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-   -   Anyone in Germantown/Gaithersburg, MD interested in joining a native plants/edible herbs group? (https://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/plant-science/20676-anyone-germantown-gaithersburg-md-interested-joining-native-plants-edible-herbs-group.html)

Barbara 05-05-2003 08:59 PM

Anyone in Germantown/Gaithersburg, MD interested in joining a native plants/edible herbs group?
 
Any native plant enthusiasts out there interested in joining a group
devoted to learning more about the edible wild plants in our area?
Recently we have been stalking the wild asparagus (remember that great
Euell Gibbons book?) Although we didn't have too much lock finding
asparagus, we did find a mystery plant we later identified asGarlic
Mustard, (Alliarea Petiolata, as well as catnip, Great Burdock,
Stinging Nettle. It's fun to go on field trips and learn from each
other. As for Garlic Mustard, if you crush the leaves, it smells
garlicky, and is great for making pesto. Hoping to hear from others
in the Germantown or Gaithersburg, MD, area interested in joining us
to learn more about our native plants.

Emily 05-05-2003 10:44 PM

Anyone in Germantown/Gaithersburg, MD interested in joining a native plants/edible herbs group?
 

"Barbara" wrote in message
om...
snip
we did find a mystery plant we later identified asGarlic
Mustard, (Alliarea Petiolata, as well as catnip, Great Burdock,
Stinging Nettle. It's fun to go on field trips and learn from each
other. As for Garlic Mustard, if you crush the leaves, it smells
garlicky, and is great for making pesto. Hoping to hear from others
in the Germantown or Gaithersburg, MD, area interested in joining us
to learn more about our native plants.


I would guess that Garlic Mustard is probably not truely a native plant. It
grows in abundance at the girl scout camp where I am nature director and it
is the one plant that we can pick as much as we want of on hikes without
worrying about destroying natural ecology. In fact, we are encouraged to
pick all we see. If you see it later in the summer with full seed pods
you'll se why it is so prolific. At this camp in michigan it is encroaching
on the needs of true native plants. Garlic mustard originally came from
europe and was called "sauce only" (I forget the french for this, even
though I'm supposed to be fluent, it's another common name of the
plant.....). The reason for this name is that poor peasants who could not
afford salad dressing would add this plant to their salads as a natural
dressing.

Were I in MD I'd love to join the group, but as I am not, I can't.

Em.



Iris Cohen 06-05-2003 03:20 PM

Anyone in Germantown/Gaithersburg, MD interested in joining a native plants/edible herbs group?
 
Contact the National Arboretum in Washington. They may know of interested
people in your area. Also, if there is an established Native American nation
nearby, they may have people with similar interests.
Iris,
Central NY, Zone 5a, Sunset Zone 40
"If we see light at the end of the tunnel, It's the light of the oncoming
train."
Robert Lowell (1917-1977)

Beverly Erlebacher 06-05-2003 04:08 PM

Anyone in Germantown/Gaithersburg, MD interested in joining a native plants/edible herbs group?
 
In article ,
Barbara wrote:
Any native plant enthusiasts out there interested in joining a group
devoted to learning more about the edible wild plants in our area?
Recently we have been stalking the wild asparagus (remember that great
Euell Gibbons book?) Although we didn't have too much lock finding
asparagus, we did find a mystery plant we later identified asGarlic
Mustard, (Alliarea Petiolata, as well as catnip, Great Burdock,
Stinging Nettle. It's fun to go on field trips and learn from each
other. As for Garlic Mustard, if you crush the leaves, it smells
garlicky, and is great for making pesto. Hoping to hear from others
in the Germantown or Gaithersburg, MD, area interested in joining us
to learn more about our native plants.


If you spell it Alliaria, you can probably find a long discussion we
had about this plant here a year or two ago, especially regarding its
dozens of common names in English and French. It's a very aggressive
weed that can crowd out natives in shaded and semishaded areas like
open woodland. It has been used as a potherb in Europe since time
immemorial.

If you'd like to send me the pesto recipe, maybe it will motivate me in
my futile struggle to control it in my backyard - futile because it
keeps reinvading from my neighbour's side of the fence.

Most of the edible herbs you'll find are native to Eurasia. The system
of cultivation used in eastern North America before the European
invasions pretty much prevented native plants from developing into
weeds. Almost all common weeds are non-native, and this includes many
used as herbs.

Enjoy your foraging, and leave the edible native plants, if you find
any other than milkweed, to their struggle to survive despite the
aliens.

If there are potherbs you particularly like, you can find improved
versions of some of them to grow in your garden. The Italians have
domesticated the dandelion as well as developing chicory into a variety
of vegetables more diverse than the lettuces. Burdock root (gobo) is a
standard vegetable in Japanese and Korean cuisine, and the Dutch have
some really good varieties of purslane. Note that Queen Anne's Lace is
the common carrot gone feral, so these things work both ways.



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