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Song sparrows

Canadian Yew – Taxus Canadensis: Heartstopper of Not So Edible & Medicinal Wild Plants

December 30, 2022 by Rachel of the Woods Leave a Comment
Canadian Yew – Taxus Canadensis

Yew is an important shrub to know if you’re going to forage conifers. It’s trendy to make teas out of evergreens like spruce or cedar, but just a cupful of fresh yew leaves can actually kill you. While parts of yew have been used both for edible and medicinal purposes, most of the plant is …

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Posted in: Coloring Pages, Craft Ideas, and Wild Plant Recipes, Edible & Medicinal Wild Plants Tagged: American robins, Chipping sparrows, Deer mice, Dye, Found in clearings or old fields, Found in lakeshores or edges, Found in riverbanks, Found in rocky outcrops or slopes, Found in swampy mixed woods, Full sun, Mockingbirds and mimics, Moose, Native to Ontario, Partial shade, Ruffed grouse, Sandy soil, Shade, Song sparrows, Taxaceae/Yew family, Veery, Well drained soil, White-footed mice, White-throated sparrows, Wood thrushes

Docks – Rumex SPP.: Edible & Medicinal Uses of the Yellow Root of Wild Plants

September 9, 2022 by Rachel of the Woods Leave a Comment
Docks – Rumex SPP.

The nonnative yellow rooted docks, sour and bitter, have a long history of medicinal use. We have a couple dozen (native and nonnative) edible and medicinal docks. Last week’s sheep sorrel is a Rumex species too, but docks stand alone. There are at least 26 species spotted on iNat for Ontario. The three docks listed …

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Posted in: Edible & Medicinal Wild Plants Tagged: Cool and Dry, Dye, Edible parts, Found in damp ditches or roadsides, Found in damp meadows, Found in damp or wet places, Found in fens, Found in swamp edges, Found in wet ditches, Found in wet sandy shores, Found in wet swampy sites, Medicinal parts, Muskrats, Native to Ontario, Perennial, Pink flowers, Polygonaceae/Buckwheat family, Red flowers, Red-winged blackbird, Song sparrows, Swamp sparrow, Wet soil

Fire Cherry – Prunus Pensylvanica: Edible & Medicinal Uses of the Bird Cherry of Wild Plants

April 29, 2022 by Rachel of the Woods Leave a Comment
Fire Cherry – Prunus Pensylvanica

We’ve covered almost every native cherry in Ontario and this fire cherry, also called bird cherry for one, is no exception to the fact cherries are fantastic for birds and other wildlife. And not just jam! Pin cherry / Fire cherry (Prunus pensylvanica) was common along roadsides, woodland slopes, lake banks, and stream banks in …

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Posted in: Edible & Medicinal Wild Plants Tagged: American crows, American goldfinches, American robins, Astringent, Black bears, Blue jays, Brown thrashers, Cedar waxwings, Common grackles, Deer mice, Downy woodpeckers, Eastern bluebirds, Eastern kingbirds, Edible parts, European starlings, Evening grosbeaks, Found in fertile slopes, Found in lake banks, Found in roadsides, Found in stream banks, Gray catbirds, Great crested flycatchers, Grey-cheeked thrush, Grosbeaks, Hairy woodpeckers, Hermit thrushes, Integumentary, Mallards, Medicinal parts, Mice, Mockingbirds and mimics, Moose, Native to Ontario, Northern cardinals, Northern flickers, Northern orioles, Pileated woodpeckers, Pine grosbeaks, Raccoons, Red foxes, Red squirrels, Red-bellied woodpeckers, Red-eyed vireos, Red-headed woodpeckers, Rosaceae/Rose family, Rose-breasted grosbeaks, Ruffed grouse, Rufous-sided towhees, Scarlet tanagers, Skunk, Snowshoe hares, Song sparrows, Swainson’s thrushes, Thrushes, Veery, Warbling vireo, White-crowned sparrows, White-footed mice, White-tailed deer, White-throated sparrows, Wood thrushes, Yellow-bellied sapsuckers

Tamarack – Larix Laricina: Edible & Medicinal Uses of the Sweet Gum of Wild Plants

October 23, 2020 by Rachel of the Woods Leave a Comment
Tamarack – Larix Laricina

Tamarack (Larix laricina) is common in low, damp areas, treed bogs (especially fens) and shore banks. If you’ve read about other trees here on the Song of the Woods blog and you’re expecting a lot, you won’t be disappointed. When I moved up north I was surprised to see an “evergreen” (it’s not an evergreen) …

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Posted in: Edible & Medicinal Wild Plants Tagged: Alterative, Analgesic, Antiseptic, Bogs, Common yellowthroat warblers, Connecticut warblers, Crossbills, Digestive, Diuretic, Dye, Edible parts, Found in damp shore banks, Found in lakeshores or edges, Found in low damp areas, Full sun, Immune, Integumentary, Kinglets, Laxative, Loamy soil, Medicinal parts, Moist soil, Nashville warblers, Native to Ontario, Partial shade, Pinaceae/Pine family, Porcupines, Purple finches, Red squirrels, Respiratory, Snowshoe hares, Song sparrows, Veery, Wet soil, White-throated sparrows, Yellow-bellied flycatchers

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