The Forager's Harvest: A Guide to Identifying, Harvesting, and Preparing Edible Wild Plants | 
| Author: Samuel Thayer Publisher: Forager's Harvest Press Category: Book
List Price: $22.95 Buy New: $14.33 You Save: $8.62 (38%)
New (26) Used (5) from $14.33
Rating: 27 reviews Sales Rank: 4595
Media: Paperback Edition: 1 Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 368 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4 Dimensions (in): 8.8 x 6 x 0.7
ISBN: 0976626608 Dewey Decimal Number: 641.303 EAN: 9780976626602 ASIN: 0976626608
Publication Date: May 15, 2006 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Brand New, Perfect Condition, Please allow 4-14 business days for delivery. 100% Money Back Guarantee, Over 1,000,000 customers served.
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Product Description A practical guide to all aspects of edible wild plants: finding and identifying them, their seasons of harvest, and their methods of collection and preparation. Each plant is discussed in great detail and accompanied by excellent color photographs. Includes an index, illustrated glossary, bibliography, and harvest calendar. The perfect guide for all experience levels.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 22 more reviews...
Exceptional book on edible plants January 9, 2009 Very easy, and even fun to read. Full of clear and incredibly helpfull informations. Only one regret : I wish the book did describe more edible plants. But maybe il will come ?!
Foraging for people who like food, not just plants! January 6, 2009 This book is not just informative, it's inspiring. There are wonderful detailed instructions for plant identification, timing of harvest, and yes, preparation. I've never seen another book that held so much for people who love plants, and who also love food. I've read Euell Gibbons and the Thayer book chooses to focus on a smaller number of plants in order to focus on those that are seriously tasty, nourishing, and easily found. My only complaint is that it's time for the next volume, and the next and the next!
If you like wild foods, this is your new bible! (note the small b, people! It's just an expression!) December 18, 2008 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
Most wild plants guides cover the same three hundred or four hundred plants, cross referenced with all kinds of little graphics to indicate that they are edible, good in salads, canned, jelly, steamed, etc. There is nothing on how to do it, or how to actually gather in quantity, or what to look for, etc. In other words, almost no details which would be pertinent to an avid forager. In my own early learning journey, I struggled often to find an actual, edible food plant guide that really helped me out.
Man, I wish I had had this little baby in my backpack 20 years ago! Well, finally, it's here.
Sure, everyone mentions that there aren't that many plants covered, but you know what? A lot of the other plants that the other guides list are only marginally edible anyway! If someone reads this and masters the gathering and preparing and using of all of them, go a head and complain if you have to. But get the book anyway and get started! There is a world of wild foods outside, on the edges of meadows and swamps and fields, just waiting to be discovered.
Great details, important info on all kinds of products, tools and useful things for gathering, all kinds of stories and everything is laid out very nicely, with excellent photos, too.
If you get this book whether for yourself or for a gift for someone who loves the outdoors, you can't go wrong. It is absolutely the leader among guides for the serious or occasional gatherer. And you can take that to the bank. (Food Bank!) Okay, that was lame. But the book isn't! Go for it!
Not a keeper for me October 22, 2008 2 out of 4 found this review helpful
While the information included here is extensive for the limited number of plants covered, it wasn't useful for me. As a relative neophyte in this area who'd like to take advantage of plants growing wild in my area, I was disappointed that I was able to recognize only a couple of those presented--plants I was already familiar with. The author is clearly very experienced, but seems to assume that the reader is somewhat experienced as well and wants to extend his current knowledge.
The book contains many photographs, as other reviews have said, and which encouraged me to try it, but I didn't find them as useful as I'd hoped. While photographs are usually more useful than drawings to identify plants, a frequent problem in books such as these is the lack of size reference, i.e. is it likely to be bigger than a breadbox? Showing a photo of a plant leaf or branch doesn't help much if you can't tell if the whole plant is 3" tall or 3'. Showing a close-up shot of the whole plant doesn't help if you can't see it in relation to something of identifiable size, and ideally, also, in its favored location. Additionally, showing a plant with early spring shoots that are great for harvesting doesn't help if you don't know what the plant looks like fully developed so you can identify its location and look for those spring shoots next year.
This particular book is pretty and well put together, and no doubt will be useful to a more experienced forager than I--one who has the included plants available to him, has an idea of what they are already, and wants to learn more about harvesting and preparing them.
It fills the void! September 20, 2008 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
This book is unique in that it fills a big void in the other wild edible books out there. This void is filled mainly by the chapters entitled "Harvest and Preparation Methods for Wild Plant Foods" and "Storing Wild Foods". Thayer wrote this book with his experience and not what he has compiled from other books like so many others. It covers only 32 plants but they are very useful plants and it covers them in detail. I agree with other reviewers in that the book may only cover plants that are more common in the eastern U.S. but the author makes recommendations for other books that will cover what his book does not...and I can vouch that his recommendations are worth while. Great pictures, a useful glossary and the verbal content is not only an enjoyable read but overwhelmingly informative. Despite the fact that this book is a softcover, the quality of the pages and binding will seemingly make it a durable guide for field use and the repeated referencing I intend to give it. Regardless of where you live, if you are a serious forager or survival enthusiast your library should not be without this book!
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