EDIBLE LANDSCAPES
Blueberries |
Life appears to move
forward at an ever increasing pace. My early childhood days are unrecognizable
today. We never knew about information technology and only the better off had
television, so everyone played outdoors. We had woods nearby and hills (Sidlaw
Hills) to climb only a two hour walk away from our housing estate (St. Mary’s.)
No-one knew of any dangers, and no-one came to any harm, but we did learn a lot
about nature and got any amount of outdoor exercise. Older kids passed down their
knowledge to us so we learned about blaeberry picking, collecting wild
strawberries, picking sheep sorrel from the woodland floor (botanically called
Rumex acetosella, but we called it surix) and on our bicycle trips to the
raspberry fields in Longforgan we would stop under the cherry trees along the
Perth road and eat whatever fruit was ripe. As we got older we never forgot our
childhood adventures but looked into this natural edible landscape with greater
interest. As kids from the town we took every opportunity to get into the
countryside both for play as well as earning some money picking raspberries,
strawberries then in autumn it was potato picking. Looking back with hindsight
you could say it must have been hard work for kids, and we must have been poor,
but it was really great fun while we were young and fit and the extra money
boosted our income (pocket money.)
Sweet chestnut |
Japanese wineberry |
Today life is very
different with all our kids needs close at hand as long as they have the latest
mobile phone. The countryside is no longer viewed as a place of discovery as
ability to travel all over the world and this country is normal and all their
food needs are available at the supermarket, so they never learn how food is
produced. This lack of outdoor education is recognized, and local communities and schools are beginning to
address this problem. Edible landscapes are being created within schools as
well as other outdoor landscape areas. Although in its infancy it is becoming
very popular with schools, and some communities are getting involved in
planting up outdoor landscapes using a wide range of edible plants, both for
use and for education of our children. Kids love to handle seeds, cuttings,
plants and learn how they are used for dyes, basket making, fibres, brushes,
fuel, soap, insecticide and the benefits of green manures on cultivated land.
Walnut |
Forest gardens are another
development on a larger scale within a woodland setting, but plants chosen are
useful or edible and form a woodland flora from the taller canopy trees such as
walnut, sweet chestnut and edible lime trees to the forest floor layers such as
blueberries and wild garlic. There are also many edible plants that prefer a
pond or bog garden from watercress to reeds, cranberries, white water lily, and
other plants that have edible rhizomes, leaves, fruit and seeds.
We grow apples,
pears, plums and cherries in our gardens, but we can also diverse with mulberries,
hazelnuts, saskatoons, chokeberries, quince, medlar, fuchsia, figs and hardy
outdoor grapes.
Brambles, Tayberries
and loganberries make excellent climbers, and currants, raspberries and
gooseberries will form good hedges.
Wild Garlic |
Plants with edible
leaves include lime trees, nettles, sorrel, bamboo (shoots), campanula, and
wild garlic, and the list of herbs and medicinal plants is enormous. Many herbs
have medicinal value but rosemary, thyme, sage and mint is used for flavouring
many meat dishes and kale and Swiss chard are excellent in a stir fry.
We encourage our
kids to try out a bit of gardening with growing pumpkins and sunflowers but
there is another world just waiting to be discovered with plants and their
uses.
Wee jobs to do this week
Pruning the Euonymus |
Prune any evergreen shrubs that are getting too straggly or
encroaching on other plants
space. Some plants such as the Euonymus and
Elaeagnus are quite happy to be kept contained as they regrow from cut branches
easily. However bear in mind their natural shape and avoid all attempts to cut
them into square or round balls.
END