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Found in lakeshores or edges

Serviceberry – Amelanchier SPP.: Edible & Medicinal Uses of the Early Bloomer of Wild Plants

August 14, 2020 by Rachel of the Woods 4 Comments
Serviceberry – Amelanchier Spp.

The English name serviceberry (Amelanchier spp.) has origins related to when one can finally have funeral services/burial for winters dead. They’re also called juneberries even though you’ll be waiting until the end of June or later for ripe berries. Here around Haliburton, Ontario you’ll find, to the least: downy (Amelanchier arborea), mountain (Amelanchier bartramania), smooth … [Read more…]

Posted in: Edible & Medicinal Wild Plants Tagged: American crows, American martens, American robins, Astringent, Beavers, Black bears, Black-capped chickadees, Blue jays, Brown thrashers, Cedar waxwings, Digestive, Downy woodpeckers, Dye, Edible parts, Evening grosbeaks, Fishers, Found in clearings or old fields, Found in lakeshores or edges, Found in roadside banks, Found in roadsides, Found in rocky shores, Full sun, Gray catbirds, Hairy woodpeckers, Hermit thrushes, Integumentary, Loamy soil, Medicinal parts, Moist soil, Moose, Native to Ontario, Northern cardinals, Northern flickers, Northern orioles, Partial shade, Red foxes, Reproductive, Rosaceae/Rose family, Rose-breasted grosbeaks, Ruffed grouse, Rufous-sided towhees, Sandy soil, Snowshoe hares, Squirrels, Swainson’s thrushes, Veery, Well drained soil, White flowers, White-tailed deer, Wood thrushes

Balsam Fir – Abies Balsamea: Edible & Medicinal Uses of the Most Resin-ating of Wild Plants

July 3, 2020 by Rachel of the Woods Leave a Comment
Balsam Fir – Abies Balsamea

Balsam fir (Abies balsamea) is an edible and mostly medicinal tree that’s the closest local plant to frankincense that I know of, scent-wise. (But it’s not a sedative.) Its resin can also be used to make Balm of Gilead, mentioned in poplar posts. A little ecological history: When the fight against eastern spruce budworm vs … [Read more…]

Posted in: Edible & Medicinal Wild Plants Tagged: American robins, Antiseptic, Astringent, Beavers, Black-capped chickadees, Eastern flying squirrels, Edible parts, Expectorant, Found in lakeshores or edges, Found in mixed woods, Found in pure stands, Full sun, Grosbeaks, Integumentary, Jays, Kinglets, Medicinal parts, Moist soil, Moose, Mourning doves, Native to Ontario, Nuthatches, Partial shade, Pileated woodpeckers, Pinaceae/Pine family, Porcupines, Purple finches, Red squirrels, Respiratory, Ruffed grouse, Shade, Snowshoe hares, Stimulant, Warblers, Wet soil, White-footed mice, White-tailed deer, White-winged crossbills, Yellow-bellied sapsuckers

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
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