The Foragers Guide to Wild Foods

$47.65 - $60.29
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UPC:
9781735481517
Maximum Purchase:
2 units
Binding:
Paperback
Publication Date:
6/21/2021
Author:
Nicole Apelian
Language:
English: Published; English: Original Language; English
Edition:
Paperback edition
Pages:
319
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319 color pages, 400 wild foods, plant localization maps for each plant (400 maps), paperback, great print quality, superior plant identification guidelines, recipes for each plant, full page photos of the plants, at least 3 pictures for each plant, medicinal uses. The Foragers Guide to Wild Foods is probably the most important thing you want to have by your side when you go out foraging. Maybe there are times when you're still not sure about a certain plant and you need to consult the book, despite your vast experience. Or maybe you dont have experience at all and just want to find wild goodies using the book. This book is the ultimate resource for every home, kept right next to your emergency foods, in your Bug out Bag, on your coffee table, or in your bookcase. You can use this book to put food on your table in case hard times are coming ahead. This knowledge is better at your fingertips now, as you might not be able to get it when you need it the most. You can also use the book to make your own remedies from plants growing around you. Inside The Foragers Guide to Wild Foods there are hundreds of medicinal plants and detailed, super simple instructions on how to take advantage of them. A lot of high-priced foods you find labeled as ORGANIC, are nothing compared to the ones that grow in the wild. Wild foods mean no GMO, no pesticides, herbicides or harmful contaminants. There are no foods healthier than the ones you pick yourself in the wild. This is FREE food and its completely up for grabs. The plant knowledge is no longer taught as it has been for thousands of generations before us. If we dont do something about it, this knowledge will be lost forever and one day we might pay the ultimate price for this. When you were growing up, it was probably your parents or grandparents that helped you identify your very first berry.. .