Thanksgiving Week Survival Experiment!

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From Friday Nov. 20 through Thanksgiving dinner on Nov. 26, I will attempt to survive exclusively on wild food gathered from sidewalks, parks, wilderness areas and yards within the city of Portland. There will be no Dumpster diving or mooching from gardens. My unusual menu will include thistle, sumac, dandelion and other weeds; fat gathered from a roadkill deer; the root vegetable wapato; acorns, chestnuts, hazelnuts and black walnuts harvested from city trees; mushrooms; stinging nettles; hawthorn berries; yellow dock seeds; cleavers, and more.

I will be blogging about my experience daily at CultureChange.org, talking about what I eat, how I prepare it and how I feel. For more about myself and my vision, check out my blog, www.FirstWays.com

What I am about to do is something anyone can do anywhere, right now. You don't need to live in the middle of a nature preserve to forage. If you are near an unmowed lawn, a vacant lot, or even just a sidewalk with weeds growing between the cracks, then you have something to work with. I will continue living in my apartment in the city during this project, cooking what I gather on my stove, and using my laptop computer and digital camera to post updates to CultureChange.

Most of what I know comes from reading books and spending time with knowledgeable friends who are herbalists, survivalists, ethnobotanists and primitive skills enthusiasts. What we are doing is a bit like reinventing the wheel. Because we lost most of our ancestral knowledge when our forefathers destroyed indigenous cultures, modern-day foragers are tasked with salvaging what scraps of information we have left. It is essential that we work together as a community to assemble the pieces.

There is certainly some urgency, as we are living in the midst of the sixth greatest extinction event of all time. Resources are becoming ever scarcer as our population continues to climb. It makes sense to look "backwards" in order to progress as we work to build the infrastructure for a sustainable future. For 200,000 years humanity has lived on this planet, and the vast majority of the time we had no worries about pollution. It only got funky 200 years ago, when we entered the strange new age of industrialization, a world filled with machines and factory farms and chemicals.

Over the past few years there has been a sudden resurgence of the old ways in America. It may be a meaningful synchronicity that this is happening right now, that ordinary people who went to college and got desk jobs in gray cubicles, like me, are finding ourselves intensely drawn to rewilding. Some, interested in traditional healing, are becoming herbalists and shamans; others want to know about hunting and hide-tanning. All of it has tremendous value for those interested in building a better, more sustainable society.

Foraging doesn't have to be about surviving emergencies. At its core, wild food offers you a deeper way to explore your relationship to the land outside your door, to recognize the gifts Gaia has left for you.

This wild food challenge feels adventurous because ancestral lifeways are so unfamiliar, but it's nothing out of the ordinary in the context of history. The Portland area has been continuously inhabited for the past 10,000 years by hunters and gatherers. In fact, the region has only had agriculture for the last 150 years at most, according to Portland State University anthropologist Cameron Smith.

Before Europeans settled here in the 1850s, the native diet was made up primarily of salmon, sturgeon, wapato and camas roots, deer and elk, and salalberries, blackberries and huckleberries. It was supplemented with oil from the euchalon fish, which was used like butter, as well as greens such as ferns, western dock, and lupine. The available food alternated depending on the season -- for instance, nuts in the autumn, greens in the spring and fruits and berries in the summer.

Many of the plants I will be eating can be found across North America. If you live in the Pacific Northwest, check out Food Plants of Coastal First Peoples by Nancy J. Turner and Edible and Medicinal Plants of the West by Gregory L. Tilford. A fantastic guide to wild mushrooms of the west is All That The Rain Promises and More... by David Arora. The Forager's Harvest by Sam Thayer offers a handy calendar that tells you when each plant is available and edible. A classic book that's helpful anywhere in North America is the Peterson Field Guide to Edible Wild Plants.

Since agriculture and industrialization polluted most of the land and water on the planet over the past 200 years, contemporary foragers need to think about how we can best minimize our exposure to poisons. The further you are from civilization, the less chance of contamination you have. It's a good sign if you see lichens growing on the trees, since they are usually too sensitive to grow in polluted air.

John Kallas, a Portland, Oregon-based botanist and foraging expert, offers the following safety advice: "Don't gather within 4 feet of an old house because of lead paint. Don't gather within 30 feet of a highway -- and even then, preferably gather uphill -- because of nickel and cadmium from the batteries, petroleum chemicals wearing off tires and washing off the side of the road, coolant, and gasoline. And never, ever, ever gather near railroad tracks. They've been putting pesticides and herbicides in those areas for the last 100 years."

So few people forage these days that questions of impact are usually negligible, but there are some guidelines for being ecologically responsible. Traditionally, herbalists advise removing no more than 1 out of every 20 plants in a stand. This is of course a general rule, and it has exceptions. It does not apply to invasive species or weeds, which many people would be excited to eradicate. And it does not apply to mushrooms, berries, seeds or nuts, or any other situation where you can harvest food from a plant without harming it. It is also a good idea to familiarize yourself with the laws in your area, because they're usually set with the intention of preventing over-harvesting and protecting endangered species.

The more you learn about ancestral ways, the more powerful you will become. You will acquire the ability to recognize hidden abundance, to see things that were previously invisible to you. For instance, where I once saw a nondescript green mass lining the roadsides, I now recognize cough medicine, fiber to weave mats with, and even emory boards. Eating wild shifts your understanding of reality. You are now and have always been free.

Comments

How cool

I wish you the best! I live in South Louisiana and love gathering blackberries and blueberries, figs and now this time of year is bringing pecans and persimmons and satsumas. Such natural abundance has fed humanity in this area for many millenia as well.

The trouble with the world is not that people know too little, but that they know so many things that ain't so. - Mark Twain

Well done.

I have been reading Derek Jensen tonight, thinking about the end of civilization as we know it and how were gonna eat? and this all sorta went together, thanks Rebecca!

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"Banish the word 'struggle' from your attitude and your vocabulary. All that we do now must be done in a sacred manner and in celebration. We are the ones we have been waiting for." — Hopi elders

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