monsantos at work on the wilds now, WOW.

  • @jeffborders5526
    @jeffborders5526 5 лет назад +2

    "the rare and elusive matsutake that only grows in the wilderness." Not quite. Those pine mushrooms grow in my front yard.

  • @ameliab7245
    @ameliab7245 4 года назад +2

    I have bought stinging nettle tea and loved it. I have at least one plant in my yard, but don't know how to handle it for making tea. Does a person just wear gloves and pick off the leaves? Dry the leaves? I've read you can also boil the plant and eat as a vegetable. Stems and all? Was interesting to hear if I cut it, it will branch out and propagate. Been wanting it to do that.

    • @SapioiT
      @SapioiT 4 года назад +3

      And not only that, but with a bit of soap or oil and a blender, one can even make natural biodegradable shampoo. The internet is full of videos and text about how even the most absurd-sounding things can actually be done, and in many cases quite easily and cheaply.

    • @haydehabdolahian7691
      @haydehabdolahian7691 3 года назад +1

      Amelia B , I have lots lots mint in my flower beds , every day i pick hand full of that even with steam and wash it , put it in tea pot with like 5 or more cup water and boil it for 5 minutes and drink it all through day ,

    • @frithar
      @frithar 3 года назад

      Amelia, I cut the tops of the nettles with scissors and let them drop directly into a bowl underneath. I've done it for so long and worked with nettles for so long that now I just pick them with my finger sometimes too. The sting goes away. I put my nettles raw in smoothies with orange juice and bananas, or I make a hot tea out of them, or I dry them and then powder them in my blender for winter use. Fantastic for allergies

    • @natureisallpowerful
      @natureisallpowerful 2 года назад

      Yes fellow foragers

  • @haydehabdolahian7691
    @haydehabdolahian7691 3 года назад

    You are so right ! People plan beautiful garden full of vegetable , healthy lots of it and they don’t use it ☹️make me so sad to see every thing go to waste all over ground and people like me pay so much money to buy organic vegetable every week 😢

  • @brigittelm6054
    @brigittelm6054 6 лет назад +8

    Corporatioms and mono culture is the destructive force not humans in general.

  • @brandonmusser3119
    @brandonmusser3119 4 года назад +2

    Sounds like you're in Florida you guys got to start canning that stuff

  • @DylanBegazo
    @DylanBegazo 4 года назад +1

    Grow Aronia for it's antioxident berries

  • @TellaTokyo
    @TellaTokyo 4 года назад +1

    Would it be enough to feed the whole world tho, only by foraging?

    • @SapioiT
      @SapioiT 4 года назад +1

      Yeah. Though one would need to go from 10-meters-wide combines to 20meters wide and even 1-meter-wide combines, and have different combine attachments for different pluricultures (opposite of monocultures) of foraged plants, and to re-introduce grazing, whether by poultry (chicken, ducks, turkeys, etc.) or by sheep and goats (each of whom provides milk and wool), or by pigs, or by rabbits, or by other small herbivore animals, but one would also need mobile walls to keep the grazing animals confined to certain spaces, for planed cyclical grazing (as proven practically by Allan Savory, who turned a patch of desert into a forest with it).

  • @brigittelm6054
    @brigittelm6054 6 лет назад +4

    Corporations 😉

  • @EmilyPorter
    @EmilyPorter 8 лет назад +2

    All the rotten veggies. That's cute. I like that.

  • @emmelawrence
    @emmelawrence 4 года назад +5

    I am a big fan of permaculture & foraging, but there are some big downsides to some of the plants & weeds he mentions - oxalates, phytates, lectins, & other plant toxins & pesticides that enable them to fend off pests(including us) better than their domesticated counterparts can. One of the biggest differences in wild vs. domesticated species that needs lots of synthetic pesticides to deter pests is that we have selected for less toxic variants in the latter group. So it is a tradeoff. The same compounds that keep bugs and animals away often kill us(albeit slowly) too. Oxalates can cause acute poisoning, yes, but can also cause slow, insidious health problems that develop over a lifetime. Please, everyone, read up on some of these things before relying heavily on greens, nuts, legumes, or grains for your nutrition.

  • @voidvector
    @voidvector 4 года назад +2

    He never addressed the capacity issue - as he mentioned himself, foraging worldwide can only feed a 10-100 million people.

    • @henrikkarl25
      @henrikkarl25 4 года назад +1

      what a load of bs..

    • @voidvector
      @voidvector 4 года назад

      @@henrikkarl25 Timestamp for you - 6:10

    • @kenbrown438
      @kenbrown438 4 года назад

      I DON'T think this will work for everyone on the planet !!!!

    • @kenbrown438
      @kenbrown438 4 года назад

      @@henrikkarl25 : I think you are CORRECT, sir !!!!

    • @voidvector
      @voidvector 4 года назад +1

      In ecology, there is something called "carrying capacity," which is the amount of population of specific species that local ecosystem is able to support. Anywhere near major cities, even if 1% of the population forages, it will outstrip the carrying capacity of the local ecosystem. (i.e. destroying it)
      If you live somewhere remote like Alaska, or Sahara desert, forage all you want.

  • @sixshootinparker3823
    @sixshootinparker3823 4 года назад +2

    Leave some for the global-warming threatened and vulnerable birds and critters also.

  • @brigittelm6054
    @brigittelm6054 6 лет назад +3

    Permit to eat nature?

    • @SapioiT
      @SapioiT 4 года назад +1

      I know, right? That's absolutely insane! But then again, city parks could be harvested bare, so it would be understandable to not allow people to go home with parts of the park, if the park is non-renewable.

  • @frithar
    @frithar 3 года назад

    We need to eat all the food out there before we start growing more? Ummmm...doesn't sound like the best plan, fren.