Foraging The Elusive Mayapple

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  • Опубліковано 24 сер 2022
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 605

  • @timfowler4642
    @timfowler4642 Рік тому +299

    the chemotherapy drug, "etoposide" was given to my infant when going through cancer treatment. I learned that the drug is derived from compounds from the Mayapple plant. Wow!

    • @songlyon7795
      @songlyon7795 Рік тому +54

      I do hope your baby is well now.

    • @ronsimpson8666
      @ronsimpson8666 Рік тому +18

      ❤️🙏

    • @kdavis4910
      @kdavis4910 Рік тому +24

      May your baby recover and l I ve a glorious life. If that didn't happen may your baby rest with the other angels.

    • @marianlincoln9008
      @marianlincoln9008 Рік тому +19

      Thats amazing ... I hope YOUR child has recovered and is living a cherished life.
      There was a saying in the 60s and 70s... GOD made...(they were REFERING to marijuana) Man MADE ... Who do you TRUST.. As an HERBALIST friend once explained (as did my sainted Grandfather) For every ill in the world there is a plant growing near by with the remedy...
      I like that the mayapple which is toxic except for its fruit is a treatment that I hope has cured your child.

    • @ragheadand420roll
      @ragheadand420roll Рік тому

      Shud have used cannabis instead of poison chemo

  • @momsmushroomsjodyfoster5786
    @momsmushroomsjodyfoster5786 Рік тому +110

    Adam Harriton. If I could choose anyone person to wander the forest with it would be you!! Intelligent and cheerful. Your passion for nature's secrets is completely contagious! 👌

    • @CatsPajamas23
      @CatsPajamas23 3 місяці тому

      Well said. My sentiments exactly.

  • @edwardgomez5616
    @edwardgomez5616 Рік тому +57

    My ancestors ate the fruit and used the roots for poison on their arrow points. The leaves were used in medicine.

    • @quinn799
      @quinn799 Рік тому +1

      That’s awesome.

    • @MrRugercat45
      @MrRugercat45 Рік тому +1

      Who were your ancestors? That’s very interesting, I didn’t know any culture that used this plant as a poison.

  • @BestCosmologist
    @BestCosmologist Рік тому +40

    I feel like a genius after being subscribed to this channel for a couple of years.

    • @Del-Lebo
      @Del-Lebo Рік тому +2

      Just subscribed 3-4 days ago and already getting those Genius vibes! Love this channel!!!!

  • @flyingsodwai1382
    @flyingsodwai1382 9 місяців тому +4

    Woot! Found some today totally by accident but I remembered your video and snagged a few. if I had never seen your video I woulda enjoyed the oddness of the plant and moved on. Thanks Adam!

  • @phillipzimmerman3575
    @phillipzimmerman3575 Рік тому +8

    I would pick them while squirrel hunting. They are good snack with moisture when thirsty. I bite end off and squeeze in to mouth. Suck on the seeds and spit out. Sometimes I swallow seeds. Never been sick. All my family has ate them for years. I’ve ate them since I was able to eat. The seeds have been swallowed alot

    • @katepavelle9465
      @katepavelle9465 Рік тому +1

      Good to know about swalling seeds, I've been wondering about that. Thanks!

  • @Jag0h
    @Jag0h Рік тому +49

    My dad once came across a mayapple plant while walking in the woods. He knew they were poisonous when not ripe, but he thought it looked almost ripe and figured it would probably be safe to eat.
    When he got home he collapsed on a lawn chair and became so sick he could barely move and he felt like he was high.
    He laid there for something like 8 hours and my sister's connected a bunch of straws to a glass of water so he could drink because he literally couldn't move enough to drink.
    In the end, he was ok. I think he learned his lesson and now he's more careful about trying plants he's unfamiliar with lol.

  • @jerrydeanswanson79
    @jerrydeanswanson79 Рік тому +5

    Hello from Wisconsin. I am smiling cuz our woods is LOADED with May Apples. I'm a Master Gardener...and love my plants. I have been transplanting May apples throughout our woods...and they thrive. But you know...been at this for over 25 years and your video showed me they are edible...smiles. Can't see the forest for the trees, eh?

  • @teamrino5493
    @teamrino5493 Рік тому +58

    Adam, you are a diamond to the foraging community, you have helped me expand my foraging from spring morels only to oysters, chantrelles, hens, chicken and wild fruits! Appreciate your professionalism and dedication to the community! Thank you!!

  • @richardlane9582
    @richardlane9582 Рік тому +17

    Not only are these plants toxic - they are deadly if used improperly. I live in the Trenton area near the Tyendinega Native reserve. The natives have a lot of respect for this plant, and it has been used for everything from inducing an abortion (which sometimes killed the mother) to committing suicide.
    These things grow everywhere up here in the woods. They are extremely potent, like a lot of other plants we have; but if you respect them enough to learn about them - you certainly get an appreciation for mother nature.
    Love your channel. Been watching for the last year since I have become more interested in the natural world around me. Many thanks.

    • @ericdu8159
      @ericdu8159 6 місяців тому

      Saw your post... I live near Napanee

  • @walterbates1654
    @walterbates1654 Рік тому

    Feeding the UA-cam algorithm. Informative video. Thanks.

  • @pat2383
    @pat2383 Рік тому +30

    Adam you are truly the best when it comes to learning our land. Your videos are not only very informative and complete but no nonsense small talk in between. You're a gem!

  • @brianevans1851
    @brianevans1851 Рік тому +35

    My grandma used to take to the woods to collect them she made jelly and jam and when she would make the mayapple cake OMG!!!!!!!! THE CAKE WAS SO GOOD

    • @farquadmantis8486
      @farquadmantis8486 Рік тому +5

      You have to get that recipe for the cake

    • @brianevans1851
      @brianevans1851 Рік тому +3

      @@farquadmantis8486 I wish I could get that recipe grandma died 30 years ago I do remember her removing the flesh from the skin and mashing it to mix in her batter but that's all I got sorry about that

    • @brianevans1851
      @brianevans1851 Рік тому +6

      @@farquadmantis8486 folks that were in the great depression were the best cooks and could cook anything my grandma's mom taught her when she was young different era back then

  • @pamelaterry8872
    @pamelaterry8872 Рік тому +2

    thank you, yet another wild fruit on my land!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Black berries, autumn olives, grapes and persimmons Yeah!!!!

  • @russellking8349
    @russellking8349 Рік тому +18

    I walk by these plants all the time in the woods. The distinctive leaves and pretty flowers drew me to them. But I never knew what they were called. Now I know.

  • @bigcatfish5029
    @bigcatfish5029 Рік тому +3

    I'VE WALKED PAST THEM ALL MY LIFE AND WILL CONTINUE TO DO SO

  • @mishajameson8939
    @mishajameson8939 Рік тому +4

    We bought a house in SW WI with a shady bed full of mayapple next to the front door! I didn't even know what it was. Last season I didn't have the guts to try the fruit but you've given me courage. Hopefully there will be a lot again this year!

  • @mikemarriam
    @mikemarriam Рік тому +16

    I worked near a very large patch of May Apples for 21 years. Sometimes there would be an abundance of fruit. Regardless of how diligent I was it always seemed like the fruit would disappear very rapidly as soon as they turned yellow. I assumed it was deer beating me to it but all the animals you mentioned were present too. I never saw evidence of other people but its possible I wasn't the only one keeping track. This video makes me want to try to harvest some again. Thank you for it.

  • @leemason4024
    @leemason4024 Рік тому +32

    Great video. I never knew you could eat these. My brother and I used to pick them and throw them at each other in the woods.

    • @carriebecker8383
      @carriebecker8383 Рік тому +11

      Sibling shenanigans sounds like a fantastic way to spread the seeds!

    • @leemason4024
      @leemason4024 Рік тому +8

      @@carriebecker8383 love the word "shenanigans", and the alliteration, Carrie.

    • @sarahstrong7174
      @sarahstrong7174 Рік тому

      Thankyou for sharing.

  • @sarco64
    @sarco64 Рік тому +10

    I only eat the inner pulp, just under the skin. To me, the best flavor to compare it to is a mango.

  • @kristinmount2852
    @kristinmount2852 Місяць тому

    These things are all over my yard! Did not know they bore fruit, but now I'll be looking.

  • @acmeplantstuff
    @acmeplantstuff Рік тому +1

    A dozen in a day! I'd die of happiness. I think 6 is the most I've ever found at one time.

    • @LearnYourLand
      @LearnYourLand  Рік тому

      Conditions were optimal in western PA this year. I could've harvested at least two dozen ripe to semi-ripe fruits in one day, but I did leave many behind. In my experiences, most years aren't like this.

  • @emariaenterprises
    @emariaenterprises Рік тому +4

    This was very informative. Thank you.

  • @joyhamilton4248
    @joyhamilton4248 11 місяців тому +1

    Thank you again for another fantastic and informative video!!

  • @PopArt
    @PopArt Рік тому +1

    When young, dad often made me “sickle the woods to the property line” to burn off energy. Ended up becoming a field of may apples hundreds of yards. Never knew we could eat them. My brothers & I would pick them to chuck at each other. I’m grown now & the may apples have disappeared as the woods grew up too.

  • @kayjay9383
    @kayjay9383 Рік тому +9

    With government excesses I have been watching your channel much more frequently. I too live in Western Pennsylvania. I live in the lowest part of Cambria County. I am old. But the grandfathers of mine told me of all the fruits and sources of natural occurring foods that they fed their families during the depression. I was too young to understand that this WAS NEEDED LIFE KNOWLEDGE; after all the grocery stores were packed with food. Now, in the beginning of this depression, I seek as much of this information as possible. Thank you so very much for your channel and your wisdom. With your wisdom may we all be fed.

  • @THETASTERSTWINS
    @THETASTERSTWINS 11 місяців тому

    I used to pick mayapples for my grandma. She loved them.

  • @LillyMunster85
    @LillyMunster85 Рік тому +1

    100% have seen these. 100% animals took them. Thank you for the info. I'm in NOVA.

  • @babyboomerbackpacking
    @babyboomerbackpacking Рік тому +2

    I know there are a lot of Mayapple on the Appalachian Trail, so I will watch for the ripe Mayapple fruit while hiking. Thank you.

  • @RTFosmark
    @RTFosmark Рік тому

    The intro/outro music is as delicious as a ripe mayapple.

  • @momsmushroomsjodyfoster5786
    @momsmushroomsjodyfoster5786 Рік тому +3

    Woo hoo I have time this year in West Michigan to search for these new foods! Thx Adam

  • @Customfurball28
    @Customfurball28 2 місяці тому

    There are hundreds of these at my local park, and I'm looking forward to eating the fruit when it's ready! They bloom on my birthday, too, which makes them extra special!

  • @jimgarofalo5479
    @jimgarofalo5479 Рік тому +3

    My family harvested and ate them when I was a young child. We found them in a local wooded area. My father called them Indian Lemons.

  • @garywait3231
    @garywait3231 Рік тому +13

    Thanks for the delightfully informative tutorial on the mayapple. I had them in my woodland garden for the sake of the flower, never suspecting that the ripe fruit was not toxic, like the rest of the plant. Can't wait to try the ripe fruit!

  • @PartTimePermies
    @PartTimePermies Рік тому +14

    I had my first ripe may apple a few years ago. Oh, it was amazing!!! I don't think any would make it home if I found them again. (I did eat the seeds and skin and didnt notice any off flavor or have any adverse reaction.)

  • @wolfmangosan539
    @wolfmangosan539 Рік тому +41

    Grew up eating them and never thought it was hard to find they are everywhere at least in my woods
    I find them in a huge patch in my field
    It's always so full of fruit.
    Just make sure it's fully ripe so tasty
    Love your videos thank you

    • @robertmoreau8663
      @robertmoreau8663 11 місяців тому

      Describe the taste!!! Is it better than Apple 😮😮😮😮😮

    • @richardlane9582
      @richardlane9582 6 місяців тому

      Yep. They are the best, when they get those little brown spots and bruises on them. Bit of a pain with all the seeds. Good trail nibbles, but way too much work to do anything like make jelly.
      Taste like candy. Slimy though.

    • @glxxyz
      @glxxyz Місяць тому

      @@robertmoreau8663 nothing like apple- more tropical citrus candy.

  • @kevinbown424
    @kevinbown424 Рік тому +4

    Cool stuff...I'm A Chef, so I would definitely just enjoy them as you recommended. ✌

  • @vincentviscuso3560
    @vincentviscuso3560 Рік тому +1

    Western PA here. Great videos. Keep them coming.

  • @ArcheryFanatic2000
    @ArcheryFanatic2000 Рік тому +2

    I had NO IDEA! I have seen them so many times and never even knew. Thank you, Adam!

  • @meowensteinfox9596
    @meowensteinfox9596 Рік тому

    There is a ton of mayapples on my property. And I checked and several have two leaves. This is so exciting. I will be waiting and watching :)

  • @MynewTennesseeHome
    @MynewTennesseeHome Рік тому +14

    I used to collect those back in IN. There few to none around here on the S. Cumberland Plateau... not sure why?
    I LOVE your videos, I learn from you regularly. Thanks for keeping this up.

    • @kimberlysimpson343
      @kimberlysimpson343 Рік тому +5

      They're all over the forests in IN.

    • @MynewTennesseeHome
      @MynewTennesseeHome Рік тому +3

      @@kimberlysimpson343 Yes they are, they were a good sign for morels, I've ever considered trying to transplant some up here...I miss them.

    • @valclowes5901
      @valclowes5901 Рік тому +3

      Has your current location got the same kind of mature mixed hardwood forest on slopes that go down to floodplains of a creek or small river? They are usually blooming once the stinging nettles are too old for great fresh eating. Definitely after ostrich ferns have darkened out of their first bright green colour. Jack in the pulpits are budding or opening. Cedars (nearer the creek, not on the slopes) have fresh bright green growth. The forest floor is still visible between plants, brown leaf litter from previous fall has not yet turned fully into soil. Wild ginger leaves are clearly present but not yet mature size & colour. Maples are leafing out. Sumac, found outside of this kind of forest, is not yet fully leafed out
      This is the environment where mayapple is present in southern Ontario. Fwiw, I've never seen it in coniferous forest nor in dry soil, nor sandy nor gravelly soil.
      Hope this helps!

    • @sheilafoster6383
      @sheilafoster6383 2 місяці тому +1

      Most interesting

  • @pottersjournal
    @pottersjournal Рік тому +54

    I had no idea. They are plentifully abundant in my woodland adjacent to Raccoon Park, and I've seen the fruit when out walking. Definitely worth searching out since this 'rare exotic' is right in my back yard. Thanks.

    • @Cybermunky7
      @Cybermunky7 Рік тому +10

      I've seen a bunch at moraine as well. Now I know. Now I have Saturday plans.

    • @pottersjournal
      @pottersjournal Рік тому +7

      @@Cybermunky7 My next day off isn't till Sunday.

    • @bigDwood
      @bigDwood Рік тому +1

      Are you an East Liverpool Ohio resident ? Raccoon park in pa.

    • @pottersjournal
      @pottersjournal Рік тому +2

      @@bigDwood My farm borders Raccoon Park. When I met Adam at Sewickley Farmers Market he knew my place not from the road but from the stream leading up from the lake. Didn't know who he was at the time but had a sense he'd be someone interesting to know.

  • @LS-kg6my
    @LS-kg6my Рік тому +5

    I have a lovely little patch on a mound in my side yard. However, I’ve never eaten the mayapple because I thought they were toxic. Glad to hear I can harvest them :)

  • @timl.b.2095
    @timl.b.2095 Рік тому +2

    He is so thorough!

  • @hakoshitenen322
    @hakoshitenen322 10 місяців тому

    I found so many of these today in my short hike in the woods with my puppy. It's a shame none were ripe. With my bad eyesight, at first I thought I spotted grapes and was confused. A closer look revealed an abundance of mayapple plants littered across this particular wooded area. Northern Delaware here.

  • @stingingmetal9648
    @stingingmetal9648 Рік тому +7

    Wow. I know that plant as I see it all the time in my forages. But never knew it had an edible fruit. Always something new.

  • @francinebacone1455
    @francinebacone1455 Рік тому +5

    I have been stalking a wild colony this year, from last frost to its current flourishing, hoping to have my first taste. Made the mistake of thinking they would be ripe in May, because MAY-apple... lol. You've answered my questions and the ones that hadn't occurred to me yet. Well, if the raccoons squirrels and other foragers don't get them first I'm glad to have seen a demonstration on how to eat one. Good to know that the skin is possibly not the adventure I want to flirt with. Lol. Thank you as always, Mr. Hariton. :)

  • @thephenom724
    @thephenom724 Рік тому +8

    Thank you so much for uploading this. I have been trying to find ripe mayapples for years and haven't found a single one. Hopefully this will be of great help.

  • @angelad.8944
    @angelad.8944 Рік тому +15

    Mayapple is just one of those seasonal treats that is best eaten in that little window frame that you can find them. Like treasure hunting. I also wouldn't recommend you eat a whole bunch at one time. 😊 Just a magical treat here and there.

  • @danielgeci4513
    @danielgeci4513 Рік тому +3

    It's May and I'm here in Pennsylvania where ive lived my whole life. I was out walking a cpl weeks ago in a local park and found a large area covered with maypple plants. There were only a few with flowers however, but i figured ill monitor the patch and see what is left in fall. Anyways yesterday i was there again and what i noticed was every single plant with a flower had all the leaves chewed off them so only stem and flower were left. i took pics even because literally every female plant was eaten this way and all the male plants were in perfect shape. I'm fairly sure it was the work of groundhogs because their dens are littered throughout this park and township. Its pretty insane tbh how many groundhogs are in this area. Anyways i found it super interesting and thought this may contribute to the elussive nature of the ripe fruit.
    I would also suggest that the name perhaps comes from the month it flowers not fruits.

  • @jennifermancke1059
    @jennifermancke1059 Рік тому +4

    Thank you for your wonderful, detailed videos. Everyone needs to "Learn your land" for sure!

  • @fenrirwalker7083
    @fenrirwalker7083 Рік тому +1

    I've seen these so often... now I'll know when I can have a delicious snack! Thanks!

  • @karenbergmann209
    @karenbergmann209 Рік тому +14

    We have lots of these in Southern Ontario and I never knew we could eat the ripe fruit. Thanks. Unfortunately, the animals usually get them before the humans do.

  • @user-ze3ds6ji6x
    @user-ze3ds6ji6x Рік тому

    I harvested these ripe fruits near Saratoga Springs, N.Y. many years ago as a teenager. Found a large patch not far from town. Enough to fill a medium size basket. The fragrance was very sweet and filled the kitchen where I had them stored. Its a smell you never forget. I made jelly out of the fruit which was delicious. It was a very unique experience.

  • @jeremykenward3082
    @jeremykenward3082 Рік тому +2

    It's funny I was out for a hike with my kids last week and my 7 year old daughter spotted some with ripe fruit quite a distance away. We ended up harvesting 6, first I've eaten in a few years. So tasty!

  • @carolthomas770
    @carolthomas770 Рік тому

    My second time watching. May Apple flowered in S Ohio now. Wanted to review great tips again. Thank you!

  • @jeremybertram5575
    @jeremybertram5575 Рік тому

    I recommend your channel to everyone I talk to.

  • @chrishynes6091
    @chrishynes6091 Рік тому +2

    The forest floor behind my house was literally blanketed with Mayapples... Then in the late 80's they began logging out a good portion of the trees and the Mayapples went away. Sad. But I did have a great time growing up exploring the woods.

  • @LarrySimon-lz7ky
    @LarrySimon-lz7ky 10 місяців тому +1

    I started my study of wild edibles in Elk County, Pa. with my favorite field guide by Lee Allen Peterson. Your videos take the whole foraging to a very higher level. Thank you... Just a note on the may-apples: When ripe, I pop the whole thing in my mouth, getting a taste akin to a giant grape, though I've never eatten more than a couple at a time. The edibles guide states as you said, the pulp is edible But Cautions the rest of the plant is strongly cathartic/a purgative. These things grow all over my hometown in western N.Y... Thanks again.

  • @jimf1964
    @jimf1964 Рік тому +2

    With the squirrels and garbage pandas we have in S Quebec, I think the almost ripe ones are the only chance we have in finding any.

  • @krickette5569
    @krickette5569 Рік тому +4

    I have several patches of Mayapples in the field out back. I'm going to go check them! Thanks!

  • @jacobcarrick1182
    @jacobcarrick1182 9 місяців тому

    I just found a huge patch of these up here in Ontario Canada. They're everywhere here. Found one with 5 apples on one plant. Smell amazing and taste great too. Thank you for all the knowledge 🙏

  • @esthercheng297
    @esthercheng297 Рік тому +2

    Thank you! There are lots of mayapple in S. Ontario. Next time I'll look for the fruits.

  • @rosettapstone
    @rosettapstone Рік тому +5

    I found these last year on a nature walk and had no idea what it was! I'm going back to the same place this year to search!! Thank you for this info.

  • @prestonmiller9994
    @prestonmiller9994 Рік тому +3

    I'm excited to have one more thing to look for and eat when I take my dogs out for walks!

    • @ericferguson9989
      @ericferguson9989 Рік тому

      My dog's such a handful I'll have to go without him. He drags me past a huge patch of them daily.

  • @kenycharles8600
    @kenycharles8600 Рік тому +2

    The map you presented shows may apples in eastern Oklahoma, my stomping ground. I have not seen them. But I knew nothing about them except what I heard a couple of older friends say. Thank you for this presentation.

    • @davidledoux1736
      @davidledoux1736 Рік тому +1

      They're quite plentiful in the Ozark woods of northeast Oklahoma. Good luck searching them out in your area! If you're anywhere in the area from Poteau to Broken Bow, I bet you won't have any issues.

  • @DeverVision
    @DeverVision Рік тому +1

    Great video. I have huge patches of these around my house. I’ll be trying these out🎉🎉🎉🎉

  • @linbat6148
    @linbat6148 Рік тому +4

    Thanks Adam. I never even heard of them before! Love that when you teach me about something new at my age! lol I'll be looking around next spring where I live in western lower Michigan!

  • @craco77
    @craco77 Рік тому +2

    I learned of mayapple when I first started foraging in Northern Ohio 40 years ago. I noticed an abundance of plants this year. You inspired me to go out tomorrow and find the fruit.

  • @susanmazei1834
    @susanmazei1834 Рік тому

    I watched your Mayapple plant video. I successfully found a patch in the woods off of a hiking trail I frequent. I rechecked it today and I found the flowers you described. I'm looking forward to seeing if any fruit develops, but the woods are full of animals so I am not totally confident about actually getting any fruit. Your video was very descriptive and I was amazed that I successfully found the plants and later observed the flowers. I live in Southern Michigan.

  • @carlislecreekfarm1472
    @carlislecreekfarm1472 Рік тому +25

    I’ve tried them once, they’re all over my forest BUT everyone else gets them before me! They are so yummy! Thanks for this video Adam, I love them all.

    • @genki_7
      @genki_7 Рік тому +5

      I think it’s probably more likely that the squirrels get them. They love May apples!

    • @marianlincoln9008
      @marianlincoln9008 Рік тому +1

      @@genki_7 I think your right... The darn critters get the pears off my pear tree just as they'd be ripe and I never get any... I don't mind them having a share but it would be nice if they'd let me have a few too.
      Greedy little buggers...Any suggestions on how to scare them off... If tried an animated hawk and an owl... No luck there... They're too smart to fall for either.

    • @genki_7
      @genki_7 Рік тому +1

      @@marianlincoln9008 I wish I knew how to scare them off, too! But no ideas…short of live trapping and relocating them. 😒

    • @marianlincoln9008
      @marianlincoln9008 Рік тому +1

      @@genki_7 Thanks ..
      As I live with a forest pretty much around me that's not really a feasible idea either. Then after awhile they'd just avoid the trap too.
      Thanks ... For the suggestions and your kind speed in an attempt to help with my problem.

    • @denisefrickey5636
      @denisefrickey5636 Рік тому +2

      FYI these grow profusely here on the Mississippi Gulf Coast. It's hard to get any however, as the wildlife is crazy about them

  • @danielwhiteman9120
    @danielwhiteman9120 Рік тому +4

    Always look forward to your new videos I'm local to you and love to forage. Thanks for all of your knowledge

  • @MadRiverHomestead
    @MadRiverHomestead Рік тому

    I am so glad I watched this video! I have lots of May Apple plants on my property, here in southern Ohio. After watching your video, I went walking through the woods and I am seeing a lot of green mayapples. I cannot wait to taste them! (Obviously, I will have to wait until they ripen… Lol)
    Thank you!

  • @jdarylthom514
    @jdarylthom514 Рік тому

    I loved that background music 🎶 at the end lil bro.

  • @j.j.savalle4714
    @j.j.savalle4714 Рік тому +1

    Big patches of Mayapple this year up in SE Michigan. Fruiting is looking good this year. Great vid!

  • @danielshepherd4436
    @danielshepherd4436 Рік тому +2

    Awesome video! I've seen these in the woods with the white flower blooming but never knew what they were.

  • @salty_crawling_mitch
    @salty_crawling_mitch Рік тому +5

    Found and consumed my first ripe may apple fruit this year while out mushroom foraging. Awesome new find for a plant that grows everywhere here in nw Arkansas.

    • @TylerMcMahan
      @TylerMcMahan 10 місяців тому +1

      I’m in Fayetteville! Did you find them in Aug? They’re all over my place

    • @salty_crawling_mitch
      @salty_crawling_mitch 10 місяців тому

      @@TylerMcMahan yea I found a couple ripe ones a couple weeks ago. Most of them should ripe already.

    • @jennr6928
      @jennr6928 2 місяці тому

      I’m in central Arkansas and I am seeing little green fruits on mayapples in mid March. Wondering when they will be ripe here? I was thinking maybe July?

    • @salty_crawling_mitch
      @salty_crawling_mitch 2 місяці тому

      @@jennr6928 yes I think July and August would be your best best. I went back looking through old foraging photos. Sadly I had none. But I seem to find them most ripe when summer really sets in and we haven't had rain for a while. They taste best when they are over ripe. Little brown bruises.

  • @Paunguliaq
    @Paunguliaq Рік тому +2

    Great program Adam. Thank you🙏🍀🍋 You are a great woodsman.

  • @tanekarnes5260
    @tanekarnes5260 10 місяців тому

    I wish I studied more as a kid about wild plants and fungi. I haven't seen mayapples in many years, in Pennsylvania. There was a stretch of deep woods I used to haunt as a kid. I did read a lot of books, both fiction and non, about the woods. Unfortunately we left when I was 15.

  • @fomerbu
    @fomerbu Рік тому +1

    The timing of this video was choice!

  • @denamathews2363
    @denamathews2363 Рік тому +4

    Great video, great content, so informational and good to know, thank you.

  • @samyoungblood3740
    @samyoungblood3740 Рік тому +16

    Love this! I’d love to take a class or just spend the day identifying eatable healthy wild plants. Just found a bunch of wild American persimmons and brought home. Hoping to plant and grow on our property.

    • @edwardgomez5616
      @edwardgomez5616 Рік тому +5

      You do know to let frost hit persimmon first before eating.

    • @samyoungblood3740
      @samyoungblood3740 Рік тому +6

      No I did not thank you. The one’s I have are usually ripe by Oct. or they’re falling off the trees onto the road an deer going crazy for them. I got these hoping to plant them, not eat them for a decade or so, But thanks for the info. Do you know when muscadine grapes are fully ripe? I have a woods full of those. The vines are killing several trees so I’ve got to thin them out. We figured out what they are and tasted some last year. They are delicious!

    • @samyoungblood3740
      @samyoungblood3740 Рік тому +4

      We’re wanting a all natural wild food forest for the future. We may not be around to enjoy all of it, but our children an grandchildren might.

    • @samyoungblood3740
      @samyoungblood3740 Рік тому +4

      I was diagnosed with an autoimmune disease. I’m becoming a believer in Organic foods “not found in stores” being the best medicine.

    • @edwardgomez5616
      @edwardgomez5616 Рік тому +8

      @@samyoungblood3740 the reason for waiting till the frost hits the persimmon is to make it sweet. They're bitter and make your tongue draw up like alum would, as persimmon and alum have a similar compound. My people would use persimmons to eat and treat thrush in children. The mayapple as mentioned before was eaten after turning color and to make poison for arrow points from the root, leaves for skin problems. You said persimmon get ripe around October where you live, they get ripe here in early-mid November. Paw paw gets ripe around now - September, passion fruits around April-june. Walnut, hickory, wild pecan. One question, I see the name Youngblood, which usually points to having native American ancestry. Are you of native ancestry. I am of Saponi people, in eastern North Carolina. To many of us we recognize our true ancestry, the Tous or Touscarora people, a warrior nation. I myself am involved in weapons making, medicinal plants, wild foraging. I am Iearning crafts to a lesser degree. I believe in having the ability and not need it, than needing ability and not having it. In this world you never know.

  • @StirlingLighthouse
    @StirlingLighthouse Рік тому +2

    Your information is always fantastic!
    Thank you 🙏

  • @allensnook7760
    @allensnook7760 Рік тому +2

    Thanks adam ive found these in my neck of woods here in mid-eastern pa.but wasnt sure of toxicity so didnt eat,which is a shame i too love starburst. I just love ur tutorials on shrooms n edible-non edible fauna!!!seems like i might know you two yrs back i went mushrooming with a fella who worked at a gas station on I-80 near loganton pa.he knew his shrooms we just small talked about them,next weekend he took me out to his haunts,found some lovely oysters.he had an odd hobby he told me he collected roadkill then bleached bones and wire n glued them into window ledge displays,that wasnt you was it,just wondering if i had at actually meet you once upon a time.cool if it was im even more addicated to outdoors from that influence.snooky pa.💥👍😜🤪👌💥

  • @terryblais9128
    @terryblais9128 Рік тому

    Thanks Adam You are a excellent teacher. I have only successfully harvested 3 Mayapples. The patch of green unripe ones I checked every 2 or 3 days. U fortunately the squirrels checked every 2 or 3 hours 😢. But the 3 I sampled were delicious. Much smaller I might add, you got some doozies there.

  • @bonniebertrand1189
    @bonniebertrand1189 Рік тому +1

    My father learned the following from his grandmother who passed it to me, and I passed it to my son. When he found a mayapple blossom and took it to his grandmother, he could go barefooted for the rest of the summer till he got a new pair of shoes for school in the fall. He was from WVA and we could find them in Ohio.

  • @strawberryjones7193
    @strawberryjones7193 11 місяців тому

    they created some new trails at our community park and I stumbled upon unknown to me plants which turned out to be these. soo many patches of them it was unreal. some very large too. the way they were flowering caught my eye as I was going up a steep part of the trail, that's how I got to see the flower under the two leaves of the plant otherwise I could surely have missed them. cool plant. I looked it up and learned it was these and about the little fruits so started making sure to check them out. have been taken photos of their progress. right now the fruit is out and growing, saw a few good sized ones, some had a reddish blush (not much) on the side otherwise a beautiful shiny green. I noticed what you said about the difference between the two leaved and one leaf plants, it was good to learn about the difference from you. this video was very informative, love your videos, am subscribed. take care.

  • @CliffsidePermaculture
    @CliffsidePermaculture Рік тому +1

    So good to have a fellow Pittsburgher so well versed in our local forage. I have may apples in my forest garden now, looking forward to see if they eventually fruit. ❤

  • @sniper.308
    @sniper.308 2 місяці тому +2

    I have a natural colony of the plants . Long lived I believe the patch could be hundreds of years old near a 150year + old oak I know the area remained natural for hundreds of years. They ripen at different times pick more than once. When Cold ripens over weeks . Warmer ripens in one week when full size.

  • @singingelephants5597
    @singingelephants5597 Рік тому +2

    I have seen those a lot and didn't know that they fruited.

  • @dfaz333
    @dfaz333 Рік тому +6

    Thank you, Adam. I know where a patch is located, but for years avoided because they're toxic. Thanks to your video, I'm definitely going to see if there are any fruits now.

  • @ronsimpson8666
    @ronsimpson8666 Рік тому +2

    Would love to see these video treasures before harvest! Going looking this week!!! ❤️✌️

  • @niteshades_promise
    @niteshades_promise Рік тому +1

    didn't know you could eat these. im going foraging. thanks for the awesome video.🍻

  • @amommamust
    @amommamust Рік тому +19

    My mother had a huge patch of these, and I never knew they were edible. I am not sure if I want to kick Mom's butt or my own!

  • @StarDreamMemories
    @StarDreamMemories Рік тому +1

    I never knew.
    I know I've come across these....I've definitely seen them flower.
    Thank you

  • @cryptonein
    @cryptonein Рік тому +1

    Thank you. These are everywhere near me, but never knew these could be consumed. Amazing.

  • @orion3267
    @orion3267 Рік тому +2

    I have over 5 wooded acres in western part of Virginia Shenandoah Valley and my Mayapples were already withered and gone by mid to late July. Can't even see traces of them anywhere here. These things literally grow all over the place. I think the squirrels got to them early too just like they throw off the Hickory nuts and cherries early as well.

  • @bernie2231
    @bernie2231 Рік тому +1

    Very informative. I have many may apples that grow on my property. I have always heard that they were edible, but when I bit in to one of the fruits, it was bitter so I spit it out. Now I know that it wasn't ripe. I can't wait to try them correctly. I have been educated. Thank you

  • @TediumGenius
    @TediumGenius 2 місяці тому

    Awesome video! My parents, probably out of an abundance of caution, told us always that these were poisonous. Very cool bush sweetener idea! Thanks for another great video!

  • @christopherklene1411
    @christopherklene1411 Рік тому

    Ty for teaching me something new today!! 😊