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Merrimack Valley Magazine

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Eating the Weeds

July 31, 2021 by Katie DeRosa

Summer Foraging From Backyards to Backwoods

Foraging is Mother Nature’s scavenger hunt. Outdoors, we find many hidden gems in the form of what most call weeds. Once you start learning and building your foraging confidence, this activity can quickly snowball and begin to transform the way you look at everything from your lawn to your local hiking trails. Before you set off on your first expedition, here are some guidelines.

General Guidelines for Foraging:

1. Always be 100% certain of what you are eating before you eat it. Assume your discoveries aren’t edible until proved otherwise. Check multiple sources to confirm. 

2. Tread lightly and be mindful of sustainability. Lots of things live under our feet. Research what is a considered a sustainable harvest of the plant you seek, never taking more than what you need unless it’s invasive. Often, other animals or insects eat it, too.  

3. Keep an eye on where you are foraging. Beware of common dangers such as poison ivy and ticks, and be on the lookout for less common concerns such as giant hogweed. Don’t forage in areas treated with chemicals or possibly contaminated with heavy metals or pollutants. 

4. It’s easy for new foragers to get lost. Use good mapping software and make sure your phone or GPS unit is charged. Better yet, learn map and compass skills.

 

Bonus Tips for Foraging:

1. Find something good? Pin-drop the location on your phone’s mapping app so you can return. I also set reminders to check these spots when the time is right — many common edibles are only available for short periods of time.

2. Bring the right gear. I keep a couple of bags and a knife with me every time I forage. It’s also useful to bring along a small field guide. 

So, on to the good stuff. The following are a few species to look for in the summer months. 

Wild Blueberry  (Vaccinium sp.)

Photo by Kevin Harkins.

Here’s one we all know and love, but finding blueberries in the wild makes them even more fun and delicious. Who doesn’t love wild blueberry pancakes?

ID: You’ve got highbush and lowbush blueberries; they have small, ovate and alternate leaves on woody branches. Their flowers in spring are small, white to pink, and grow in clusters, each with five petals fused together into a bell shape. The berries have a five-pointed crown on the end and often have a white bloom. Highbush can get taller than the average person, and lowbush are about shin height. They like acidic soil, so look for them around evergreen trees in July and August. 

Turn these tasty berries into a blueberry sumac (see below) jam or just enjoy them as is. We aren’t the only animal that likes these, so leave some behind.

Garlic Mustard  (Alliaria petiolata)

Photo by Kevin Harkins.

Garlic mustard is a blessing and a curse — it’s exceptionally invasive and a bully. It spreads seeds readily and inhibits the growth of other plants. Whenever you see this plant, you’re doing the world a favor by pulling it out and throwing away whatever you don’t use (NOT for compost). However, garlic mustard is one of my favorite plants to forage because it’s everywhere and you can use it almost year-round.

ID: Garlic mustard is a biennial, meaning it has a two-year growth cycle, with a shifting appearance as it develops. When you break or crush the leaves, you’ll smell garlic and a hint of mustard. In spring, it sends up a flower stalk with a seed head that looks like a mini broccoli. The flowers are small, white and four-petaled. The flowers turn into long, slender capsules filled with dark-colored seeds. When ridding an area of garlic mustard, it’s best to pull the plant by the roots before the seed pod sets. It grows in partially shaded areas that have been disturbed by humans. 

The leaves are the least bitter and most tender in early spring. Cook them quickly with olive oil and salt, make them into a pesto, or add them to homemade sauerkraut for a kick. Before the flower heads open, you can use the top few tender inches like broccoli rabe. You can even use their roots as horseradish. For this, it’s best to find thick roots and peel off the tough outer part, mince the inner roots and mix them in a splash of vinegar. If they’re too tough, make an infused “horseradish” vinegar. 

Staghorn Sumac  (Rhus typhina)

Photo by Kevin Harkins.

I know how many people will react to reading about staghorn sumac. Isn’t that poisonous? I would love to get the phone number of poison sumac’s marketing team because it did a bang-up job of promoting it. There is a poison sumac, but its appearance is wildly different from the edible varieties. The beautiful and striking conelike clusters of the immediately recognizable staghorn are pink-red and upright, not the drooping clusters of greenish-white berries of the far less common poison sumac.

ID: Staghorn sumac commonly grows along highways and often goes unnoticed until you know how to ID it, at which point you start to see it everywhere. It reaches a height of 10-12 feet. In the fall, the compound leaves (many leaflets on one leaf stem) turn a lovely pinkish scarlet. The most common form of sumac in our area is called staghorn sumac because it has a fuzzy antler appearance. It grows in open sunny areas, often at the edge of fields. The berry clusters are ready to pick in mid to late summer, when they are rust colored. The coating on the outside of the berries is the tasty part. To tell if they are worth harvesting, touch the middle of a cluster and lick your fingers to see if it has a lemony tang. Taking a few clusters from each tree won’t hurt them. 

To make pink lemonade, soak the clusters in cool to room-temperature water and break up the clusters, massaging them a bit to get the berries to give up the goods. Strain, and you have an unsweetened lemonade — a great source of vitamin C. You can also dry the berries to create a lemony spice, or use the lemonade and/or dried sumac to make a nice “lemon” wild blueberry jam! 

Chicken of the Woods  (Laetiporus sp.) 

Photo by Emily Makrez.

Certainly not a weed, but sometimes treated as one by those who don’t appreciate its value, this mushroom is easy to spot and ID. 

ID: The first thing to note is that the underside has no gills. It is a polypore mushroom, which means the bottom will appear smooth with many small holes (these are the pores). They grow as a group of thick, stemless, fan-shaped caps, one often overlapping the other. They are shades of orange to yellow-orange, making them really stand out. They are commonly found growing out of dead or dying oaks, but can also grow from other trees. Look for these in late spring through fall. If they seem bug ridden or dried out, leave them.  

I think these are best when breaded and fried; they really do taste like chicken. Be sure to try a small amount at first and wait a day to make sure it doesn’t upset your stomach. This is a good policy to employ with any new edible. Because of the dangers associated with mushroom poisoning, it’s also helpful to attend guided walks sponsored by organizations such as the Boston Mycological Club.

I hope searching for some of these wild edibles brings you joy and lets you connect to nature in our fast-paced, electronics-centered world. Nature always has something to teach us! Happy foraging. 

Filed Under: Home & Garden Tagged With: backyards, Chicken of the Woods, foraging, Garlic Mustard, Merrimack Valley, Mushrooms, Staghorn Sumac, Wild Blueberries, woods

Faces in the Garden – Merrimack Valley Sundials

August 24, 2019 by Jill Oestreicher Gross Leave a Comment

Few people these days tell time by sun and shadow, yet sundials are still prized as decorative objects. It’s easy to understand why. Sundials possess an inherent beauty that changes as the hours pass. They seem to remind us of simpler times, and they do so in places where we look for uncluttered tranquility, such as gardens, parks and backyards. The effect isn’t just nostalgia. You know this if you’ve ever witnessed a child encounter a sundial for the first time.

A typical sundial is a horizontal plate with a gnomon, or rod, at its center. The gnomon casts a shadow onto the numbered plate to indicate the time. According to the Farmers’ Almanac, the exact origin of the sundial is unknown, though many ancient civilizations used the shadows cast by the position of the sun to calculate time. Dates of the sundial’s invention range from 3500 to 1500 B.C.

There are at least three public sundials in the Merrimack Valley. Only one — a more modern dial installed as part of a playground renovation — appears to accurately calculate the time. The oldest of the three is in Maudslay State Park in Newburyport. That sundial stands in the grand formal gardens designed by Martha Brookes Hutcheson in the early 1900s. This square dial originally included a brass gnomon, but it was stolen some time ago, according to park interpreter Donna Sudak.

On the campus of Phillips Academy stands “The Armillary Sphere.” Created by American sculptor Paul Manship, it was designed to be “a symbol of the world.” Photo by Yoon S. Byun.

“Now, you just have to do it on your own and just imagine it being there,” Sudak says, adding that a garden renovation in 1998 preserved the sundial, which still sits on its original Grecian stone base. The dial has two concentric circles etched with Roman numerals. A 1920 photograph of the sundial shows its ornate gnomon in place.

Also in Newburyport, the sundial at Cashman Park was installed in the fall of 2000 as part of a major playground-building effort by the Friends of Cashman Park, a group of community members who raised close to $100,000 for the project, according to Jeff Stott, president of the now disbanded group and a Newburyport resident.

“After purchasing all of the playground equipment, we had just enough money left over to purchase and install the sundial as one of the last features of the playground,” Stott says. “We thought it was a cool feature that added a learning activity to the playground.”

A rectangular sundial, it was designed to appeal to children, but it invites admiration from many who come across it. It is accurate during daylight saving time and was installed at noon for greatest accuracy, Stott says. The sundial came with installation instructions, and a trial run was conducted to make sure it was set correctly before being cemented into place.

Newburyport boasts two public sundials. The sundial in Maudslay state park (left) is located in the formal gardens. It is missing its brass gnomon, which was stolen. The sundial at Cashman Park (right) was designed to appeal to children and stands in the park’s playground. Photos by Adrien Bisson.

Phillips Academy in Andover boasts a different and much more ornate sundial. “The Armillary Sphere,” by American sculptor Paul Manship, is an astronomical device that uses the location of celestial objects and shadows to indicate time. The piece, which was commissioned in 1927, includes a sculpture of a man, woman and child, depicting what Manship referred to in archival documents as “the circle of life.”

The large and intricate metal sphere, cast in Paris, is 8 feet in diameter and was commissioned by the school, according to information provided by Phillips Academy’s Addison Gallery. Manship (1885-1966) wrote that he designed the sphere to be “a symbol of the world,” featuring earth, wind, fire and water elements, and zodiac and celestial symbols.

“The shaft of the axis of the world is the gnomon, whose shadow on the belt of the equator indicates the time of day by the position of the sun,” Manship wrote of his sculpture. “So when the sun is due south, the hour is noon. Opposite to noon is midnight, represented on the inner side of the band. … At the halfway points between noon and midnight are six o’clock in the evening.”

The sculpture sits prominently on the Great Lawn, near the corner of Main and Salem streets in Andover. It is a hub of social activity, and students are often found gathering around it on bright spring days.  

 

Buying a sundial

Most sundials in the Merrimack Valley can be found at private residences. Many types of sundials can be purchased online or at your local garden center. Installed in a garden or on a deck, they’re excellent conversation pieces and complement rather than interfere with natural elements. 

Filed Under: Arts & Entertainment, Community Tagged With: Addison Gallery, backyards, Cashman Park, Decoration, gardens, MA, Martha Brookes Hutcheson, Maudslay State Park, Merrimack Valley, newburyport, parks, Paul Manship, Philips Academy, sundials, The Armillary Sphere, time

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