Some Plants have edible stems, although many are too woody to eat. If they are soft, peel off the outer, stringy parts, slice and then boil. The inner pith of some stem is nutritious and sweet, elder, for example. In this case the stem must be split open and the pulp extracted.
Stems produce fewer nutrients for the survivor than the roots, shoots and leaves so put them at the bottom of food choices and exploit their other uses. Fibrous stems, like those of stringing nettles, make good twine.
Good King Henry is spiky, 2 foot tall with dull green triangular leaves, sometimes reddening, and spikes of tiny greenish flowers, common on waste ground. leaves and young shoots are edible raw or boiled as spinach, peel the roots to remove the stringy parts.
Fat Hen or Lamb's Quarters is spiky, 3 foot high with often reddish stems, dull green, mealy, oval to spear shaped leaves and spikes of tiny greenish flowers, abundant on waste ground. cook the tasty leaves like spinach.
Chickweed is a straggling to 1 foot high, with a line of hairs on the main stem, pointed, oval leaves and tiny white, five petal flower, common in waste places. Boil the delicious tender leaves.
Watercress is often found in abundance by fresh running water. It is creeping semi-aquatic, with shiny leaves in opposite pairs and small white four petal flowers. (DO NOT CONFUSE WITH THE WATER HEMLOCK). Leaves and stems are edible raw, but boil if the water looks contaminated.
Rosebay Willow Herb or Fireweed is found in open woods, waste and rocky places. It is about 5ft tall or more with spear shaped leaves in opposite pairs and a spike of brilliant pinkish flowers. Young leaves, flowers and stems are edible raw but taste better boiled. Mature stems have a sweetish inner pulp.
Sweet Cicely grows to around 5ft with slightly hairy and often purplish stems, feathery fern like leaves flecked with white and heads of tiny white flowers. You can find these in open woods and rocky places. (DO NOT CONFUSE WITH HEMLOCK) Roots, stems and leaves should be boiled.
Dead Nettles are smaller than stinging settles, with heart shaped leaves and no stringing hairs with white or pinkish/purplish flowers. Boil the leaves before eating.
Stinging Nettles are abundant for most of the year. Look for the toothed, narrow oval leaves covered in stinging hairs and the spikes of green flowers. Pick young growth or young plants 6-8 inches high. Boil for a minimum of 5 minutes to destroy the formic acid in the hairs. Leaves can be dried and stored for consumption later. You can crush the stems and use the fibers from them as make shift rope.
Plantains can be found in a variety of areas. Ribwort or English Plantain has spear shaped leaves and much shorter flower spikes than the Greater Plantain. This is a bitter tasting plant and the leaves should be cooked like spinach, and the juice can be used for wounds, and the decoction of the whole plant for chest pain complaints. So over all this is a pretty useful plant to find in the wilderness!!
Bucks horn Plantain can be found in waste and grassy places often near the ocean, and is a small star shaped plant with narrow jagged leaves and shorter flower spikes. This is also a bitter tasting plant and the leaves should be cooked like spinach, the juices can also be used for wounds, and just like other Plantains the decoction of the whole plant for chest pain complaints.
Greater or Rat's Tail Plantain is also found in in waste lands and grassy places. This plant had broad, oval leaves and distinctive upright spikes of tiny yellowish green and brown flowers. This is also a bitter tasting plant and the leaves should be cooked like spinach, the juices can also be used for wounds, and just like other Plantains the decoction of the whole plant for chest pain complaints.
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Hi Everyone, I just wanted to give a quick update (5/20/15) We have added a New Ruffs Backyard Chicken Blog and a New Ruffs Backyard Chicken Channel If you are interested in getting some Chickens for your Backyard or you already have some please check our New Blog and New Channel out, There is a lot of helpful information on both, and just some everyday things on there we do with our chickens!! If you like them, Please Subscribe, we add new videos to our channel at least 4 times a week, and we add new post to our blog a couple times a week, Don't forget to share them on G+, give them a Thumbs up if you enjoyed it!! Thanks for all the support and if you have any Questions or comments just leave them in the comment area below, we will get back to you as quickly as we can!! Thanks again!! --Karen
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Showing posts with label what to do in a survival situatation.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label what to do in a survival situatation.. Show all posts
Saturday, November 30, 2013
Thursday, March 28, 2013
Seashores and the survivor
SEASHORES
Lets talk about the Seashore... Most seashores offer abundant sources of food and excellent prospects for survival. Even where they appear bleak and barren, there is food to be had. Coastal waters are the home of many life forms-- Seaweeds, fish, birds, molluscs and the plankton that support the marine animals. Inland lakes and water ways of all kinds will also team with life, with the exception of the Dead Sea and other areas of extreme salination, and those heavily polluted by man.
Coasts can range from sheer cliffs to long and gently sloping beaches. From the sea a towering cliff offers no opportunity to escape the water. Even a stretch of beach at its foot is likely to be cut off by high tide in tidal waters, though it could offer a few hours of respite before swimming off to find another landing place. All kinds of shore, however, offer resources to exploit and there are few better places to be stranded.
Sandy Beaches... Sandy Shores tend to be gentle and sloping. The tide goes out a long way, revealing large areas which are the habitat of burrowing species, let below the exposed sand. They include many worms and molluscs and they also attract feeding birds. Look for signs of buried mullucs. It is usually easier to spot the marks left by the syphons of buried bivalve under the shallow water at the sea's edge.
Where the sand is not inundated by the tide and is blown into dunes, it may be possible to find fresh water and it is here that plants will grow.
Sand is easily blown by the wind and gets into everything. Dunes also tend to be full of aggravating insects, so don't choose them for making camp or building shelter, if you can move beyond.
Muddy shores and estuaries.... Where a slow moving river joins the sea it deposits sediment, rich in nutrients, forming large mud flats. These can support many species of worms and mulluscs and provide a rich feeding ground for birds and animals.
Rocky Shores.... Rocky shores, if their cliffs are not too sheer, trap pools of water when the tide recedes. These pools may team with life. Rocks form a strata to which the many univalve shells can cling, and anchor for weed and sea urchins and crevices where octopus and other cephalopods can live.
Soft rocks, such as chalk, marl and limestone, erode quickly and their surfaces are smooth, but hard rocks fracture in chunks and provide good nesting sites for birds.
Pebble Beaches... Stretches of pebble beach, often found between sandy and rocky sections of the shore, sustain least life. The continual movement of pebbles makes a difficult habitat for most plants and animals.
Tides.... Tides vary considerably according to both location and time of year for they are caused by the counter-gravities of the sun and moon. In enclosed seas, such as the Mediterranean, they range over only a few meters. The Bay of Fundy, Between Nova Scotia and New Brunswick, has a difference of 52 feet between low and high tide.
A line of debreis along the beach; a change in appearance and texture from the long dry sand to that which is daily inundated; weed, shells, and color changes on vertical rock faces, all these will help to indicate the level to which the water is likely to rise.
Always check access to and from a beach or rocky shore. Keep an eye on the rising water level so that you do not run the risk of being cut off. Tides not only scour the beach but throw up valuable flotsam and jetsam, often providing fuel for fires and may leave large fish stranded in rock pools along with their inhabitants.
That's all for today....
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Hi Guys, Just a very quick update (5/20/15), If you have an interest in BackYard Chickens, We have a New Ruffs Backyard Chicken Blog and Ruffs Backyard Chicken Channel on Youtube, We want to invite all who enjoy reading our Survival Blog to come and Check out our New Blog and New Youtube Channel, If you enjoy our Backyard Chicken Blog and Backyard Chicken Channel, Please Subscribe, share and give a Thumbs up and maybe a G+ Thanks for taking the time to read our Survival Blog, and We hope that its very informational for you all, We hope you will enjoy our other new blog and channels as well!! Please leave any comments or questions below in the comment section and we will be sure to get back to you as soon as possible!! Thanks again!! - Karen
Hi Guys, Just a very quick update (5/20/15), If you have an interest in BackYard Chickens, We have a New Ruffs Backyard Chicken Blog and Ruffs Backyard Chicken Channel on Youtube, We want to invite all who enjoy reading our Survival Blog to come and Check out our New Blog and New Youtube Channel, If you enjoy our Backyard Chicken Blog and Backyard Chicken Channel, Please Subscribe, share and give a Thumbs up and maybe a G+ Thanks for taking the time to read our Survival Blog, and We hope that its very informational for you all, We hope you will enjoy our other new blog and channels as well!! Please leave any comments or questions below in the comment section and we will be sure to get back to you as soon as possible!! Thanks again!! - Karen
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