Dandelions and Civilization: A Forgotten History

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 8 сер 2024
  • Dandelions are among the most populous and widespread plants on earth. The secret to their success has to do both with their unique characteristics, and their inextricable connection to humans. The history of humans and dandelions is forever linked in ways that may surprise you.
    This is original content based on research by The History Guy. Images in the Public Domain are carefully selected and provide illustration. As images of actual events are sometimes not available, images of similar objects and events are used for illustration.
    All events are portrayed in historical context and for educational purposes. No images or content are primarily intended to shock and disgust. Those who do not learn from history are doomed to repeat it. Non censuram.
    Here's an awesome song about dandelions by an artist who happens to be a former student of mine. You can buy his music at the link provided. Really, he is a great guy. www.amazon.com/Dandelion-Girl...
    Find The History Guy at:
    Facebook: / thehistoryguyyt
    Patreon: / thehistoryguy
    The History Guy: History Deserves to Be Remembered is the place to find short snippets of forgotten history from five to fifteen minutes long. If you like history too, this is the channel for you.
    Subscribe for more forgotten history: / @thehistoryguychannel .
    Awesome The History Guy merchandise is available at:
    teespring.com/stores/the-hist...
    Script by JCG
    #history #thehistoryguy #botany

КОМЕНТАРІ • 4,7 тис.

  • @wickedcoolname399
    @wickedcoolname399 3 роки тому +2192

    I never understood the hate for dandelions. I think they're beautiful. I guarantee that if they were rare people would seek them out and plant them.

    • @colinlarson9656
      @colinlarson9656 Рік тому +39

      Yeah I never would have thought of that. But now you said it I agree.

    • @neilaleksandrov2655
      @neilaleksandrov2655 Рік тому +113

      i have also felt the same way... i think its crazy people try to poison their own land just to get rid of these wonderful flowers

    • @Jorg05111980
      @Jorg05111980 Рік тому +17

      In Asia they actually do

    • @radeon8461
      @radeon8461 Рік тому +56

      They compete out native species and even if you like that kind of flower, there are native equivilents everywhere that are better for the surrounding wildlife which has already evolved to suit them. Their ground hugging leaves also kill any surrounding grass and provide a food source for pests.

    • @MoonlightAcid1
      @MoonlightAcid1 Рік тому +12

      i mean yea, you can say that about anything, if it were rarer people would want it more. That isnt really saying much, I do agree that dandelions are nice though

  • @carlosenriquez2092
    @carlosenriquez2092 4 роки тому +1855

    I live in Texas and when finally decided I would scatter no more poison on my land the dandelion emerged triumphant. I save a fortune the pastures look beautiful in bloom the bees and butterflies are abundant. Yes I lost to the dandelions but still came out the winner.

    • @scottmantooth8785
      @scottmantooth8785 4 роки тому +148

      *you did not lose...you and the dandelions just have an understanding and mutual respect for each other and life is all the more sweeter because of that*

    • @singingstars5006
      @singingstars5006 4 роки тому +118

      I live in the former East Germany where nobody cares about dandelions. I was shocked the first time I saw a field of them! 😆 No body sprays weeds here. Roundup is sold in a small spray bottle behind a locked glass door. Totally funny considering the gallons of it my neighbor used to spray over his land. I LOVE not ever smelling Roundup in the air, despite being surrounded by farms. Even farms here don't use stenchy chemicals. It's wonderful!!!

    • @M.C.Blackwell
      @M.C.Blackwell 4 роки тому +22

      Carlos I love your comment

    • @ryanh6177
      @ryanh6177 4 роки тому +28

      In Canada they make for good target practice with hockey sticks.

    • @castoresnegros
      @castoresnegros 4 роки тому +15

      There 2 winners 🙏👍💯🎉

  • @jimbobbby
    @jimbobbby Рік тому +419

    Dandelions are often one of the first plants to get kids into nature because of how they disperse their seeds. My son is just discovering them now and he is totally enraptured.

    • @kocmnkhorror787
      @kocmnkhorror787 Рік тому +6

      I remember as a kid trying to get the yellow dandelion petals to change into the white airborne seeds by folding the petals up 😂 definitely one of my first introductions!

    • @Kellycreator
      @Kellycreator Рік тому +2

      Treasure the memories ❤

    • @GarthKlein
      @GarthKlein Рік тому +13

      My mother insisted that God created the dandelion so that kids would have flowers to pick and not get yelled at.

    • @JaSon-wc4pn
      @JaSon-wc4pn Рік тому +1

      Make a wish, then blow 🌬

    • @danpro4519
      @danpro4519 Рік тому +3

      Yes! That, and they are among the most common early flowers any kid will encounter, and no adult will tell them not to pick and play with them. Dandelions FTW!

  • @socal5039
    @socal5039 Рік тому +293

    I have no idea how this page came up but this was 💯. I'm part Greek and we eat dandelion greens "radikia"
    almost every day. I buy organic dandelion greens at least twice a week we boil them for about 10 min In drinking water. Drink the water as tea. Then we add good Greek olive oil, pink salt and lemon. You can eat it as a side dish. It's so good for your liver too. I remember when I was young my grandmother would stop me while I was driving when she would see a clean piece of grass that had dandelions and she would pick them. It's one of the foods she survived during the World War II in Greece when there was no food.🌼💛

    • @seanotron4559
      @seanotron4559 Рік тому +3

      Neato!

    • @planetdisco4821
      @planetdisco4821 Рік тому +10

      As a resident of Melbourne, Australia (largest Greek city outside of Greece) I condone this op. As a kid I used to see all the old Greek nanas collecting wild dandelions beside the train tracks and wondering why they didn’t just eat canned peas like a regular Australian lol. It was only years later that I realised they survived starvation in WWII by doing this and also (tikanis, Boleh kala) that it tastes bloody awesome! Yasu mate….

    • @bigboss-tl2xr
      @bigboss-tl2xr Рік тому +6

      Thank you for the recipe, I shall try it today!

    • @socal5039
      @socal5039 Рік тому +1

      @@planetdisco4821 🥰

    • @socal5039
      @socal5039 Рік тому

      @@bigboss-tl2xr 👍

  • @gbalock
    @gbalock 4 роки тому +982

    As a beekeeper, the emergence of dandelions is a welcome sight. It is one of the earliest blooming food sources for bees.

    • @jfinkle1
      @jfinkle1 3 роки тому +14

      We use the dandelion as our sign to put the supers on the hives.

    • @ZOMBIEHEADSHOTKILLER
      @ZOMBIEHEADSHOTKILLER Рік тому +10

      yeah, ive always like them, more so now that im a beekeeper too, had to leave a comment about it being good food for bees too.

    • @EscapeePrisoner
      @EscapeePrisoner Рік тому +14

      In Australia, a number of our native bees benefit greatly from the Dandelion too.

    • @WhyAreYouThisWay
      @WhyAreYouThisWay Рік тому +22

      Both my neighbor and I have replaced our lawns with clover & dandelion. Why fight nature? It's a beautiful sight.

    • @mistag3860
      @mistag3860 Рік тому +10

      crazy that they give the nectar, but dont need fertilization by bees.

  • @rtstrong
    @rtstrong 5 років тому +722

    My grandpa always maintained that if dandelions were harder to raise, everyone would want them.

    • @truthreignsfacts4997
      @truthreignsfacts4997 4 роки тому +34

      r strong Wise grandpa

    • @jeffreyzheng8875
      @jeffreyzheng8875 3 роки тому +19

      Meanwhile we searched our entire city for dandelions to feed our rabbit.

    • @kurtfeierabend1206
      @kurtfeierabend1206 3 роки тому +47

      The difference between a flower and a weed is: One you try to grow - and can't. The other you try to kill - and can't.

    • @therugburnz
      @therugburnz 2 роки тому +8

      @@jeffreyzheng8875 I love them for feeding animals and people, but around my place the Interstate Highway 55 most likely makes those near said highway toxic if only slightly.

    • @salyluz6535
      @salyluz6535 Рік тому +5

      @@jeffreyzheng8875 Did you try the parks? Probably the best thing would be to get out of the city, and go to a county or state park. Take a walk along the river, go to historical sites etc. If you want to be sure the ones you are collecting in the city have not been sprayed, I suggest collecting dandelions from alongside or behind abandoned buildings where the property owner has not been investing any time or money.

  • @arcticwolf4029
    @arcticwolf4029 Рік тому +169

    Yes, thumbs up for dandelions. When we lived in a city, we did not mow the lawn until after the carpet of dandelions had finished flowering (ignored the neighbors!). One sunny day, as I idly looked out the window, a mother walked with her two or three-year-old boy. After they rounded the corner, he spotted the dandelions. His little arms opened, his face lit up and he ran to the middle of the lawn and, laughing, sat among the dandelions with a happy shout: "Gold flowers! Gold flowers!" He laughed, his mother smiled, I smiled. Long live dandelions!

    • @PADS62
      @PADS62 Рік тому +7

      What a Beautiful little story! Blessings to you and yours! 😊

    • @MoniMeka
      @MoniMeka Рік тому +4

      Awww, that's so cute! 😁

    • @bleh5409
      @bleh5409 Рік тому +7

      Whenever my 2 year go for walk. I get a handful of dandelion flowers. It smells so good😊

  • @mirzamay
    @mirzamay Рік тому +99

    I never understood why anybody would want a boring sterile lawn without these beautiful little flowers.
    I feel like it's people who can't really think for themselves and only chase the elusive idea of pure conformity that want to get rid of them.
    I mean you have to be really sad inside to not see the gift of these little yellow suns.

    • @valrosenbaum6435
      @valrosenbaum6435 Рік тому +2

      🎉❤I agree

    • @ericbarber3420
      @ericbarber3420 Рік тому +3

      When my pain is not having a pure wildflower lawn over the perfect lawn, then i look around and see a few neighbours in my part of the village doing the same, by letting poppies and long grass grow. makes me feel like i belong or like i’m part of some unspoken movement.

    • @gemzoey1313
      @gemzoey1313 Рік тому +1

      Well said!!❤

    • @ginalibrizzi5204
      @ginalibrizzi5204 Рік тому

      TRUTH! ❤

    • @12thDecember
      @12thDecember Рік тому

      Judgmental much?

  • @maddogames
    @maddogames 5 років тому +710

    "A weed is just a flower in the wrong place"

    • @johngililland6166
      @johngililland6166 5 років тому +7

      Thank you. LOL

    • @roberts8507
      @roberts8507 5 років тому +18

      Wrong requires expectation. No expectation, everything is alright.

    • @baldy6789
      @baldy6789 5 років тому +21

      Most weeds are edible something you all need to consider you never know when you might be extremely grateful for the wild edible weeds🌏🌏🌏👽

    • @starlady98
      @starlady98 5 років тому +32

      "The only difference between a flower and a weed is a weed has a greater will to live." - Garfield

    • @theberrby6836
      @theberrby6836 5 років тому

      Truth.

  • @OnTheHorizonSomewhere
    @OnTheHorizonSomewhere Рік тому +509

    I started keeping them in my yard when I noticed a duck feeding on the leaves of one, and noticing the insects that visit the flowers and it got me thinking that by removing them I am taking away a food supply from nature. Nature needs all the help it can get these days. Love the confused looks of people who admire my well cultivated garden that has dandelions all over the place.

    • @greenteabear-fb7st
      @greenteabear-fb7st Рік тому +37

      I live on the 3rd floor of a newer apartment, have no balcony and have extremely limited growing space (thanks to rail hooks and a couple hangign baskets). I've had such a hard time getting anything to grow so I started dandelions this spring. They're so easy to grow and I can't wait to eat my first dandelion salad!

    • @eemoogee160
      @eemoogee160 Рік тому +21

      The long tap root makes deep minerals available to other plants.

    • @Gilberto90
      @Gilberto90 Рік тому +12

      They also provide competition for other pests to eat instead of your cultivated plants so the plants you like get nibbled less.

    • @653j521
      @653j521 Рік тому +7

      @@greenteabear-fb7stI wonder how Americans can get Japanese dandelions in other colors. I always wanted to try that. They might be gorgeous.

    • @dickJohnsonpeter
      @dickJohnsonpeter Рік тому

      Then there's Plantain (not the banana looking plant) That ruins your lawn but is medically and nutritionally very beneficial yet it makes your lawn ugly so it's hard to know what to do. I tend to just keep some and get rid of the rest, same with dandelions, There's so many I don't need them in my lawn because there's always a ton of places that they grow undisturbed and people who don't get rid of them in their lawns. I eat them using the flowers which are the tastiest part and tje leaves although they're a bit bitter, and the roots for tea.

  • @radosawimianowski5222
    @radosawimianowski5222 Рік тому +214

    I'm from Poland and my mom used to make "dandelion honey", which is made by boiling the flowers and adding sugar. It tasted like real honey too!

    • @sarahbeaulieu999
      @sarahbeaulieu999 Рік тому +12

      A lot of vegans do this if they want to use honey

    • @sincerely-b
      @sincerely-b Рік тому +5

      I've made dandelion honey. It's surprisingly good.

    • @dproduzioni
      @dproduzioni Рік тому +15

      I'm a beekeeper in Italy and I can confirm this recipe a friend from Poland told me, actually tastes really good! I don't think it tastes much like honey, but it has that "flower" character you can find in honey and pollen also.
      Great recipe! And great episode: this guy amazes me

    • @sunh1213
      @sunh1213 Рік тому +2

      Thank you! I look forward to trying this.

    • @eva5601
      @eva5601 Рік тому +2

      Thank you. I am going to try to make that recipe.

  • @robinarai9545
    @robinarai9545 Рік тому +43

    I’m from a tropical country where we don’t see dandelions. I was delighted to find them growing all around me when I moved to the US for studies. Ever so often I take a bunch and make tiny floral arrangements for my room. But to my dismay, I found out people don’t like them as much. Every time the dandelions are in full bloom, the landscapers mow them. 😢

    • @MemoGrafix
      @MemoGrafix Рік тому

      I love the rich vibrant yellow color of Dandees. I remember when My Mother had bought a box of Dandelion tea when she started getting into herbal healing way back in the 1970s. I used to think the tea was different from the flowers on the ground. I didn't start consuming it until I learned its a cure & preventative of Canser in 2005. I realized the real reason there is a massive effort to kill them.

  • @kimcater9199
    @kimcater9199 5 років тому +401

    It's the first "Mommy I love you" flower.

    • @heidimisfeldt5685
      @heidimisfeldt5685 4 роки тому +5

      So true. 🏡 😎 😍

    • @heidimisfeldt5685
      @heidimisfeldt5685 4 роки тому +17

      @@bweaver1930
      Unbelievable rude reaction of that school teacher.
      Some people shouldn't be working with kids.

    • @bookieone9277
      @bookieone9277 4 роки тому +4

      Awe. That's cute and commonly true.

    • @BillBrasky7718
      @BillBrasky7718 4 роки тому +4

      Probably my daughters favorite flower. Breaks her heart when I pull them from the lawn. Somthing very primal there... it's hard to wrap ones head around.

    • @tritchie6272
      @tritchie6272 4 роки тому +4

      @@bweaver1930 Sounds like that teacher was a rude idiot.

  • @joeanderson8839
    @joeanderson8839 Рік тому +294

    The reason our lawn looks so good is because of our dandelions and other wild flowers. The roots of the dandelions aerate the soil and make our lawn more fertile. And when they bloom , it is spectacular.

    • @turtlejeepjen314
      @turtlejeepjen314 Рік тому +12

      I totally agree about how cool dandelions & wildflowers are, too- I’m in Kansas, where there used to be no houses around, & the few acres of land we own looked amazing;but now there are houses choking the edges & you can see where our natural land meets the chemicals that run off their property & bleed into our field.

    • @REMEMBERFINCH
      @REMEMBERFINCH Рік тому +8

      They're also more likely to take root in loose soil. Let them grow and soon enough the soil will be healthy enough to grow thick grass.

    • @davidgraham2673
      @davidgraham2673 Рік тому +1

      I bet it looks great.

  • @Miguel_and_The_Microbes
    @Miguel_and_The_Microbes Рік тому +393

    seeking a "perfect" green lawn is a disease; we always let our dandelions grow in our yard in boulder in the 70s and 80s......................... It's cool to see episodes like this

    • @zz449944
      @zz449944 Рік тому +23

      People wanting perfect lawns is the reason why Homeowners use more herbicides than Farmers.

    • @amg9163
      @amg9163 Рік тому +8

      I'd be willing to bet that the majority of people who use herbicides on weed consider them *_"environmentally conscious"._*

    • @IchorX
      @IchorX Рік тому

      Home Owner's Associations are a crime against nature.

    • @skinny771
      @skinny771 Рік тому +9

      Just moved to Broomfield Colorado and all the neighbors hate that I let the dandelions grow

    • @amg9163
      @amg9163 Рік тому +3

      @@skinny771 This could be a good way to tell who the new neighbors are ;-)

  • @jondoealoe
    @jondoealoe Рік тому +160

    The genetic diversity hidden in dandelions is amazing!
    I found a little dandelion like the ones that grow in Southern California by the docks in Hilo, Hawaii, took it home and put it in a planter.
    When it's seeds came I planted them too.
    The dandelion seeds that came from the original dandelion I found by the docks grow 8-10 feet tall plants in Hawaii.
    I've had this strain of dandelions growing in my yard organically for about 12 years.

    • @allenmitchell2762
      @allenmitchell2762 Рік тому +3

      10:17

    • @skylerthompson8652
      @skylerthompson8652 Рік тому +7

      Holy shit, a 10 ft tall dandelion. That plant asserts its own dominance

    • @jondoealoe
      @jondoealoe Рік тому +2

      @@skylerthompson8652I have shallow dirt and low quality soil in my yard.
      My friend tells me that sugar cane grows bigger and sweeter in Puerto Rico, mangoes, papayas, and guavas grow bigger and sweeter there too; because they have much richer soil.
      There's got to be places where dandelions grow over 10 feet tall.

    • @topsideplanet234
      @topsideplanet234 Рік тому +3

      Wow that sounds incredible, do you have any pictures of them?

    • @jondoealoe
      @jondoealoe Рік тому +1

      @@topsideplanet234Yep, who wouldn't take pictures of giant dandelions that grew from tiny dandelions?

  • @griplove
    @griplove 5 років тому +471

    Lady’s and gentlemen I give you the only man able to get me to click on a video with dandelion in the title... and keep me watching for 11.5 minutes

  • @beerandgear6986
    @beerandgear6986 5 років тому +324

    one other thing tangentially related. Dandelions are often the first flower of spring and the first food source for bees after a long winter.

    • @Nebelwerfer210cm
      @Nebelwerfer210cm 5 років тому +18

      Plant early-blooming native wildflowers and shrubs instead. Dandelion pollen lacks key amino acids that wild pollinators need to reproduce.

    • @womanoftheozarks
      @womanoftheozarks 5 років тому +21

      @@Nebelwerfer210cm Thanks for info but bees love them and as it seems they need all the help they can get due to our "lawn free weeds"..... trying to copy the worthless wealthy that have destroyed most everywhere natural.

    • @Nebelwerfer210cm
      @Nebelwerfer210cm 5 років тому +10

      @@womanoftheozarks You're right, they do need help. So, like, actually try helping.

    • @pixyrosejes7133
      @pixyrosejes7133 5 років тому +7

      🐝🌼🐝🌼🐝🌼🐝🌼🐝🌼

    • @DiamondHedgehog
      @DiamondHedgehog 5 років тому +5

      Yes, bees still do like dandelions even if they don't really need to be crosspolinated.

  • @EpicSpence
    @EpicSpence Рік тому +52

    At Calke Abbey in the UK they let the dandelions grow in huge numbers on some parts of the estate. Some hills are completely yellow and it looks surprisingly nice this time of year.

  • @trishthehomesteader9873
    @trishthehomesteader9873 Рік тому +23

    I'm happy to see so many people understanding and appreciating the dandelions!👍👏🎉

  • @evenflow3256
    @evenflow3256 5 років тому +784

    All my neighbors poison the ground with weed killer while mine has dandelion and clover patches ,it's beautiful .

    • @mythra7174
      @mythra7174 5 років тому +122

      Good for you. I think we should do away with monotonous "lawns". So much water wasted, so many toxins and chemicals poured into the ground (and ground water) for a stupid, boring expanse of just *green* . Everyone needs to have a bit more natural variety in their gardens and yards.

    • @Cerinaya
      @Cerinaya 5 років тому +18

      Most of our yard is clover and dandelions. My grandmother didn't like them and tried to take out any she could with the hoe.

    • @waterandafter
      @waterandafter 5 років тому +26

      I don't mind dandelions, clover or violets, but that creeping Charlie has got to go.

    • @caitojones3140
      @caitojones3140 5 років тому +52

      Clover is a nitrogen fixer too. People kill weeds because they think they’re stealing nutrients from their grass, but often they’re doing the opposite.

    • @PabloMelendez1969
      @PabloMelendez1969 5 років тому +18

      I bet there's cute natives that could benefit from your benign neglect. Visit a natural preserve nearby to find them, or find the website of your local native plant society.

  • @steveb6103
    @steveb6103 5 років тому +222

    A weed is a plant that you do everything to kill and it keeps growing. A plant is something that you do everything to keep alive and it die' s.

    • @joezeigler1064
      @joezeigler1064 5 років тому +24

      I've always called a weed a perfectly fine plant growing where it is not wanted. Corn is a weed in a soybean field.

    • @july8xx
      @july8xx 5 років тому +8

      @@joezeigler1064And roses were considered weeds at on time.

    • @joezeigler1064
      @joezeigler1064 5 років тому +14

      @@july8xx interesting
      Tomatoes were thought to be poisonous...same family as nightshade

    • @PierreaSweedieCat
      @PierreaSweedieCat 5 років тому +11

      @@joezeigler1064 YES! PLEASE, History Guy, do a story on theTomato!

    • @joezeigler1064
      @joezeigler1064 5 років тому +5

      @Wade Haden
      Both were "New World" crops. Cherry tomatoes were taken to England and planted as ornamental hedges for their bright red fruits...the large beefsteak type tomato was developed much later in Ohio. Yes potatoes are also nightshade family but the roots were eaten so maybe that was considered safe. Bright red commonly signifies poisonous. I could be wrong about all of this...

  • @terrywestbrook-lienert2296
    @terrywestbrook-lienert2296 Рік тому +26

    My grandmother used dandelions for wine making and cooked the leaves as greens.
    Thank you, History Guy, for this episode.

  • @lauracaruso2524
    @lauracaruso2524 Рік тому +36

    I watched this video because my husband has been a long time dandelion fan. I sent him this video, and I'm sure he'll love all these extra facts to bolster his advocacy for this much misunderstood wildflower. Your presentation is great, and I'm now a subscriber!

    • @fensoxx
      @fensoxx Рік тому +1

      You won’t regret the subscription! Not every video will get a play, but he is bound to put one out that puts a smile on your face sooner rather than later. This channel has become the chicken soup of my UA-cam viewing.

  • @johnrickard8512
    @johnrickard8512 5 років тому +568

    Hmm...if a uniform lawn is desired, how about I kill off all the grass and replace it entirely with dandelions?

    • @brandi8040
      @brandi8040 5 років тому +52

      LOL, A lovely idea, but your neighbors would hate you. But on the plus side, bumblebees and butterflies would thankk you greatly!

    • @brandi8040
      @brandi8040 5 років тому +62

      Also! Try clover! It doesn't get as tall, and also produces flowers! And there isn't a need to mow!

    • @PabloMelendez1969
      @PabloMelendez1969 5 років тому +16

      I'm guessing it's against dandelion strategy to establish itself in one spot. It must require disturbed soil and little competition. It probably has to yield to meaner invasives like the wild radish and the wild mustard after a while.

    • @ElinWinblad
      @ElinWinblad 5 років тому +15

      There is also a short walkable thyme that’s pretty

    • @brettb9194
      @brettb9194 5 років тому +7

      difficult - most herbicides interfere with a process in the broad leafs (they mimic auxin); herbicides that kill grass will tend to kill everything

  • @billgross3579
    @billgross3579 5 років тому +206

    Thank you for this! As beekeepers, we appreciate dandelions because they are the first post-winter nectar/food source for honey bees, native bees, and other pollinators. Dandelions are the life-giving food pollinators need in early spring before other flowering plants have blossomed.

    • @jfinkle1
      @jfinkle1 3 роки тому +3

      We put our "supers" on when the dandelions start to bloom.

    • @ReflectedMiles
      @ReflectedMiles 2 роки тому

      Like Asian carp, we should always be happy for non-native, invasive species.

    • @kevingath9801
      @kevingath9801 Рік тому

      @@ReflectedMiles always happy for invasive species? Carp is cool but privet and wisteria are destroying natural and balanced ecosystems

  • @ambiej123
    @ambiej123 Рік тому +14

    When I was a kid we had a large yard with beautiful dandelions. I would sit for hours and make dandelion chains, I’d pick dandelion bouquets, I’d flick their heads off to a poem, make a joke with them to friends and gross them out- I LOVED how bright and cheery they were, and the unique shape of their pettles. And then the MOST magical thing happened when they were ready to seed- I’d blow the seeds and make a wish, I’d pretend to be Belle from Beauty and the beast and sing her songs, I’d take each seed off one by one just to see how they stuck to the inside. I LOVED dandelions. As an adult, I enjoy dandelion tea, and happily eat the greens in salads when offered. I never understood why people don’t like dandelions- and as a teenager needed to be told not to blow the orbs as I walked past city folk lawns.

    • @valrosenbaum6435
      @valrosenbaum6435 Рік тому +4

      🎉❤I love your story.. blow those orbs! I will today..& I'll make a wish!

    • @winnepeterson6570
      @winnepeterson6570 Рік тому +1

      I used to say that poem but can’t remember it now.

  • @comcilliak
    @comcilliak Рік тому +23

    You might like the old german kids show "Löwenzahn" (dandelion). It was a guy, living in a tiny house in a nice garden, explaining stuff about the environment and technology - the intro was dandelions growing from every crack and eventually overgrowing a city. Good times

  • @TheMilwaukeeMark
    @TheMilwaukeeMark 5 років тому +412

    The one thing I really like about this channel is that you can play it without having to watch the video. I play the videos in my work truck over the stereo, it's almost like a mini-info-podcast. One of the BEST information channels available on UA-cam!

    • @chrisj197438
      @chrisj197438 5 років тому +15

      Mark The Shark
      I do the same thing when I go on road trips. My kid doesn’t realize she’s learning lol

    • @aaronj3062
      @aaronj3062 5 років тому +3

      Me to, love that about this channel!

    • @markschwartz5614
      @markschwartz5614 5 років тому +6

      I as well do this on the way to and from work. House chores as well.

    • @stevek6486
      @stevek6486 5 років тому +3

      I just thought of /did this this week on a road trip!

    • @chrishieke1261
      @chrishieke1261 5 років тому +2

      I'm in the same boat. Just listening is highly enjoyable!

  • @denniswhite166
    @denniswhite166 5 років тому +185

    The War of the Dandelions is over. My front lawn is a testament to this. They have won.

    • @mikebussy3334
      @mikebussy3334 5 років тому +7

      I like to describe my lawn as an urban habitat.

    • @WildWinterberry
      @WildWinterberry 5 років тому +12

      The bees will thank you

    • @alanaadams7440
      @alanaadams7440 5 років тому +1

      Lol

    • @TheogRahoomie
      @TheogRahoomie 5 років тому +10

      Only place I actively fight the dandelion is in my vegetable garden. There free to colonize the rest of my lawn but war is waged in the garden.

    • @denniswhite166
      @denniswhite166 5 років тому +5

      @@maro7125 I don't use pesticides, never did I know how harmful they are. I dig them up by hand. Or I should say dug. I quit!!!!

  • @SGT_Fon
    @SGT_Fon Рік тому +13

    My Oma (grandma) credited the dandelion for helping her family survive the last few months of WW II. It was something the family was able to forage to feed themselves after food became scarce twords the end and even after the war. I still make dandelion salad at the start of spring when the plant is still tender and young. The rest of the year I let them grow over the summer and then let my geese forage on it just before the first frost !

    • @trishthehomesteader9873
      @trishthehomesteader9873 Рік тому

      I pick some daily for my chickens. I probably have the healthiest chickens in town! I also dry them and add to their feed in the winter. 🙂

  • @richardjohnson7563
    @richardjohnson7563 Рік тому +4

    Dandelions are a great lesson in persistence and perseverance. With all the methods man has tried to rid the world of them, they are still with us. Keep up the resistance, Dandelions, you are beautiful.

  • @jamesball6069
    @jamesball6069 5 років тому +282

    I like them. They are beautiful. One of my favorite flowers.

    • @linda7545
      @linda7545 5 років тому +10

      Me, too. And the seed puffs are fun to make a wish on then blow them out into the wind :)

    • @liliencalvel6151
      @liliencalvel6151 5 років тому

      Do you leave them alone or kill them in your yard?

    • @liliencalvel6151
      @liliencalvel6151 5 років тому

      @@linda7545 Do you kill them?

    • @linda7545
      @linda7545 5 років тому +1

      @@liliencalvel6151 No way.

    • @jamesball6069
      @jamesball6069 5 років тому +2

      When they are in bloom I put off mowing.

  • @lesleyfitzpatrick1711
    @lesleyfitzpatrick1711 2 роки тому +586

    Dandelions were among the first greens to come up in the spring and provided essential nutrients to the people coming out of the winter diets. The introduction and spread of it across north america was deliberate by those pioneers

    • @savage22bolt32
      @savage22bolt32 Рік тому +30

      I just picked a handful of small dandy lion leaves, washed, dried, chopped & warmed up with my eggs.
      As a kid, my mom would give peach baskets to my brother, sister & I to fill with the blossoms. She made a pretty good wine!

    • @davidvarey5072
      @davidvarey5072 Рік тому +6

      It just spred

    • @grtwhtbnr
      @grtwhtbnr Рік тому +3

      ​@@savage22bolt32 you can make a wine?!

    • @savage22bolt32
      @savage22bolt32 Рік тому +9

      @@grtwhtbnr yes, from the blossoms!
      My mom's would always be cloudy, but its a white wine & I loved being able to taste test it with her.

    • @grtwhtbnr
      @grtwhtbnr Рік тому +3

      @@savage22bolt32 thank you for sharing. Do you know how she did it?

  • @labellavita2248
    @labellavita2248 Рік тому +4

    Fields of dandelions remind me of my childhood, and they always make me smile.

  • @planetdisco4821
    @planetdisco4821 Рік тому +8

    This was great! I’m now adding this to my personal pantheon of ways to bore my co-workers when they rudely interrupt me from reading a book on my lunch break. Other go to subjects include: the history of salt. The birth of the metric system and its baseline metrological standards. The taxonomy and life cycles of the giant south Australian cuttlefish (apanama sepia btw, thanks for asking) and why they predominately tend breed in an oligotrophic inverse estuary ….. and now the correlation between dandelions and civilisation! I live for information like this and I love this channel for it…

  • @thomaslee7810
    @thomaslee7810 5 років тому +52

    Soak the yellow flower in salt water (cleans and removed any bugs), then coat in flour and fry. My grandmother used to cook them.

    • @chrisebert7307
      @chrisebert7307 5 років тому +3

      I was just introduced to fried dandelions by a friend recently. Delicious i must say

    • @Oldbmwr100rs
      @Oldbmwr100rs 5 років тому +6

      That sounds like a depression dish! it also sounds really interesting, much like adding the leaves to salad and toasting the roots to make a coffee substitute.

    • @zb7293
      @zb7293 5 років тому

      I always eaten it as a salad. ..
      Work's amazingly is you have iron deficiency. ...
      But hearing of vine, I must found it and try it...

    • @lynnmitzy1643
      @lynnmitzy1643 5 років тому +1

      I am gonna try this ♥️💛♥️

    • @CompostWatcher
      @CompostWatcher 5 років тому +2

      If you're not a vegan, eat the bugs.

  • @MattyMcFly_
    @MattyMcFly_ 5 років тому +318

    This is the kind of video I didn't know I needed until I watched it 👌

    • @jimb01
      @jimb01 5 років тому +7

      Who knew :)

    • @preshisify
      @preshisify 5 років тому +3

      😂☕

    • @kari7403
      @kari7403 5 років тому +5

      I find myself thinking that, surprisingly often, when watching videos by History Guy. 👍

    • @tomasinacovell4293
      @tomasinacovell4293 5 років тому +3

      Righto! It's a sea-change.

  • @carolineatkinson5982
    @carolineatkinson5982 Рік тому +5

    as a forager and a lawn hater, I love dandelions! They're wonderful to cook or make teas with, and i love their rebelious and weedy nature. They're like the kindest punk kid you've ever known

  • @ZeeboidThrok
    @ZeeboidThrok Рік тому +7

    I used to bring my mother bouquets of dandilions that I picked on the way home from school. She always proudly displayed them in a small vase she kept just for them.
    I learned years later that my great grandmother, a poet, wrote a beautiful poem called "my darling dandyline" that made me realise that I wasnt the only one who loved them.

  • @natashasemrau3670
    @natashasemrau3670 5 років тому +106

    Dandelions are pretty, and are useful to us. I find dandelions a nice spot of yellow in a green carpet. We used to eat them, make wine and coffee out of them. It's not really a weed, dandelions open the ground with their long tap roots. Thank you for this informational video.💛💚💚💛💚💛💚💛💚💛💚💛💚💛💚💛💚💛💚💛💚💛💚💛💚💛💚💛💚💛💚💛💚💛💚💛💚💛💚💛💚💛💚💛💚💛💚💛💚💛💚💛💚💛💚💛

    • @natashasemrau3670
      @natashasemrau3670 5 років тому +2

      Thank you for Highlighting my comment. Dandelions away in the wind!!!🌲🌾🍃🌼🌼🌹🌻🌿🌿🏵💐🍀☘💮🌺🌺🌷🌸🌱🌱🌲🌾🍃🍃🌼🌼🌹🌻🌻🌻🌿🌿🏵💐🍀☘💮🌺🌷🌸🌸🌱🌲🌲🌾🍃🌼🌼🌹🌹🌻

  • @christianradioE5
    @christianradioE5 5 років тому +66

    Dandelion jelly tastes like wild honey. (The dandelion flowers are often the first Spring food source for bees.)

    • @kevinhickman4851
      @kevinhickman4851 4 роки тому +2

      Yes! Every year my daughter and i pick dandelions and make jelly!

    • @adamtrembley4168
      @adamtrembley4168 4 роки тому

      How do u make it I would like to try it. And ive never had dandelion coffee sounds good 👍🏻

    • @graceskerp
      @graceskerp 4 роки тому +1

      And wine.

    • @jacksparrowismydaddy
      @jacksparrowismydaddy 4 роки тому +1

      I learned you can make bread too imagine if you mix the jelly with homemade butter and and spread it on dandelion toast

    • @kimchee94112
      @kimchee94112 4 роки тому

      Dandelion roots as coffee or tea.
      Another one is polkweed, careful how you prepare it though.
      ua-cam.com/video/fRF24LY5pvw/v-deo.html

  • @jsspoonamore
    @jsspoonamore Рік тому +45

    I am a horticultural therapist and I personally have always loved dandelions. They are beautiful and bloom early and in a mild winter bloom even in the midst of winter. Like a ray of sunshine

    • @franklinstephen3268
      @franklinstephen3268 Рік тому +1

      Hey there! I came across your comment and I just had to reach out and say hi. Your perspective really caught my attention and I would love to get to know you better. Would you be interested in chatting sometime? Looking forward to hearing back from you! 😊

  • @JonnoPlays
    @JonnoPlays Рік тому +1

    This was a fantastic video. Thanks for sharing!

  • @brandi8040
    @brandi8040 5 років тому +297

    I love dandelions! So do our bumblebees and butterflies! 💕

    • @styromaniac6967
      @styromaniac6967 5 років тому +9

      Honey bees too.

    • @saltytraveller
      @saltytraveller 4 роки тому +5

      Dandelions are among the first flowers of spring to feed newly awakened pollinators.

    • @LuckyBaldwin777
      @LuckyBaldwin777 4 роки тому +3

      He said dandelions set seed asexually - no pollen needed and each seed is a clone of the parent. So why would they produce pollen and nectar?

    • @saltytraveller
      @saltytraveller 4 роки тому +1

      @@LuckyBaldwin777 They are probably self pollinating.

    • @arthas640
      @arthas640 4 роки тому +2

      chickens love dandelion greens and all the vitamin A in the leaves will given the extra dark, rich yolks. one of the reasons why cheap factory farmed eggs have such pale watery yolks is because they mainly just eat soybeans and corn with some high fat byproducts like bean cake (like sesame seeds after the oil has been expressed) so the only vitamin A they get is the tiny bit thats in the corn.

  • @davidcopperfield-notthemag397
    @davidcopperfield-notthemag397 5 років тому +99

    I knew a lovely 90+ year old lady who ate dandilions every day she could get them. She would excitedly tell us the benefits of eating them and encourage us to eat them too. Couldnt argue with her logic...I couldnt keep up with her! And she was always happy! 😃😄😆

    • @here_we_go_again2571
      @here_we_go_again2571 5 років тому +7

      My grandparents ate them every spring.
      My grandmother made dandelion wine
      from the flowers all summer long. They
      also had a huge veggie garden that
      provided them with canned vegetables
      throughout the winter. And, they raised
      their own livestock for slaughter (had
      a smoke-house too).

    • @lizziesangi1602
      @lizziesangi1602 5 років тому +1

      @David Copper...
      Great news!

    • @kathleennorton6108
      @kathleennorton6108 5 років тому +5

      I wonder if their happy, cheerful flowers contain properties that help cause happiness.

    • @christianfreedom-seeker934
      @christianfreedom-seeker934 5 років тому

      90+ and eating tons of weed killer? Um, not smart.

    • @davidcopperfield-notthemag397
      @davidcopperfield-notthemag397 5 років тому +6

      @@christianfreedom-seeker934 There was no weed killer on the Dandlions my friend ate. Or...obviously they would be dead. Only wild dandelions. Um, smart!

  • @LS-xs7sg
    @LS-xs7sg Рік тому +5

    I remember one time going for a walk in a woods near my home. There was a farmers field that had been left to go fallow and it was totally carpeted with bright yellow. As I got closer I saw that it was entirely made up of dandelions. It was beautiful. I won’t ever look at them the same way again.

  • @trixifield7925
    @trixifield7925 Рік тому +2

    They're some of the first flowers to offer nectar to our native bees so really important. I'm in the UK, and it used to be that our councils mowed the grass and wildflower verges, and in some cases weedkiller might have been used. It's lovely to see that they are left alone now all along the lanes and roundabouts, giving the pollinating insects plenty to feed on and more corridors to get to other flowers in other areas. Mowing comes later, when the flowers have died off. My mother used to make dandelion wine, and leaves in salads. During the war they made dandelion coffee. I love to see the dandelions, daisies and buttercups in my lawn. Perfectly tended and short-mown green lawns are just so sterile looking! I've noticed now that that dandelion season is more or less over, I'm seeing in their places false dandelion (hypochoeris radicata), equally pretty and rather nice as a cut flower for the vase.

  • @insertnamehere5146
    @insertnamehere5146 5 років тому +56

    i deliberately allow Dandelions to grow in my lawn until they have nice big leafs. I then carefully remove the plant with its main root for my tortoises who love them and they are extremely good for them.

    • @pythongunner
      @pythongunner 5 років тому +3

      Used to have an Iguana that loved them....miss you Chester

    • @carstenssmith753
      @carstenssmith753 5 років тому

      What lucky tortoises to have such a caring owner!

    • @insertnamehere5146
      @insertnamehere5146 5 років тому

      well thank you. I have had them for 35 years and its likely I will have to hand them on when I get too old as they are likely to outlive me :o/

  • @greyferguson9319
    @greyferguson9319 5 років тому +103

    Dandelion wine is wonderful when done right. Dandelions are such happy little flowers!

    • @cynthiaennis3107
      @cynthiaennis3107 5 років тому +2

      Pearly Everlasting I’ve never had it, but my great aunts used to make it...they were all born in the 1800’s! I wish I had known what parts I could’ve eaten as a child, as our huge lawn was full of them! I would’ve been the healthiest child in our suburb!

  • @LauraEllen999
    @LauraEllen999 6 місяців тому

    This may be the best video I've ever seen on UA-cam, ever. Super informative. Thanks so much for making this!

  • @user-mu8ho3tt7p
    @user-mu8ho3tt7p 2 місяці тому +1

    Another great video! I took can just play the vid and listen to your narration. Thanks H- Guy!!

  • @davidparadis490
    @davidparadis490 4 роки тому +99

    Before I even watch this, my grandmother was so poor growing up in the 1st 2 decades of the 1900's, they had to collect dandelions along the roads on many days to make dandelion salad so they could eat

    • @an-tm3250
      @an-tm3250 Рік тому +11

      Early colonists had contests for the most prolific growth on a lawn. Later it was scorned as a weed. Rockefeller likely.

    • @grtwhtbnr
      @grtwhtbnr Рік тому +5

      ​@@an-tm3250 Henry Ford loved to est them

    • @Mrbfgray
      @Mrbfgray Рік тому +6

      Often considered a "superfood" there's no reason we shouldn't eat them today as some of us do.

    • @turtlejeepjen314
      @turtlejeepjen314 Рік тому +3

      My Bearded Dragons & tortoises LOVE dandelions- I also like them-

  • @inthenow8249
    @inthenow8249 5 років тому +78

    Dandelions have always been my favorite flower. They always make me smile. Well manicured lawns do not.

    • @liliencalvel6151
      @liliencalvel6151 5 років тому +1

      Aww, so cute.

    • @djf8619
      @djf8619 4 роки тому

      I love to see a well manicured lawn, even though I feel it is a gross waste of space.

  • @E5PY
    @E5PY 3 місяці тому

    Love me some plant/culture history. My favorite of your videos so far is the gooseberry-white pine video. Amazing how something so small shaped the culture of entire continents & hardly anyone knows. Thank you for doing what you do🌻

  • @BellyLaugher
    @BellyLaugher Рік тому +1

    Thank you sooo much❣I really enjoyed how you put it together visually; your friendly voice/presentation/humor/facts & cautions. I LOVE dandelions...not only their perfect circle of soft yellow flowers & whimsical saw-tooth wezardy-hat-like leaves, but also how their the little bits that make up a flower are all exactly the same length-& that makes them soft/kind of pet-able & pleasant to brush across one's cheek. They are so friendly😊

  • @MrJinxxxed13
    @MrJinxxxed13 4 роки тому +123

    During the Great Depression, Dandelion soup was staple for some people.

    • @mjrussell414
      @mjrussell414 4 роки тому +7

      Mark James And salad.

    • @alexcarter8807
      @alexcarter8807 4 роки тому +9

      @Vee Kee I was told by a survivor of the Yugoslavian breakup that if one found a dandelion, it was a real treat.

    • @dogwalker666
      @dogwalker666 4 роки тому +8

      Dandelion and Burdock is a popular soft drink in the NE of England

    • @jarehelt
      @jarehelt 4 роки тому +7

      ive already started a garden

    • @dickJohnsonpeter
      @dickJohnsonpeter 3 роки тому +4

      @@alexcarter8807 probably because instead of letting some seed so there could be more they ate every one they found root and all. If that's not the case then they wouldn't have been rare at all. You'd think one of them would have had some foresight.

  • @saycat6758
    @saycat6758 5 років тому +73

    My 85 year old father, still picks dandelion greens before flowering. Boils the greens down and freezes them. Great to put in with your boiled boiled veggies.

    • @dizzywilliams3557
      @dizzywilliams3557 5 років тому +4

      i only cook mine once,,,

    • @pheresy1367
      @pheresy1367 5 років тому +1

      @@dizzywilliams3557 What about in the Winter?

    • @arthas640
      @arthas640 5 років тому +10

      Dandelions were a popular green veggie for alot of people who lived through the great depression, dandelion salads were popular until the end of WW2 when supermarkets became common and made lettuce cheap and available.

    • @ManScoutsofAmerica
      @ManScoutsofAmerica 5 років тому +4

      They’re decent as a fresh salad.

    • @davidmartin3760
      @davidmartin3760 4 роки тому

      Picks them before flowering. Do you mean the yellow flower or when it turns to the white puffy seeded flower? My mom use to boil the greens and have them with our boiled dinner. I remember asking her-- one day in the summer-- if she wanted me to pick some more of those greens. She said that they would be too strong at this time of year. I'm just confused when someone says " before flowering". Please reply if you can.

  • @demonvalentine1
    @demonvalentine1 Рік тому +6

    With the recent food supplies being what they are, this is welcome knowledge. A return to past ways of thinking will be critical, in my honest opinion. An excellent video. Thank you.

  • @flurng
    @flurng Рік тому +2

    Another fantastic, informative episode! Well done! BTW, I find it especially fitting to this episode that your theme song is 'Highway Wildflowers" by Bird Creek! Cheers!

  • @bruniau
    @bruniau 5 років тому +54

    In the northen hemisphere it is the first food of bees in the spring, could be a life saver knowing the tough predicament these invaluable creatures are in .

    • @jonp.6131
      @jonp.6131 5 років тому +1

      That's why I don't pull them :)

    • @Nebelwerfer210cm
      @Nebelwerfer210cm 5 років тому +3

      Plant early-blooming native wildflowers and shrubs instead. Dandelion pollen lacks key amino acids that wild pollinators need to reproduce.

    • @gerryrozema8338
      @gerryrozema8338 5 років тому +1

      As a beekeeper our spring schedule revolves around first dandelion flower. From first dandelion it’s 3 weeks till bees will be starting swarm preps and time for spring splits.

    • @t.j.ohlemeier9533
      @t.j.ohlemeier9533 5 років тому

      @@jonp.6131 My neighbors have no idea my lawn is saving the planet!

    • @Nebelwerfer210cm
      @Nebelwerfer210cm 5 років тому

      @Max Kruchowski No, I work at a native plant nursery for an ecological restoration firm. Dandelions are like junk food to native wild pollinators, they'll keep them alive, but it isn't the healthiest option. If you want to actually improve habitat for wild pollinators, it will require some effot. Stop kidding yourselves that you are "helping" by not doing anything.

  • @glendathegoodwitch6987
    @glendathegoodwitch6987 Рік тому +50

    I am not going to lie: dandelions completely fascinate me. There are two reasons for this. First, they are impossible to kill, and if you pull them up, always unsuccessfully, they grow back spikier, meaner and coarser -- as if they have a vengence. Second, the flowers reproduce themselves after death. They grow to seed after you pluck the flowers.

    • @starwolven
      @starwolven Рік тому +7

      They are like you and me. Us. Humans. We are resilient as Dandelions! And they have many lessons to share.

    • @blackkennedy3966
      @blackkennedy3966 Рік тому +2

      Spiker? What? They don’t have spikes probably something else you have in your yard that looks like it.

    • @Alexcutspie
      @Alexcutspie Рік тому

      @@blackkennedy3966 do you go outside of course there’s ones with spikes

    • @bleh5409
      @bleh5409 Рік тому

      ​@Black Kennedy oh they have spikes. I've gotten poked quit another trying to get rid of them

    • @reptilian132
      @reptilian132 Рік тому

      I once plucked a dandelion flower whole out of the ground and left it in a pond right before winter. It literally survived all winter. The roots never froze. The pond froze and the flower looked healthy. Absolutely cold tolerant plants

  • @lindafoxwood78
    @lindafoxwood78 Рік тому

    Delightful history story. Well done my friend. 😀

  • @dragonsamuslive
    @dragonsamuslive Рік тому

    First episode of yours that I watched, it was fantastic. Thank you.

  • @butterman0007
    @butterman0007 5 років тому +146

    LOVED this episode! Thank you!
    I personally prefer when you do some of these 'non war related' subjects. It reminds us that not all history is written in blood.

    • @tibbygaycat
      @tibbygaycat 5 років тому +6

      Hey don't forget the utter brutality of the dandelion wars >:c

    • @mazdarex7
      @mazdarex7 4 роки тому +6

      @@tibbygaycat yes monsanto was the villain.

    • @taraxacum
      @taraxacum Рік тому

      As some of the other commenters have pointed out, dandelions have nourished people when other foods became unavailable in war times. No, some history is written in healing and nurturing during and in spite of wars.

  • @marktwain368
    @marktwain368 5 років тому +213

    It is so admirable of you, sir, to speak for this humble and may i say 'downtrodden' plant.

    • @bland9876
      @bland9876 5 років тому

      I Am The Lorax I speak for the trees and by trees I mean all plants

  • @-beee-
    @-beee- Рік тому +5

    This is wonderful! I find myself pulling the dandelions I see in my neighborhood to try to prevent their speed spread because I had internalized a negative attitude of them being a weed, but in addition to this history I've since learned that they can also be really helpful for bringing deep nutrients up toward the surface which can help other plants when they compost. I love the idea of getting rid of the manicured lawn, but I still have some anxiousness about dandelions taking over everything 😅

  • @mahmoodmoossavi243
    @mahmoodmoossavi243 Рік тому +3

    Thank you. It was very interesting and educational.
    Liked and subscribed.

  • @MariaBareiss
    @MariaBareiss 5 років тому +14

    I loved this so much!!! The Dandelion is the flower of the Military Child (I'm a Navy brat) because they're tenacious (edited to fix "tenuous"), put down strong roots easily, and they're EVERYWHERE!

    • @audrod81
      @audrod81 5 років тому +2

      Nice! Oh, BTW, I think you mean "tenacious," not "tenuous" - maybe it was just a typo. Just FYI 😊

    • @MariaBareiss
      @MariaBareiss 5 років тому +2

      @@audrod81 Oh, criminy, you're absolutely correct! Good catch! Thank you!

  • @michaelbuelow9275
    @michaelbuelow9275 5 років тому +224

    Brilliant! Wonderful choice of subject, beautifully presented.

  • @josephmcnicholas1877
    @josephmcnicholas1877 Рік тому

    What a great description. Included some information I didnt know. I love Dandelions. Dandelions just need some good publicity, like this video.

  • @senselocke
    @senselocke Рік тому +2

    That was way, way more interesting than I thought it ever could be. Thank you!

  • @lostinpa-dadenduro7555
    @lostinpa-dadenduro7555 5 років тому +43

    My grandma told me about dandelions. The depression era people had skills we should remember.

    • @Oldbmwr100rs
      @Oldbmwr100rs 5 років тому +7

      There's a few people making depression era foods on youtube, telling of the history of the dishes and how good or poor they were. These can be very interesting to watch.

  • @ncc74656m
    @ncc74656m 5 років тому +21

    Dandelion wine is absolutely delightful, and I know my grandmother used to eat dandelion salads.

  • @BA8762
    @BA8762 Рік тому +2

    Well done Sir. This plant is generally underappreciated. Thanks for sharing!

  • @KuriousKi77y
    @KuriousKi77y Рік тому +10

    Love the history lesson. It would have been great to hear about the 'make a wish' folk tale. Where one is to blow all the seeds in one breath while making a wish. It's one of my oldest and most vivid memories or pastimes from my mom.

  • @victoriaeads6126
    @victoriaeads6126 3 роки тому +135

    We've made dandelion wine multiple times from the plants in our untreated rural yard. It's somewhat labor intensive, because it's best it you remove all of the green parts, but it's very tasty. We've also used the leaves in salads.
    The most interesting thing for me is that, as a teenager and young adult, I used to have a green iguana. I had to treat her greens with vitamin powder to make sure she was healthy... unless it was summer dandelions. They are so packed with nutrients that she didn't need the vitamins in the summer!

    • @wrench8149
      @wrench8149 Рік тому +4

      That’s interesting I never heard that before.

    • @victoriaeads6126
      @victoriaeads6126 Рік тому +8

      @@wrench8149 Yeah, the entire plant is edible. You can clean and roast the roots for tea, the green parts make excellent salad-I used to have a pet iguana, and if she ate plenty of dandelion greens, she didn't need as much of the vitamin powder on her other food, they are very nutritious- and the flowers can be used for salads or wine. Oh, and the plants aerate the soil, too, so they really aren't so bad.

    • @skwoods7986
      @skwoods7986 Рік тому +6

      It took me 5 hours of plucking to get all the green off my dandelion heads when I made dandelion wine. But it was eventually worth the labor.

    • @victoriaeads6126
      @victoriaeads6126 Рік тому +5

      @@skwoods7986 Yeah, that part is difficult. We keep missing the first flowers, haven't made it in a few years now. Try using champagne yeast, it works nicely with the flavors and produces a high enough alcohol content to keep it from going off or needing to be refrigerated after bottling.

    • @ApiaryGaming
      @ApiaryGaming Рік тому +5

      My childhood rabbit used to love to eat the Dandelions

  • @CHITOWNDEECON1
    @CHITOWNDEECON1 2 роки тому +283

    More like this, please. Foraging is such an important part of our history.... and if I might add it's a great way ro get a good dose of reality in such an odd modern society

    • @Mrbfgray
      @Mrbfgray Рік тому +7

      Also excellent source of nutrition.

    • @seigeengine
      @seigeengine Рік тому

      It's actually really really not, for a few reasons.
      1. Basically nobody has access to anything even approximating a natural environment to forage from.
      2. Basically nobody has anywhere near the knowledge people who forage to survive would have.
      3. It's a very plausible health risk due to ignorantly consuming dangerous plants, or because the environment is far more polluted with hard-to-discern toxins, like heavy metals, pesticides, etc.

    • @Mrbfgray
      @Mrbfgray Рік тому +8

      @@seigeengine Point 1 is completely false for ME. 2 is true but correctable and it's not about living off the land entirely it's about incremental diet supplementation.
      3 is laughable, my yard is vastly cleaner, healthier than 90% of American commercial farming, I use essentially zero pesticides and rare exceptions are organic. Wild untrodden lands all around.
      Surely you are aware of some of the nasty persistent toxins used in modern agriculture, grain silos are fumigated with stuff you don't even want to think about. I hope you buy nothing but organic and never eat out.
      Americans are extremely unhealthy due to sugar, grain oils, over processed foods, etc., certainly not from foraging their food which would also cure the rampant sedentary problem.

    • @seigeengine
      @seigeengine Рік тому

      @@Mrbfgray Nobody asked you to confess what a massive wanker you are.

  • @willmarkley
    @willmarkley Рік тому

    Fantastic channel. Your vocal delivery is perfect. Reminds me of Sunday Morning

  • @mrs.schmenkman
    @mrs.schmenkman 5 років тому +190

    This is the crap that makes my family call me Cliff Claven!! I will inevitably repeat half this info to at least one person who could not care less.

    • @belovedvictoriouspeople9685
      @belovedvictoriouspeople9685 5 років тому +3

      lol I always call my husband that. But I love little known facts!

    • @miguelmarquez4192
      @miguelmarquez4192 5 років тому +2

      Hilarious

    • @lauriemashek5419
      @lauriemashek5419 5 років тому +3

      Deb Carsey I had forgotten his last name. Yes the voice of Mr. Potatohead. I marvel at how much info people like him not only collect but remember. I’d buy him a beer and give a listen any day.

    • @martinpiggins5772
      @martinpiggins5772 5 років тому

      Ha someone else just like me 👍

    • @theroyalpotato8390
      @theroyalpotato8390 5 років тому +5

      followed by the 'please shut up stare', I feel like I've wasted my time if I'm not getting that look at least once a day lol.

  • @jasonmgavitt2357
    @jasonmgavitt2357 5 років тому +16

    In Maine quite a few folks eat dandelions and they are sold at farmers markets and the seeds are sold from local seed co. Up here as well.

  • @paramashantadharma5676
    @paramashantadharma5676 Рік тому

    Great video..! Liked and subscribed. Thanks for sharing this information. Peace and Love.

  • @outthasky
    @outthasky Рік тому

    One of my favorite videos of yours. So much so, I watched it thrice.

  • @LaGuerre19
    @LaGuerre19 5 років тому +6

    When I mow the lawn, I leave little "islands" of dandelion and buttercup in the yard. My neighbors didn't like it too much until I told them that it's for my daughters' and toddler son's enjoyment; to pick them, to play in them, to blow the seeds when it's time. Secretly though, it's also for me.
    The definition of "weed" is just any plant growing where you don't want it to grow. If you don't see something as a weed, it's not. I like that idea.
    Anyway, thanks for sharing another wonderful, thorough, fascinating piece of history. Cheers.

  • @eekns
    @eekns 5 років тому +128

    Thanks. I’ve always loved dandelions over manicured nature.

    • @arthas640
      @arthas640 5 років тому +3

      i find it kind of depressing watching people cutting down trees and clearing brush so they can grow grass and drown their lawn in weed killers and fertilizers to keep it emerald green year round. My city implemented a water ration last summer during a drought but the city had their sprinklers running all day to keep their lawns green, and they wouldnt even have them run during the night like it said to do _in their own water rationing instructions_ to avoid evaporation.

    • @paulaj1445
      @paulaj1445 5 років тому

      eekns
      good comment.
      i take photos of nature alot,
      i once took a upclose pic of a dandelion, a beautiful cheerful yellow.
      i even heard on a outdoors survival video, that a dandelion is something edible to eat if your stuck somewhere and hungry and have no food, that it's edible.
      i'd rather just let them grow. :)

  • @ZombieGrandpa
    @ZombieGrandpa Рік тому +5

    You really ought to do a review of the humble cardboard box. Cardboard is amazing stuff, found everywhere in the world. It made shipping far less expensive and really did change the world.
    Love your show!

  • @mikeedward3161
    @mikeedward3161 Рік тому

    Hi there, thanks for such good and interesting informatikon on Dandelions, the video has produced a great deal of good interesting comments from such a wide number
    of viewers, it could be said it has grown yet another wonderful product, so please keep those seeds of growth growing. Maureen

  • @Biber0315
    @Biber0315 5 років тому +126

    I LOVE dandilions - free flowers!

    • @Barskor1
      @Barskor1 5 років тому +6

      And free food.

  • @sueroberts6193
    @sueroberts6193 5 років тому +75

    I used to encourage these beauties in my flower garden... They are like mini sun's!!!!!

    • @scottmantooth8785
      @scottmantooth8785 4 роки тому

      *a very poetic way of viewing them...will have to remember that one and share it with others*

  • @travellingjack8960
    @travellingjack8960 Рік тому

    Top notch stuff as always from THG !

  • @alwaysinsideout
    @alwaysinsideout Рік тому +2

    Absolutely loved your video. To me they are beautiful flowers. Love to see them on my lawn along with the many other wild flowers. This year they bought in many types of bees and insects. Thanks again.

  • @THEfamouspolka
    @THEfamouspolka 5 років тому +156

    Thank you for these snippets of history! I very much appreciate your efforts and style!

  • @rueporter2253
    @rueporter2253 4 роки тому +221

    I’m one of the few people who really love the dandelion. In fact I just harvested tons of them to make into a bitter. Also themilk used for warts and it works. They are one of the miracle foods no one gives credit too, well almost anyone lol great vid sir.

    • @pegjames188
      @pegjames188 4 роки тому +11

      Should bitter read butter or is a bitter beer you produce? Alway picked them for a neighbour as a child who made small beer and when older I used to make a decent wine of them.

    • @feliciagaffney1998
      @feliciagaffney1998 Рік тому +5

      @@pegjames188 bitter could just be a spirit, not necessarily beer. Like bitters that is used for some alcoholic drinks.

    • @feliciagaffney1998
      @feliciagaffney1998 Рік тому +4

      I want to learn more about the healing properties of "weeds" and other natural plants. I think I have a foraging guide on order. I want to learn about foraging and making my own natural plant medicine.

    • @janicem4382
      @janicem4382 Рік тому +1

      I love dandelions too, I hope this love catches on!

    • @rueporter2253
      @rueporter2253 Рік тому

      @@janicem4382 😁💜. One of my fav pics from childhood is me an mon standing in a huge field of nothing but dandelions. They are a life saver plant. Healed my sickness an heart.

  • @yerossyle
    @yerossyle Рік тому

    Loved it. Finally some original content.

  • @deaddocreallydeaddoc5244
    @deaddocreallydeaddoc5244 Рік тому +3

    When I was a kid in the 1950s, it was common to call the floating seeds, "Falling Stars." Trying to catch one was great fun. It was considered good luck to catch one and keep it in your pocket. Perry Como, a very popular contemporary singer in those years even did a song "Catch a Falling Star." I think this idea is a very old folk tradition that seems to have been completely forgotten.

  • @KayleeCee
    @KayleeCee 5 років тому +37

    I love having dandelions in my yard. My bearded dragons love to eat them, greens and flowers, so every spring/summer I have a wealth of free food for my lizards that they're crazy about.

    • @thesayxx
      @thesayxx 3 роки тому

      they make a great spring salad! :)
      City folk pay a pretty penny for dandelion greens in the spring where i'm from.

  • @malcolmyoung7866
    @malcolmyoung7866 5 років тому +26

    In the 'War Against Dandelions' there can be only one winner....and it ain't 'us'...

  • @conradfrost3468
    @conradfrost3468 Рік тому +3

    I have no idea why but for some reason dandelions on the Aleutian chain of islands grow to be enormous. The flowers themselves are not that much larger than those of dandelions elsewhere but the plants are huge. Foot long leaves in clumps a foot across. The climate in the Aleutians is hella cold in winter and not much warmer in the brief summer. Perpetually cold and damp. Spring is glorious though: the islands are a sea of wildflowers.
    The word for dandelions in German, by the way, is Löwenzahn, literally 'lion's tooth'.

  • @metroidragon
    @metroidragon Рік тому +1

    This was solid, I'd definitely watch a series on edible plants from you; mushrooms, berries, et al.

  • @elizabethashley42
    @elizabethashley42 5 років тому +15

    I adore dandelions. They're bright and happy, they cannot be defeated, and they're actually useful. Seeing them pop up in my yard tells me spring has arrived. 😊