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Remembering the Old Ways: Foraging



Foraging is the act of gathering what the land freely offers—food, medicine, nourishment.

It’s an ancient skill, once passed through generations without books or systems. People simply knew.

They recognised what was edible, what was poisonous, what to pick, and what to leave behind.

That knowing is still in you.

You only need to slow down and start again.


Foraging isn’t about collecting for the sake of it.

It’s about relationship.

Moving through the land with care, attention, and respect.

Learning to feed yourself without fear or urgency—just the quiet trust that the Earth provides.




How to Begin

Start small. Learn a few safe plants deeply before you try to recognise many.


Follow these three rules:


  1. Only eat what you can confidently identify. If there’s any doubt, leave it.

  2. Learn through the seasons. Plants change as they grow—get to know how they look in spring, summer, and decay.

  3. Harvest with care. Never strip a patch bare. Always leave some for the land, the wildlife, and regrowth.




Foundational Wild Plants (UK)

These plants are safe to start with, widely available, and deeply nourishing when used well.


Nettles (Urtica dioica)


Found almost everywhere. Pick the young tops in spring wearing gloves.

High in iron, minerals, and protein. Cook in soups, teas, or use like spinach.

The sting disappears when boiled or dried.


Dandelion (Taraxacum officinale)


All parts are edible—bitter leaves, yellow flowers, and deep roots.

Use fresh leaves in salad or cook like greens.

Roast roots as a coffee alternative. Full of minerals and liver-cleansing properties.


Wild Garlic (Allium ursinum)


One of the first signs of spring. Found in damp, shaded woodland.

Crush a leaf between your fingers—it should smell strongly of garlic.

Use leaves raw or cooked. Flowers are edible too.

Never confuse with Lily of the Valley—learn the difference carefully.


Cleavers (Galium aparine)


The sticky plant that clings to clothing in spring.

Use young shoots for cold infusions (cleansing for lymph and skin).

Once flowering, it becomes fibrous—best harvested early.


Hawthorn (Crataegus monogyna)


Young spring leaves are edible raw—traditionally called "bread and cheese" by country walkers.

In autumn, the red berries can be made into syrup or tea.

Supports the heart, circulation, and nervous system.




Foraging Through the Seasons


Spring: Young greens like nettle, dandelion, wild garlic, chickweed, cleavers

Summer: Flowers, tender leaves, some early berries, lime leaves, yarrow

Autumn: Berries, nuts, rosehips, apples, hawthorn, roots

Winter: Pine needles for tea, preserved leaves, stored roots, bark infusions


Each season offers something different. What you learn in April won’t be there in October.

This is what brings rhythm back to the year.




Where and How to Forage Safely


  • Stay away from busy roads, sprayed fields, and dog-walk areas

  • Never forage from protected or private land without permission

  • Use a sharp knife or scissors—don’t pull plants up by the root

  • Leave more than you take

  • Don’t take from rare or struggling plants

  • Always check local foraging laws and wildlife protection guidelines




Ways to Use What You Gather


  • Make teas or infusions from dried leaves and flowers

  • Add young greens to soups, broths, or stir-fries

  • Blend berries into syrups, ferments, or raw jam

  • Roast or dry roots for long-term use

  • Keep a foraging journal and wild herb shelf


Let your practice grow slowly. You don’t need to gather everything—sometimes the learning is in the noticing.




Practising the Skill of Foraging


Go outside with the sole purpose of looking.

Bring a guidebook or take a photo. Sit near the plant. Touch it. Smell it. Watch how it grows.

You can forage without picking—just learning what grows near you is part of the skill.

Make it part of your week, even just for ten minutes.

The land will start showing you more, the more you show up.




When You’ve Remembered Foraging

You’ll begin to walk differently.

You’ll see wild garlic before it flowers. You’ll notice which leaves look full of life.

You’ll reach for nettles not in fear, but with thanks.

And you’ll know, deep down, that you are not separate from the land—you are part of it.

That is the remembering.

1 commentaire


Great post thank you!

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