Stinging Nettles - Who is Killing My Plant!?!?

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  • Опубліковано 23 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 144

  • @jonathonalsop2120
    @jonathonalsop2120 6 місяців тому +27

    Red Admirals are native, and it's been a good year for them, lots up where I am in Ontario. Stinging Nettle isn't native however Red Admirals, and a few other butterflies and moths feed on them as caterpillars. I'm happy they can do so just as they do on native Wood Nettle and False Nettle. Caterpillars are the backbone of what feeds the multitude of baby birds born every year. No caterpillars, no song birds (except for some weirdos like finches, bless their seed feeding hearts). We've all got blind spots, glad you're curious Sean.

  • @formidableflora5951
    @formidableflora5951 6 місяців тому +35

    Red Admirals range from southern Canada and the US to the northern part of Mexico. They're a holarctic species, i.e., also found in Europe/northern Asia. Because they can't survive cold winters, they migrate to northern parts of North America every spring. Stinging nettle taxonomy is historically complicated with the American species (Urtica gracilis) ultimately declared a separate species (originally a sub-species) of the European nettle (Urtica dioica). You would encounter both in your region, and I assume both host the same specific caterpillars...who are not "interlopers." They're simply part-time residents, native in the appropriate season, not in the least "invasive," but living in balance with the nettle population.

    • @MartinaSchoppe
      @MartinaSchoppe 6 місяців тому +3

      Yes, they are migratory, like the monarch butterflies.

  • @michellebarbour5777
    @michellebarbour5777 6 місяців тому +22

    Red admirals actually eat excess tree sap and rotting fruit and rotting dead animals. So beautiful and so useful. Lovely to have the space for some nettles for their babies.

  • @andrep5899
    @andrep5899 6 місяців тому +8

    Regarding stinging nettles, when I was a kid we visited an uncle in France. I was amazed to see that the local farmer fed her chickens stinging nettles. She waited till the nettles were wilted before feeding them to the chickens. I still remember seeing the hens rushing to be the first to eat the nettles.

    • @ginnyframe1243
      @ginnyframe1243 5 місяців тому

      I love your gentle and curious nature and acknowledge that sometimes i am quick to react to any unknown or known visitors to my garden but am working hard to live and let live (bug wise) by overplanting so we both can live in harmony.

  • @mylesfalconer9183
    @mylesfalconer9183 6 місяців тому +19

    Its been a huge flight of red admirals this spring. Last one was 2012. They are native.btw.

  • @Echo_Isles
    @Echo_Isles 6 місяців тому +4

    Red admirals are native in Minnesota, as migratory visitors. I keep a patch of nettles just for them, just as I allow milkweed to thrive for monarchs, and dill to grow where ever wants for our native black swallowtails. (The dill isn't native, but I don't want most of their native host plants in my garden)

  • @erika_is_growing
    @erika_is_growing 6 місяців тому +9

    If everyone were as curious about nature, and if they pursued a deeper understanding of nature's complex system, we'd all be in a better place. Thank you for continuing to share this important message of appreciation.

  • @am2schmarvelous
    @am2schmarvelous 6 місяців тому +19

    Isn't it amazing how our experience of an evet changes when we shift perspective. I'm glad to meet your butterflies.

  • @artistlovepeace
    @artistlovepeace 6 місяців тому +3

    Your channel, lectures and information is really astonishing and hopefully influential to your audience. You are doing a great job. Thank you for sharing your education and understanding the cycle and patterns of reality.

  • @candyflair7946
    @candyflair7946 6 місяців тому +8

    A couple of years ago I had a pretty little bug hang out in the parsley flowers. They must have been eating the pollen.
    They hung out on the flowers and didn't fly off much. 100's of them were climbing all over the flowers and most of them were mating. I hoping to see them again. I never looked into what kind of bug they were. I was fascinated by the the life my parsley flowers were supporting.
    Thank you for the story.

  • @debbieretzlaff2912
    @debbieretzlaff2912 6 місяців тому +4

    According to my insect guide, Red Admirals feed on hops, ramie, & nettles. The Red Admiral is found the world around in the northern hemisphere.

  • @MartinaSchoppe
    @MartinaSchoppe 6 місяців тому +5

    I think "non native" is not quite correct - they are migratory, just like monarchs!
    In German, we have a word for butterflies, whose caterpillars feed on nettles: Nesselfalter (nettle butterflies) - there are several: small tortoiseshell, peacock, comma, map butterfly, admiral, I think i'm missing some.
    They are probably not in the chicken yard, because they are bird food. A very important bird food. basically every bird species feeds catapillars to their babies.

  • @maryyett4637
    @maryyett4637 6 місяців тому +7

    Thank you so much for your deep and thoughtful perspective. The world needs more of this perspective.

  • @tcoxor52
    @tcoxor52 6 місяців тому +10

    Love and respect both the surface and deeper layer message/advice being conveyed here!

  • @eliza-pow6189
    @eliza-pow6189 6 місяців тому +13

    The Red Admiral Butterfly is beautiful (I had to look it up)! How fortunate you are to have enough abundance to share with visitors and baby butterflies! 🧡🌻 Will they all emerge at about the same time? Game-cam time ?! 😄
    Please continue sharing this adventure and great learning experience. Thank you for this presentation...I learned quite a bit. 🌻

    • @edibleacres
      @edibleacres  5 місяців тому

      Thanks for the kind words!

  • @huttonsvalleypermaculture
    @huttonsvalleypermaculture 6 місяців тому +17

    A reminder that we all have our place in nature and that we can all live happily together - thank you!!

    • @az55544
      @az55544 6 місяців тому +1

      Oh, stop.

  • @cynthiahenzler5170
    @cynthiahenzler5170 6 місяців тому +7

    A great way to look at nettles and so called pests. Thank you again for the way you teach!!

  • @JoySkydancer
    @JoySkydancer 6 місяців тому +1

    What a beautiful perspective! Thank you for offering a way to reframe our thinking by observing before taking action, being curious, and openheartedly kind to all life.

  • @lesilbuschman551
    @lesilbuschman551 6 місяців тому +4

    ❤❤ Always love your take on what could be a very negative thing.

  • @Bright_iiii_s
    @Bright_iiii_s 6 місяців тому +3

    I just love your philosophy, rock on Sean!

  • @chriswren2559
    @chriswren2559 6 місяців тому +1

    Stinging nettle also makes a very good compost tea.
    Thank you for sharing what you have learned so if some of us find these we will think twice..😊 looks like one of those perfect symbiotic relationships!
    As others have a commented the presence of all of those larva provide spring food for baby birds and of course butterflies are good pollinators so they are benefiting all of us.

  • @sharonknorr1106
    @sharonknorr1106 6 місяців тому +5

    We have red admirals in Colorado and they are beautiful. Many butterflies migrate north and then return south, so what is native and what isn't? We often concentrate on pollinators, but having host plants for the larvae of the pollinators is just as important because without the host plants, there are no pollinators in the end. Yes, plant a lot of what you want in different places and give nature its due and be grateful for the bounty that remains.

    • @edibleacres
      @edibleacres  5 місяців тому

      Everything is in flux and it's wonderful!

  • @erbauungstutztaufgnade1875
    @erbauungstutztaufgnade1875 6 місяців тому

    Beautiful how very respectfull you're talking about them 🙏🏼 It's our duty to respect ALL of creation and not only those of them which we like! 🤷🏻‍♂️

  • @Erewhon2024
    @Erewhon2024 6 місяців тому +8

    Larval butterflies are called caterpillars, not grubs. Red Admirals are considered native but migratory, like monarchs. According to James Scott (who wrote the best reference on North American butterflies, in my opinion), they sometimes reach Greenland. They are in Chicagoland by lilac blooming season every spring.

  • @kylenmaple4668
    @kylenmaple4668 6 місяців тому +3

    I wish all the slugs currently devastating my garden would turn into butterflies. Alas, no luck

  • @KatBurnsKASHKA
    @KatBurnsKASHKA 6 місяців тому

    They are gorgeous butterflies! Nettles are one of their the host plants. Very special to see!

  • @ludicrousone8706
    @ludicrousone8706 6 місяців тому +1

    In Germany gardeners are encouraged to keep a nettle corner as an ecological niche for butterflies. Nettle manure tea (?) is a go to fertilizers here.
    Nettle tea is also a great rinse for dark hair, the seeds are great in salads and and Muesli.

    • @edibleacres
      @edibleacres  5 місяців тому

      Wonderful additional notes, thank you!

  • @ayelean9397
    @ayelean9397 4 місяці тому

    I made this same discovery this year and I’m in southern Vermont - so cool they used the nettles as a host! The nettle has fully recovered since they left too.

  • @TheEmbrio
    @TheEmbrio 5 місяців тому +1

    I brought nettles to our urban/suburban backyard intentionally. (It’s native in France). Even hubby that likes a more manicured garden than I do approved. It’s an extremely useful plant.
    Butterflies are prime examples that if you want beauty in the garden, in life, you must accept the chewed out /caterpillar phase before the ’show’ :)

  • @reneelalala7690
    @reneelalala7690 5 місяців тому

    I too, plant my plants in various places, nooks and crannies! As in your experience, some might be a host and others thrive. Its so wonderful being curious and experimenting with nature!
    Thank you for your video.

  • @w1reman
    @w1reman 6 місяців тому +1

    There's a great board game all about the voyage of the red admiral called Mariposas as well. Well worth checking out if that's your sort of thing.

  • @hltyler5782
    @hltyler5782 6 місяців тому

    This was the most fantastic spring for the Red Admiral here in Central Texas on their way north. It was truly magical, with dozens of them visiting the garden each day.

  • @gardenjoy9371
    @gardenjoy9371 5 місяців тому

    Beautiful thoughts! Nature can teach us that diversity makes our lives rich and nourishing. Thank you for your encouragement to use observation and curiosity as tools to create a better life.

  • @sweaterdoll
    @sweaterdoll 5 місяців тому

    I had some of those in my patch this year as well. Thanks for figuring out who the guests are. I also was just watching a video from the UK and saw a photo of the red admiral butterfly her in their garden.

  • @sqeekable
    @sqeekable 6 місяців тому

    I also was distressed to see the caterpillars on my nettles, took a few inside my house, they ate nettles like crazy before cocooning, and I was thrilled to release the butterflies when they hatched. Now I’m ready and harvesting the nettles I need before they show up.

  • @jaymeelk9380
    @jaymeelk9380 6 місяців тому +1

    I saw these butterflies so early in spring in same area, so I had never seen them before either and had to look them up. Figured I must have something they liked but didn’t know what. They can have at it, then I will compost tea it. Thanks so much.

  • @sploit_hashtag_100
    @sploit_hashtag_100 6 місяців тому

    We have these in western europe aswel, often 2 generations a year. After the butterflies pop out, you can cut the nettle patches back and get fresh new growth.

  • @kimm1318
    @kimm1318 6 місяців тому +1

    Hmmm...I will have to keep a look out for that black grub type and butterfly. Dont think ive seen those in my nettles. Im going to have to dig mine up and move them because they keep growing out in the walkway stinging my husband and grandson. Appreciate your thoughtful discussion.

  • @adrichapoy6525
    @adrichapoy6525 6 місяців тому

    Ms. Vanessa Atalanta.
    Awesome 🦋

  • @loygreen
    @loygreen 6 місяців тому +1

    I wondered the same thing when I saw it in my nettle patch also. I have already harvested some for tea so It al works out. Thak you for this invaluable information.😃👍

  • @johnstonj92
    @johnstonj92 6 місяців тому +1

    I love this dialougue. I think it begs the question are there ppl out there who are truly putting the thought forward when thinking about the bigger picture of life and all its little crazy surprises. I think about that alot when I'm staring down the massive expanse of a knotweed patch on a local city bike path/ trail. Why is it here, how did it get here, how much of an impact is it having. I made some key observations and that was the trail was developed by clear cuttings and causing heavy disturbance and gave the knotweed which was clearly kicked from a small patch on some construction crews boot along a very large expanse of the trail. The seeds lay Dormant for some years actually. Then it established itself quickly in the void of others. I noticed the alders, the bowers clematis,wild cucumber,goldenrod and joepye really create a boundary for the knotweed and they seem to grow together and in some areas the golden rod stops the knotweed from moving In completely. The soil the knotweed creates is very soft and pliable and dark...filled with a humus smell . The woody stems host insects in winter and the flowers are coveted by lots of flying ones. They really thrive in the full sun and dwindle under a dark canopy. So this invasive has sped up the soil building work with carbon sequestration, blanketing the earth, providing habitat for insects but also small rodents from large prey and snakes seem to nestle in underneath to find food. I think the plant will no longer be here once the alders thicket up and the poplars sore above them and the goldenrod creates a barrier. They have successfully been a pioneer in the landscape that is completing something that would take alot of other species much Longer to do. This comment will rock the native plant community and by all means I am apologizing ahead of time if this seems like an ignorant comment to post but I really do feel that the work of these beings is purpose driven and if we could live to see 300 years from now that knotweed patch will be long gone and If left untouched by human hands it will leave behind a rich soil for others.

  • @gardensforliferiverton
    @gardensforliferiverton 6 місяців тому +1

    Wow, the Admirals are loving your nettles! Red Admirals are a rare species in NZ and so people often plant the plants they enjoy, just for them. We are able to share our nettle patch and over the years have just learnt to check leaves and shake off any tiny caterpillars before we make tea. At some point we don't harvest from the nettles and just leave it for the Admirals. We get early season harvest and the Admirals get it from then on (it's an unsigned contract we have with our butterflies ;).

  • @awakenacres
    @awakenacres 6 місяців тому

    Fascinating and good to know!

  • @Erewhon2024
    @Erewhon2024 6 місяців тому

    In North America, several butterflies use Urtica as host plants (I believe something callee a Fire Rim only uses them), but I have only seen the Red Admirals. Most of the nettle eaters prefer fermented fruit or sap to flowers as adults, but I have seen Red Admirals visit Allium, Hylotelephium, and lilacs. If you bait with fermented fruit, you need to block ants (the sticky tree glue stuff works).

  • @MySelfReliance
    @MySelfReliance 6 місяців тому

    Interesting. I just noticed them on my nettles today and my first thought was that my wife must have sprayed it with salt and vinegar until I noticed the larvae. I’m several hundred miles north of you.

  • @DonnaAnderson-h9p
    @DonnaAnderson-h9p 6 місяців тому +1

    We have and love red admirals butterflies here in Aberdeenshire, Scotland, UK. I have about an acre of garden and look forward to the butterflies returning every year. It can be quite cold here just 2 miles from the North Sea but they come most years along with other butterflies. I do leave nettles to grow in various areas of the garden and although some get scabby, others are lush enough to harvest mainly to dry for tea etc. I take the view that we should share our plants with wildlife wherever possible eg. I grow enough raspberries without netting so I have a decent harvest even although the birds have a good feed! Unless red admirals are detrimental to other indigenous species I think it would be fine to just appreciate their beauty.

  • @peterellis4262
    @peterellis4262 6 місяців тому +1

    What is that other lance leafed plant rising up through the nettles? I think we have some of that, as well as some nettles.

    • @Alaytheia
      @Alaytheia 6 місяців тому

      Sticky Willy lol Aka Cleaver, I believe you're referring to ?

    • @edibleacres
      @edibleacres  5 місяців тому

      Could quite well be goldenrod popping through.

  • @SebR-FR
    @SebR-FR 6 місяців тому

    I've seen a lot of rolled leaves this year too. The "Vulcain" (its french name) is present all over the year where I live. But I checked inside some leaves and it was the catterpillar of another specie, probably a "mother of pearl". Anyway a lot of buttreflies need the stinging neetles for their cycle, I'm glad to see them.

  • @angelat4639
    @angelat4639 5 місяців тому

    How amazing is this!

  • @rbrack54
    @rbrack54 6 місяців тому

    Nettle's have 4 times the vitamin C as oranges ounce by ounce! Plus many other nutrients! You can also ferment Nettles with organic brown sugar and make a concentrated liquid foliage spray that will mix 500 parts rain water with only one part concentrate. I also use the fermented liquid to soak my bio char in for a week or 2 before I apply it. 👍

  • @bryanbeast8662
    @bryanbeast8662 6 місяців тому +4

    I've been growing nettles for a while but no butterflies for me. However, I do get black swallowtail butterflies eating my parsley and dill. The swallowtails are so beautiful that I welcome them every summer. BTW, thanks for the reminder that Homo Sapiens are an invasive species, too.

    • @edibleacres
      @edibleacres  5 місяців тому +1

      There are some amazing caterpillars that work over our Bronze Fennel plants most years, really huge and amazing, I bet they're the same?

    • @bryanbeast8662
      @bryanbeast8662 5 місяців тому

      @@edibleacres It looks like black swallowtail caterpillars do eat fennel so that's likely who's eating your fennel. Here's some info on them including pictures which might help with identification entnemdept.ufl.edu/creatures/bfly/bfly2/eastern_black_swallowtail.htm

  • @MichaelWaddingtonDO
    @MichaelWaddingtonDO 6 місяців тому +1

    Red admirals are native to New York. Meaning they coevolved with the local flora and fauna and are an important part of a diverse ecosystem there, even if they winter in the southern us or Central America. This is very different than non natives that are well behaved, do not spread quickly and do not harm native ecosystems or invasives that decimate/eradicate biodiversity in whole regions of a country- other plants, insects, birds etc. invasiveness is less about where something is from and more about how deadly it is to all other life that evolved in that region of the world.

    • @MichaelWaddingtonDO
      @MichaelWaddingtonDO 6 місяців тому

      Shaun, if you read this I’d strongly recommend Bringing Nature Home by Doug Tallamy. I think you’d love the book, but I also think it may change your mind about a good many things.

  • @RayMirshahi
    @RayMirshahi 6 місяців тому +1

    Truly awesome👌. Observe, understand, before interacting. Thanks for sharing.

  • @kari-gs4eq
    @kari-gs4eq 6 місяців тому

    I shuddered every time you touched a nettle. I cannot, I react so strongly to nettle, ouch!

    • @oneproudnana3315
      @oneproudnana3315 6 місяців тому

      Yes, how did he do that? I, too, was quite surprised.

  • @stupidusedrnames
    @stupidusedrnames 6 місяців тому

    Can you harvest Stinging Nettle all summer or just in the spring? Thank you.

    • @edibleacres
      @edibleacres  5 місяців тому

      It is an early spring harvest plant.

  • @novampires223
    @novampires223 6 місяців тому

    I will watch my new nettle patch, two plants at this point, and not freak out if this happens.

  • @technicallygrowing5817
    @technicallygrowing5817 5 місяців тому

    I've let the yard and garden overgrow with weeds to see what comes. Noticed two garter snakes, what benefit do you think these guys bring?

    • @edibleacres
      @edibleacres  5 місяців тому

      THey seem to do a good job eating voles and mice I think...

  • @michellebaker9920
    @michellebaker9920 5 місяців тому

    Thank you for this video! I just discovered them on my nettle patch today and was stumped and alarmed at the extent of damage and how quickly it happened. Especially when I didn't recognize the caterpillars. First time in all my years that anything has fed on ny nettle and it is a sudden and dramatic decimation. I feel so much better after your video though! Guess the butterflies get the first harvest. Have you found that cutting it back after the butterflies emerge helps the nettle to rebound?

  • @rochrich1223
    @rochrich1223 6 місяців тому +1

    I was a mighty hunter of butterflies when I was 10 or so and not so far from where you are now.(Rochester) My reaction when you named it was "lucky you!" If you had a roadside stand, try putting a $5 price tag on a chrysalis or put the stem in your bedroom and let it hatch and fly around for a day before releasing it out the window.

  • @wildunikitty9704
    @wildunikitty9704 5 місяців тому

    I have read in Sepp Holzer's book that stigning nettle is an indicator plant of exces nitrogen. I suppose that the nettles in your chicken run are well fed in nitrogen and thrive (not invaded) but the ones in your garden are in a less nitrogen rich soil (they are then susceptible to pest damage). Next year it would be fun if you added compost to half the infested bed in your garden !

  • @growgreatgrub
    @growgreatgrub 6 місяців тому

    Years ago I raised one of the caterpillars to observe their lifecycle and a parasitoid wasp hatched instead of a butterfly. So the predators are also already here to keep their numbers in check.

  • @carriemou3678
    @carriemou3678 6 місяців тому +1

    Just pulled out a patch of stinging nettles because it adjoined my neighbor's yard and horse pasture. Dug out soooo many roots! I'm sure some will pop up again, tough to get out all those roots. Around April 11th we had dozens and dozens of red admiral butterflies in the yard and made the connection to the nettle patch. Sooooo amazing! Planning to compost the top part of the nettle plant and dispose of roots in garbage. Too afraid to try to eat them! You always have an interesting perspective on things. :)

    • @novampires223
      @novampires223 6 місяців тому

      Why? Move them to a better spot if the neighbors don't like them. Such an amazing plant, full of goodness.

    • @trumpetingangel
      @trumpetingangel 6 місяців тому

      No need to be afraid! I love the tea, which only requires drying them. It has a hearty flavor and I love to add a pinch of rosemary to it in the winter. This plant is one of the most nutritious on the planet.

  • @allonesame6467
    @allonesame6467 5 місяців тому

    The chickens probably ate the tiny caterpillars right after they hatch. Red Admiral is a lovely butterfly and the nettles will spring back. I planted nettles specifically for butterflies...and me. Butterfly feces 💩 is called frass. 💖🦋🌿

  • @PierreDuranleau-wx7fq
    @PierreDuranleau-wx7fq 6 місяців тому

    The phenomenon may not occur every season too. Observation is the key as you point out.

  • @MrRJS27
    @MrRJS27 6 місяців тому

    What you initially thought of the grubs is what I think of the stinging nettles!

  • @Mamaculture
    @Mamaculture 19 днів тому

    Amazing! That's how my mint looks right now, gotta observe more closely figure that out, but totally the reason why we should do multiple Lil patches. Looks like you have cleaners piping up too. Love that plants, it's the one that really got me started on switching to herbalism vs. pharmaceuticals. Healed me in 3 days. What's Sasha favorite cultivar for nettles? ... I didn't even know there were different cultivars! Anyone I mention nettles too just rolls their eyes or complains about her sting. Lol so glad I can talk about it with you guys. I have to create a bigger patch, right now I'm buying it from mt. Rose.

    • @edibleacres
      @edibleacres  17 днів тому

      Always worth expanding these super hardy plants so that things can happen here or there without it being a devastating loss. I like many patches of one plant so I always know things will work out without stress...

  • @Martha-q8p1b
    @Martha-q8p1b 6 місяців тому

    Observation and learning is the only way humans will stop trying to control and ruin nature's balance. Thank you for taking the time to learn about what is happening:)

  • @ainsleycamps8784
    @ainsleycamps8784 4 місяці тому

    This is a great video. I really appreciate your perspective. I notice that we humans often put ourselves in the centre of everything. I do believe we need to think of other beings as well when we consider taking action, and this is such a lovely example of doing that. Thank you.

    • @edibleacres
      @edibleacres  4 місяці тому

      We are on the fringe at best :)
      I do think we've got capacity to be lovely and wonderful aspects of nature AND that nature absolutely is and should be the driver of what is happening!

    • @ainsleycamps8784
      @ainsleycamps8784 4 місяці тому

      @@edibleacres the fringe is the place where the good stuff happens!

  • @lolitabonita08
    @lolitabonita08 6 місяців тому

    thank you so much for researching and understanding these critters..they are having a hard time right now as well many other species that migrate large distances and we, are destroying their landing places, killing them without learning who they are and using pesticides right and left. By the way i now i have a problem with a new neigboor that is spraying pesticides on my backyard (half) and on my plants and vegies. Tomorrow (Monday) i will call the department of agriculture who oversees the illegal uses of pesticides in urban areas. I was getting super sick and i was not aware was going on...I was eating contaminated food, and leaves of tulsi, making tea of tulsi and i was not aware of what i had in my backyard. I was so sick that i was not even able to work on the garden anymore. Until, the Lord told me to stop using tulsi, still, my health issues were not getting better...until i got the message...pesticides watch out. follow the spraying pattern and voila. Even my dogs are getting sick...i hate when people do that...i do not use insecticides or pesticides to protect critters and my own health and here it comes idiots that are entitled to spray systematically land and private property at will...

  • @kenchafin9890
    @kenchafin9890 6 місяців тому

    Red Admiral... Great name and lovely butterfly. Good video.

  • @ginavandam735
    @ginavandam735 6 місяців тому +1

    I have never seen stinging nettle been attacked by anything...this was a surprise..

  • @Alaytheia
    @Alaytheia 6 місяців тому +1

    I love the beautiful alternative perspective! Which I'm sure this idea could be applied to the ongoing border crisis and illegal immigrants situation, but that's NOT the topic for this video..simply an observation.. Thank you for sharing 😃

  • @ruthohare9840
    @ruthohare9840 6 місяців тому

    I harvest stinging nettles too but living in the UK they turn up uninvited and are generally viewed as a weed, so the idea of planting them is kinda weird to me 😉 Red Admirals are native here but they have to share the nettles with Peacock, Comma and Small Tortoiseshell and a few moths. Many people leave a small nettle patch in their garden just for the butterflies.

  • @danielapettus7693
    @danielapettus7693 6 місяців тому

    Awesome I used to make lots of compost tea out of the stinging nettle stinki but good for the plants 😊

  • @robertmcauslan6191
    @robertmcauslan6191 6 місяців тому

    I like admirals because they’ll get the nettle in areas I do t want it. The main bed I harvest like every 3 months and the butterflies can have all the ones in my less ideal locations.

  • @suicunerider8720
    @suicunerider8720 6 місяців тому

    I’ve got those on my nettles too

  • @GryleStyle
    @GryleStyle 6 місяців тому +2

    I didn’t think anything could hurt these plants lol they are king in our landscapes

    • @iwanabana
      @iwanabana 6 місяців тому

      You can maybe ask your local butterfly groups to lend you a larvae or two :D

    • @edibleacres
      @edibleacres  5 місяців тому

      They'll rebound :)

  • @handlethehandle7
    @handlethehandle7 5 місяців тому

    Lovely human being

  • @trumpetingangel
    @trumpetingangel 6 місяців тому

    Sean, your friend Eric just did a video about the spongy moth caterpillars in a similar vein, with some really interesting observations.

    • @edibleacres
      @edibleacres  5 місяців тому +1

      Yeah, I saw it and need to watch it! I started it and then life said something different had to happen!

  • @zachduperron8543
    @zachduperron8543 6 місяців тому

    Meanwhile I grew nettle for the butterflies that consume them for caterpillars. Not just red admirals but many other butterflies that rely upon them as host plants. We all learn and can all make mistakes but the red admiral Vanessa atalanta is a native butterfly species to a majority of the world. Me I would have been taking every caterpillar, raise them and then release them once they become butterflies.

  • @cackleberry6317
    @cackleberry6317 6 місяців тому

    I am south of you by a couple of states and then I have a huge nettle patch that I don’t have to do much with just keep it from encroaching in my yard. I’ve never noticed anything bothering mine. I would think that anything hatched here that has to travel south is native to here. It’s not just visiting.

  • @PlanetaryAwareness
    @PlanetaryAwareness 6 місяців тому

    I like your perspective! Do you ever deal with plum curculio?

    • @edibleacres
      @edibleacres  5 місяців тому

      I don't think we have (yet!)

  • @fabricdragon
    @fabricdragon 6 місяців тому

    i just started growing nettles recently!

  • @lunzie01
    @lunzie01 3 місяці тому

    Red Admiral butterflies are as "invasive" at Monarch butterflies.

  • @stupidusedrnames
    @stupidusedrnames 6 місяців тому

    Is anyone else seeing a black virus on your Lemon balm, Peppermint or Stinging Nettle??? It's WAY TO EARLY IN THE SEASON FOR THIS? Did they spray something?

    • @edibleacres
      @edibleacres  5 місяців тому

      I see discoloration on those plants sometimes... Not sure what it is but it seems to rectify and resolve on it's own.

  • @samajier2566
    @samajier2566 6 місяців тому

    Nice video

  • @petrosros
    @petrosros 6 місяців тому

    The Red Admiral butterfly is common in the UK, as are nettles. I think your problem may be more to do with fetching in strangers. Stinging nettles do like to make their own minds up about where they grow, however now you have pointed it out I will have a closer if careful look in future.
    Incidentally, I watched a Russian vid on YT, called the Ulengovs. In one episode the mother makes a smoothy entirely from nettles, she gives it to her three-year-old who knocks it back like nectar, licks then smacks her lips. The vlog is entirely concerning rural and remote areas of the Russia Federation, I do not believe you will be arrested for watching it.😀

  • @helio2k
    @helio2k 5 місяців тому

    When people see some things as beautiful, other things become ugly.

  • @that44rdv4rk
    @that44rdv4rk 6 місяців тому

    I have a bunch of whatever nettle variety is endemic to my area, but I don't really utilize it. It's just part of my diverse mixture of weeds (along with many perennial herbs and flowers and various groundcovers and raspberries and blackberries and wild strawberries and domestic strawberies and,and,and...)
    some of it is meadow, some might be too tall to be considered meadow, some of it shady woods.
    consequently, there are a ton of insects both good and bad, but nothing gets wiped out wholesale since it's so jumbled together, and the songbirds thin out most of the bugs at least somewhat.
    sort of like your guilds but far more chaotic. entropy in action. I don't sweat it.
    I do kill cucumber beetles, though, because screw them.

  • @adandel2281
    @adandel2281 6 місяців тому

    I sprayed vinegar with water on my plants with those bugs and it worked.

  • @keyboard_g
    @keyboard_g 6 місяців тому

    I would say if they find their way there naturally, they are now native. Nature is adapting as best it can.

  • @WitchyD_LifeIsGood
    @WitchyD_LifeIsGood 6 місяців тому

    I love this!

  • @angelaobrien7698
    @angelaobrien7698 6 місяців тому +1

    They come from New Zealand

  • @frederickheard2022
    @frederickheard2022 6 місяців тому +2

    Love the butterflies. They are migratory creatures. They are as native as any migratory bird. If you want to think meaningfully about native, migratory, naturalized, non-native, and invasive creatures, then you have to stop equivocating between the terms. The terms have specific meanings, and they matter for how we understand the role of beings in our landscapes. An intentional lack of understanding isn’t profound.

    • @MichaelWaddingtonDO
      @MichaelWaddingtonDO 6 місяців тому +1

      I’m not sure it’s intentional. I love Shaun’s work but I really hope he learns about this point, as he can do an awful lot of harm with his attitude towards invasive plants, some of which are responsible for the decimation of our insect and bird populations.

  • @blackwolf073
    @blackwolf073 6 місяців тому

    Stinging Nettle intrigues me, but im uncertain about growing it in my landscape. Lol

    • @Erewhon2024
      @Erewhon2024 6 місяців тому +1

      I plan on putting it under windows for home security, but I am 1. in an urban therefore crime-ridden area, and 2. not likely to marry and have kids while no-fault divorce and the current zeitgeist endures. I can avoid them and "take my licks" if I mess up by accident or have to escape through a window in a fire emergency, but am less thrilled about causing pain to little ones.

  • @4beauty4food
    @4beauty4food 6 місяців тому

    Love this

  • @grantraynard
    @grantraynard 6 місяців тому +1

    Have a garden rule, don't kill if you don't know someone's name.
    Now I still kill lots of stuff accidentally

  • @krystynam4076
    @krystynam4076 5 місяців тому

    I installed bug app so I don't kill good bugs in my garden.

  • @hawkspiritweaver6664
    @hawkspiritweaver6664 6 місяців тому

    While you may be invasive Sean we still like you. Interesting.. I need to add nettles myself someplace..

  • @thenextpoetician6328
    @thenextpoetician6328 6 місяців тому +4

    I realize pretty much everyone I interact with has neither studied the electric universe model, nor climate as a function of our externally-powered sun's nested harmonics. Don't take my word for it, however ttbomk we're 10-20 years away from catastrophic rapid onset global cooling. Climate is a self-correcting closed system. Warming causes cooling. Cooling gives way to warming. Our activity might account for 5% of expected change.
    More to the point about the butterflies, they and countless other species rely on earth's magnetic field for orientation and navigation. The poles are shifting, and that's throwing everything out of whack. The pole shift started with the Carrington Event 1859, and it's accelerating on an exponential curve. There's no fixing this. Either people know how to survive an ice age, or they don't. It is what it is.

    • @judyofthewoods
      @judyofthewoods 6 місяців тому +1

      I'm with you on that. I follow Suspicious0bservers and ThunderboltsProject. The frequent low latitude (south west Wales here) auroras of late are a good indication that things are moving that way. I just hope that the next Carrington-like event won't be too soon, let alone squatterman in the sky; still got plenty of prepping to do.