Posts

Foraging Wild Plants in a Human Dominated Landscape

Ramps in early spring. UWExtension In April, my friend Laura brought me some ramps—not just parts, but the entire plant, broad, smooth leaves, small, shallot-size bulbs, roots and all. I know she wouldn’t go out in the local forest preserves and dig them up, foraging or poaching, depending upon your perspective. So where did she get them? Her CSA has begun growing them. Because they were intact, neither of us ate them, but planted them in our respective gardens, watered them in well, and are hoping for the best. I did remember to mark where I’d put them, luckily, because the leaves soon faded away and disappeared, as happens with many species of spring ephemerals. I’ve never eaten ramps that I know of, though I hear they’re delicious. I know where they grow, at several undisclosed locations, but they are on forest preserve land, and a strict no-poaching policy is in place. As such I would not go harvesting against the rules, partly because, as a volunteer steward, I have engaged to fol...

Tikkun Olam: Mending the World

Sandhill Cranes!

Chicago Gardens: The Early History

Creeping Charlie Love

The Last Tomatoes

Samhain, Halloween, Day of the Dead, All Saints/Souls Days

An Absence of Some Months

A Small Prairie Garden

On Summer Break, Back Soon

All Kinds of Nightshade

Guest Post at Beautiful Wildlife Garden

Problematic Pokeweed

Beware the Dreadful Bindweed

A Date with Some Turtles

Ecological Reality Is Not What You Hypothesize

How Gardening Is Not Writing

Matteo and His Fig Tree

Spring Dispatches from the Backyard

April is Poetry Month 2011: "Segovia's Every Tree in Its Shadow"

The Earth Day Reading Project: A Blog Meme