NUTS & BERRIES OF CALIFORNIA

NUTS AND BERRIES OF CALIFORNIA

 

[Nyerges is the author of “Nuts and Berries of California,” and several other foraging books. Information about his books and classes is available at www.SchoolofSelf-Reliance, or Box 41834, Eagle Rock, CA 90041.]

122 pages, fully illustrated with color photos

“Nuts and Berries of California” is a lively book, fully illustrated with color photos, which was written more-or-less as a sequel to my “Foraging California” book.  But when I wrote this book, I wanted it to be different from “Foraging California,” a true sequel.  It turned out that I had a personal story for nearly every nut and berry described in the “Nuts and Berries of California” book.   I describe native nuts and berries that have long histories of use by Native Americans throughout California and North America.

Toyon berries

This is an easy-to-read book with lots of stories about every single nut or berry.  Some of the information is original and not found anywhere else, such as how to process buckeye nuts, and Helen Sweany’s research into the edibility of juniper berries.

Many generations of rural Americans grew up collecting nuts and berries as a family tradition: going out to collect black walnuts, hickory nuts, pine nuts, blackberries, wild strawberries, and other foods from the forest.  These are some of the foods that people from just a few generations ago took for granted.

 

I also include many of the introduced ornamental plants in my book which  seem to have firmly established themselves in California.  They are not natives, but they are everywhere anyway.

I wondered, what should we call these plants?  We thought of calling them FUN  plants, for “Feral Urban Neighborhood” plants, but that seemed to convey a misleading message, that introducing non-natives is somehow fun or good or desirable.

loquat fruit

HIP VS. “hip”

HIP seems to be the best term, for Horticulturally Introduced Plants.  The thing is, when these introduced exotics were planted, it was often because the gurus of horticulture of the day were pronouncing them as the greatest new thing since sliced bread.  Grow these bushes and  trees and you too will be hip!  Really!  And lots of people fell for that idea. This is the “in” plant to grow this season, and then yards and backyards fill up with new “hip” plants with great colors and much to talk about at dinner parties. Sometimes the new hip and HIP plants are edible and useful, sometimes not – as in the case of oleanders.

 

And just like the idol-worshippers who adore the newest rock star of the season, when a new one comes around, the old one is forgotten. Maybe forgotten, but all the HIP “hip” plants are still here, hip or not, and often they expand their habitat into wild areas.

 

And since we’re calling these plants HIP, it’s worth commenting on the “rose hip,” which is the common way of referring to the fruit of a rose. We were once discussing how the term “hip” came to mean the fruit of the rose, and one man suggested that the fruit might seem visually similar to a woman’s hips.  Hmmmm.  If that were the case, we asked, isn’t every fruit called a hip?  We found the answer in the Webster’s dictionary.  One of the roots of “hip” comes to us from the Middle English “hepe,” which literally means briar.  So the use of the term “hip” for a rose fruit goes back a few hundred years.

rose hips

Regardless, the rose is one of the unique plants in this book since there is a native rose (and so we included it with the native plants) but there are also many HIP roses.  HIP roses are probably in everyone’s yard, which are the commercial hybrids with multiple petals of all  hues of the rainbow.  Our wild rose is not a HIP!

 

The plants in the HIP section of the book are not what we’d call “wild” plants.  These are bushes and trees that have been widely planted for landscaping, street, or yard trees, which sometimes survive well when they are no longer tended.  All of these are commonly used as ornamentals, though the fruits are typically allowed to fall to the grown and then discarded as if they were just trash.

 

I have observed every one of these plants in wilderness areas where cabins once existed. After the cabins were destroyed by  fires or floods, these plants survived for years and decades with no human intervention.  These are survivors. And, that means that if we grow these plants, they can provide us with food with very little work and care.  Furthermore, they are probably already growing in or near your neighborhood, just waiting for you to discover and to appreciate them.

 

Some cultivated plants, which can also survive on their own, are just so common that we decided not to try to include all of them.  Such as citrus, for example.

 

Rather, we’re including many of the ornamentals which are common, but are either not commonly known, and not commonly used for food.  They are HIP, but not necessarily hip…….

 

Some of the very common HIP plants included in the book are ficus trees (figs), loquats, mulberries, pyracantha, olives, ginkgo, and others.  Get the book and you’ll get recipes and stories for every plant!  The book is available at Bookstores, at Amazon, and at the store at www.SchoolofSelf-Reliance.com.

 

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