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Dye

Red Oak – Quercus Rubra: Edible & Medicinal Uses of the Bitter Acorn of Wild Plants

February 21, 2020 by Rachel of the Woods 3 Comments
Red Oak - Quercus Rubra

Red oak (Quercus rubra) is an edible and medicinal tree we’re lucky to have even if just admiring it’s deep red foliage in the autumn. Carrying a piece of oak is said to bring good luck. And it’s a lucky tree to have around for many wild ones. It’s a long list: opossum (which nowadays … [Read more…]

Posted in: Edible & Medicinal Wild Plants Tagged: American crows, Antiseptic, Astringent, Beavers, Black bears, Blue jays, Brown thrashers, Clay soil, Common grackles, Downy woodpeckers, Dye, Eastern chipmunks, Eastern cottontails, Edible parts, European starlings, Fagaceae/Beech family, Found in mixed woods, Found on rocky ridges, Full sun, Grackles, Integumentary, Loamy soil, Medicinal parts, Moist soil, Moose, Native to Ontario, Northern flickers, Opossum, Partial shade, Raccoons, Red foxes, Red-bellied woodpeckers, Rose-breasted grosbeaks, Ruffed grouse, Rufous-sided towhees, Rusty blackbirds, Squirrels, Thin soil, Vireos, Well drained soil, White-breasted nuthatches, White-footed mice, White-tailed deer, Wild turkey, Wood ducks, Yellow-bellied sapsuckers

Staghorn Sumac – Rhus Typhina: Edible & Medicinal Uses of the Lemonade Tree of Wild Plants

February 6, 2020 by Rachel of the Woods 1 Comment
Staghorn Sumac - Rhus Typhina

Staghorn sumac (Rhus typhina) is the “lemonadiest” and most vinegary of edible and medicinal shrubs. Staghorn sumac has been called the vinegar tree and the lemonade tree as its juice can be used as a substitute for vinegar or lemon juice. The “staghorn” part comes from the velvety branches that somewhat resemble antlers. You’ll see … [Read more…]

Posted in: Edible & Medicinal Wild Plants Tagged: American robins, Anacardiaceae/Cashew family, Antiseptic, Astringent, Cool and Dry, Cotton-tailed rabbits, Dry soil, Dye, Edible parts, European starlings, Found in dry open roadsides, Found in grassy hillsides, Found in rocky outcrops or slopes, Full sun, Green flowers, Grosbeaks, Loamy soil, Medicinal parts, Moose, Native to Ontario, Partial shade, Ruffed grouse, Sandy soil, Well drained soil, White-tailed deer, Wild turkey

Eastern White Cedar – Thuja Occidentalis: Edible & Medicinal Uses of the Tree of Life of Wild Plants

April 17, 2019 by Rachel of the Woods Leave a Comment
Eastern Syn. Northern White Cedar - Thuja Occidentalis

In Anishinaabemowin, eastern white cedar (Thuja occidentalis) is sometimes called giizhik, and also gi’jikan’dug meaning cedar-like, as it’s not a “true cedar”. This Tree of Life is both edible and medicinal. One of the alternative names for eastern white cedar is swamp cedar as it likes to grow in damp woods. Another name is Tree … [Read more…]

Posted in: Edible & Medicinal Wild Plants Tagged: Antimicrobial, Attracts birds, Clay soil, Cupressaceae/Cypress family, Diuretic, Dye, Edible parts, Found in damp woods, Found in lakeshores or edges, Found in rocky outcrops or slopes, Full sun, Integumentary, Loamy soil, Medicinal parts, Moist soil, Native to Ontario, Partial shade, Respiratory, Sandy soil, Shade, White-tailed deer

White Birch Syn. Paper Birch – Betula Papyrifera: Edible & Medicinal Uses of the Craftiest of Wild Plants

March 29, 2019 by Rachel of the Woods 2 Comments
White Birch Syn. Paper Birch - Betula Papyrifera

In Chippewa, wi’gwass’tig, white birch (Betula papyrifera) is not only edible and medicinal, but is traditionally used in many other ways from making canoes to baskets to birch bark biting. I think of it as the craftiest tree! White birch is sometimes called paper birch or canoe birch after two of its many utilizations. Edible … [Read more…]

Posted in: Edible & Medicinal Wild Plants Tagged: Astringent, Attracts birds, Betulaceae/Birch family, Cooling, Diaphoretic, Diuretic, Dry soil, Dye, Edible parts, Found in disturbed sites, Found in mixed woods on hummus over granite or sand, Full sun, Integumentary, Medicinal parts, Native to Ontario, Partial shade, Skeletal, Urinary, Well drained soil, Wet soil

Jewelweed – Impatiens Capensis: Edible & Medicinal Uses of the Snappiest Wild Plant

March 27, 2019 by Rachel of the Woods Leave a Comment
Jewelweed - Impatiens Capensis

Jewelweed (Impatiens capensis) is a snappy edible and medicinal herb, known for its exploding seedpods.  It’s handy to have around if you like clumsily rooting through wild plants like me, and end up grazing yourself with stinging nettle or worse – poison ivy. Jewelweed is so named because of the way the dew beads on … [Read more…]

Posted in: Edible & Medicinal Wild Plants Tagged: Annual, Antimicrobial, Attracts pollinators, Balsaminaceae/Touch-me-not family, Diuretic, Dye, Edible parts, Emetic, Found in damp or wet places, Found in partly shaded hillsides, Full sun, Integumentary, Laxative, Medicinal parts, Muck or hummus, Native in Ontario, Native to Ontario, Orange flowers, Partial shade, Ruby-throated hummingbirds, Ruffed grouse, Snowshoe hares, White-footed mice

Common Mullein – Verbascum Thapsus: Edible & Medicinal Uses of the Coziest Wild Plant

March 27, 2019 by Rachel of the Woods 1 Comment
Common Mullein - Verbascum Thapsus

In Anishinaabemowin, mullein (Verbascum thapsus) is sometimes called waabooyaanibag (blanket leaf). Its uses are blanketly more medicinal than edible. But you can eat the delicate yellow flowers too! Mullein’s folk names include but are not limited to flannel leaf (leaves stuffed in shoes for warmth), tinder plant/torches/torch-wort, candlewick (dried stems used to be dipped in … [Read more…]

Posted in: Edible & Medicinal Wild Plants Tagged: Analgesic, Anodyne, Anti-Inflammatory, Antimicrobial, Antispasmodic, Antitussive, Astringent, Biennial, Circulatory, Cool and moist, Demulcent, Diaphoretic, Digestive, Diuretic, Dye, Edible parts, Emollient, Endocrine, Expectorant, Found in dry open roadsides, Found in sandy disturbed sites, Integumentary, Lymphatic, Medicinal parts, Naturalized in Ontario, Nervine, Nervous, Respiratory, Scrophulariaceae/Figwort family, Skeletal, Vulnerary, Yellow flowers
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  1. Bonnie Dalzell on Wild Lettuces – Lactuca SPP.: Edible & Medicinal Uses of the Opium of Wild PlantsMay 31, 2025

    I am in Maryland in a rural area. Around 10 years ago I found a weird tall plant growing as…

  2. Eva Zdrava on False Bindweeds – Calystegia SPP.: Edible & Medicinal Uses of the Morning Glories of Wild PlantsMay 5, 2025

    I just read yesterday about Calystegia silvatica, That neither part of the plant extract showed any cytotoxicity to the normal…

  3. Margo Thompson on Quaking Aspen – Populus Tremuloides: Edible & Medicinal Uses of a Popple’r Wild PlantMay 4, 2025

    I can't believe I've lived with the trees all of these years and didn't know this!

  4. Teresa on Serviceberry – Amelanchier SPP.: Edible & Medicinal Uses of the Early Bloomer of Wild PlantsFebruary 24, 2025

    In my part of the world they are called saskatoons and we eat them raw by the handful, even gorging…

  5. Gary Nichols on Reed Grass – Phragmites SPP.: Edible & Medicinal Uses of the Roasted Marshmallow of Wild PlantsSeptember 7, 2024

    Hi, have you successfully made flour from the seeds of Phragmites?

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