Foraging for wild food ⏲️ 6 Minute English

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  • Опубліковано 28 гру 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 59

  • @lka8735
    @lka8735 Рік тому +18

    BBC learning English always brings insightful and compelling knowledge as well as useful new vocabulary as usual. I reckon i’m a forager as when i was in grade 3th, more or less, i used to forage for wood ear mushrooms in my garden, chopped it and cooked with rice. It wasn’t a superfood but was a great adventure and memory for me. I am feeling quite nostalgic for my past childhood packed with a load of fascinating activities. Now i’m still wandering around taking the air noticing whether there are some wild fruit trees along the road with my cousin sister. Once , we luckily found blackberry fruit trees, flucking fruits from the trees and eating them. It tasted quite good. It’s mind-blowing to know that eating wild food helps with losing weight and is beneficial for microbiome, human guts and food digestion . I will be searching for nettles in my garden as there are a number of unknown plants and weeds to boot.

    • @HARI-nm2iz
      @HARI-nm2iz Рік тому +3

      Your English is very good

  • @14uclalltime
    @14uclalltime Рік тому +4

    Besides I learn English, I also learn about new knowledge, thank you BBC

  • @esinspire47
    @esinspire47 11 місяців тому +1

    I love Beth's way of speaking. She is so beautiful❤

    • @bbclearningenglish
      @bbclearningenglish  11 місяців тому

      Thanks for your sweet comment! Check out Beth's latest short here: ua-cam.com/users/shortsbG-CsP5gw3I?feature=shared

  • @bbclearningenglish
    @bbclearningenglish  Рік тому +12

    Hi everyone! Did you know you can download a free pdf transcript of this show? 📃 It's here: downloads.bbc.co.uk/learningenglish/features/6min/230720_6min_english_wild_food.pdf

  • @BriantheBrick
    @BriantheBrick Рік тому +19

    Humans found food through foraging, and the food contains a lot of microbiomes, so I fully buy into the idea. For example, nettles are free, and they are even considered to be a kind of superfood! At first, you might feel a little flat, but it is worth it.

  • @letsplayroblox6062
    @letsplayroblox6062 Рік тому +2

    I agree with you. Eating wild food can be dangerous but there are a lot of vitamins which can keep us healthier. Wild meat is not a good thing. In my opinion wild fruits are the best. One time i tried wild fruits. I can't forget how it tasted. That was amazing time. I took some wild apples from the ground. The smell of the fruit came around and the colour was red. I ate it. Thanks BBC💗

  • @gokulvijay9938
    @gokulvijay9938 Рік тому +3

    Humans need good life and good health, nature always bring us what we wanted. Foraging through our wild make us good feelings also we can eat edible food that helps our health and immune

  • @najatarabia741
    @najatarabia741 Рік тому +2

    Loads of new information on this video. I learnt a lot, thank you

  • @sahilthombare8749
    @sahilthombare8749 Рік тому

    I’m preparing for my PTE exams and I found this video to be very helpful. This audio is similar to the audio we get in the exam, and that’s the reason watching these videos will help me excel in my exam.

  • @thaonguyenphuong1115
    @thaonguyenphuong1115 4 місяці тому

    Thank you for 6 minutes

  • @Elizabeth071990
    @Elizabeth071990 Рік тому +1

    I've never foraged for mushrooms and seaweeds, because I don't know which of them are edible. Though there are a lot of people in our region who forage for mushrooms. I prefer foraging for plants: plums, apples, apricots, mulberry, blackberry and walnuts. They grow in our streets and in the forests. I gathered some of them during my trips to the countryside.

  • @tammytsang3487
    @tammytsang3487 Рік тому +3

    Thank you for this new podcast, and I myself found the expression: culinary treasure hunt very impressive. ❤

  • @benjaminestrada8788
    @benjaminestrada8788 Рік тому +2

    Thanks a lot BBC. Greetings from Mexico.

  • @eccharastiffaniaudiya
    @eccharastiffaniaudiya 11 місяців тому +1

    Thank youuu❤❤

  • @znbbooker9307
    @znbbooker9307 Рік тому

    nice video,and i have to say. in some countries, there are few place to plant wild food because too much people in here. and we have not any experience regarding foraging for countryside food.

  • @NoorKhan-rs1qb
    @NoorKhan-rs1qb Рік тому +2

    Thanks so much for this helpful video😊

  • @leboblehotelsandresorts
    @leboblehotelsandresorts Рік тому

    ❤ it's a great experience

  • @DianaAfrilia10Galileo
    @DianaAfrilia10Galileo 11 місяців тому

    the video my inspiration😄😄

  • @natalijapavlova6491
    @natalijapavlova6491 Рік тому +5

    When I live at my cottage in summer, I get foraging wild berries, mushrooms in the forest quite often.

  • @xuejuansu8502
    @xuejuansu8502 Рік тому +2

    98。I eat dandelion. I will try nettles in spring.

  • @johnibat
    @johnibat Рік тому +1

    Thanks BBC Learning English...👍

  • @emlakieu1431
    @emlakieu1431 Рік тому +2

    This is a first time I have seem this program so difficult for understand , but I will try and try 😢

  • @Koroshelec
    @Koroshelec 10 місяців тому

    Like always was good

  • @user-oc7rq9zi5w
    @user-oc7rq9zi5w Рік тому

    Grateful.. kindly make one video upon heat stress effects in rice plants

  • @chetnakikan1526
    @chetnakikan1526 Рік тому +1

    Nice👍

  • @lopezaguilar28
    @lopezaguilar28 Рік тому +1

    4:49 so one of the meanings of flat is tired?

  • @tgchan
    @tgchan Місяць тому

    Thank you/

  • @Desarrolloestructurarural11
    @Desarrolloestructurarural11 Рік тому +1

    👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻

  • @ΠετροςΝικου-β5δ
    @ΠετροςΝικου-β5δ Рік тому +2

    Foraging

  • @Zuhairharir
    @Zuhairharir Рік тому +3

    why BBC learning English program hasn't been able to publish a phonetic book etc, for primary schools where students can learn about phonology etc

  • @RaquelPerez-pr6fn
    @RaquelPerez-pr6fn Рік тому +1

    👏👏👍👍👌😺

  • @richardlim6436
    @richardlim6436 Рік тому +1

    🙏🏻👍🏻❤️

  • @emythatsenough5016
    @emythatsenough5016 Рік тому +1

    Living in the Dolomites....foraging wild food Is common

  • @shukurulloyulbarsov1663
    @shukurulloyulbarsov1663 11 місяців тому

    Can we chek our Transcript with Subtitles? Your audio text file and Subtitles are Same?

    • @bbclearningenglish
      @bbclearningenglish  11 місяців тому +1

      👍 Yes they are! You can follow along with the subtitles or the transcript 😊

  • @trunguc7539
    @trunguc7539 Рік тому +1

    2:47 3:10 4:29

  • @kkkasw8128
    @kkkasw8128 Рік тому +2

    I have something to talk to this madam who said 'Oh well, you know, if everybody foraged, they wouldn't be enough...'in this video, Do you know why human beings entered the farming era? Do you know how many human beings there are on the earth now? Do you know how much food a person needs to consume in a day? Many people in China have similar ideas, the only difference is that they also believe that wild animals are good for the health, and above all, they are free, so, in some places, they even eat up the whole mountain, the whole lake, the whole river... if you just want to supplement your nutrition or experience nature for a while to forage to improve your health, that's fine, but don't make wild plants, animals your main food resources and eat them all the time and convince everyone else to do it, you will eat up the whole earth, even yourself.

  • @brylant8ct
    @brylant8ct Рік тому +2

    Hi Beth, I have been taught that, if sb says "What is the most popular foraged food...."I should then say: "I asked what the most popular food foraged in the UK was. Is this also correct to say: "I asked what was the most popular foraging food.." I will be be grateful to find out. Maria

    • @bbclearningenglish
      @bbclearningenglish  Рік тому +1

      Hi Maria. You can say 'I asked what the most popular food foraged was.' or 'I asked what was the most popular foraged food." but the second sounds much more informal and so the first option is better English - hope that helps!

    • @brylant8ct
      @brylant8ct Рік тому

      @@bbclearningenglish Thanks A lot

  • @Casca-jv8fx
    @Casca-jv8fx Рік тому +1

    بيث رجعت🎉

  • @wanglinnaing-x5w
    @wanglinnaing-x5w Рік тому +1

    I guessed it must be mushroom because it is actually possible to see everywhere which means it is not wild but there are thousands of different mushrooms which we can't know exactly in the world. So it has chance to be mushroom I guessed. I was right😍

  • @irenefang246
    @irenefang246 Рік тому

    thanks BBC
    My summary while listening
    Thousands of years ago, before supermarkets, our ancestors had to forage for food daily but we seemed to forget how we managed in the past with the abundance of food we have today. Since the Covid Pandamic, foraging has been on the rise because why going to supermarkets when we can search for edible plants, mushrooms and fruit free of charge?
    According to Monica Wilde, an author, even the totally encompassing wild food diet is pretty unattainable to most people, we could still incorporate a small amount of them to enjoy their nutrients and vitamins that are barely available in our commonly bought food.
    In addition, a forager shared her experience of consuming only wild ingredients. At the start of the experiment, she felt flat and had insufficient energy level to make it through the day. After a few weeks of eating wild food, appreciation of nature and fresh air, she felt loads better and happier.

  • @ramazankamilov942
    @ramazankamilov942 Рік тому +3

    🇺🇿🇺🇿🇺🇿

  • @DUShomu
    @DUShomu Рік тому +3

    😶

  • @debrongwisky6429
    @debrongwisky6429 Рік тому +1

    Subtitle indonesian please

  • @ewong8505
    @ewong8505 Рік тому

    😔 Promo`SM

  • @ahmedrashed5909
    @ahmedrashed5909 Рік тому

    Come on we don't understand this shit are this like living in wild or living off grid
    Is so mysterious topic and unfamiliar to people who live in overseas or third country world