Foraging: why, where and what if we all start doing it?

Green alkanet grows everywhere and its flowers are edible

Green alkanet grows everywhere and its flowers are edible

In the last few years I’ve become rather attracted to the idea of foraging for food. Having had an allotment in the past, and knowing the time and work that goes into growing veg, the idea of going out into the wider environment to find sources of food which have cost me nothing in monetary and effort terms is very, very attractive.

On a recent trip to Conwy in Wales, the bushes alongside farm lanes were dripping with sloes, rosehips and blackberries. But what about here in (sub)urban Bedford, what’s to be found for foraging?

I’ve lived in the town for a year now and found a few places to find wild food: sea buckthorn, damsons, blackberries and rosehips at Priory Marina; crab apples in the streets around Castle Road, elderberries on the footpath off Caves Lane and green alkanet (pictured above – you can eat the lovely blue flowers) and hairy bittercress all over the place. if you’re a forager, please share your haunts below in the comments…

So, let’s say everyone gets into the idea of foraging – what then? Will there be enough to go around or will we be fighting over those damsons, rowans and bittercress? I suspect we’ve got a while before this is a problem, but it’s worth thinking about.

Right now, though, the difficulty is getting people to pick even the obvious fruit outside their front doors. There’s a street off Castle Road (I can’t remember which one: maybe Pembroke?) with a apple tree that was full of little red-skinned, red-fleshed apples in late summer: I think I’ve identified them as a variety called Red Devil: great to eat and produces beautiful pink juice.

I nearly cried when nobody touched them: the sweet little red apples dropped and were mashed under feet and car tyres, probably driven by people driving to a shop to buy – you guessed it – apples grown half way across the world (and not half as tasty). I’d have brought a ladder and picked them all, but I was a bit worried about how people in the street would react: maybe next year.

If you want to read more of my stuff on organic gardening and ethical consumerism, visit my personal blog, Horticultural, and follow me on Twitter.

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Miliband to Unveil the ‘Low Carbon Communities Challenge’

A major funding stream has just become available to communities and NGO’s etc working to lower carbon. Transition Bedford, Zero Carbon Castle, Sustainable Oakley, Flitton and Greenfield carbon initiative could all put in separate or joint bids. My take on this is that there is a massive amount of form filling and the application workload is heavy for a voluntary based initiative like ours. However, the fund is for 10 million pounds awarded to 20 groups, together with considerable support to deliver projects. This level of funding could redefine Bedford’s low carbon landscape and therefore i think if we gain support from the Borough and/or a local NGO or two, in form of, paid employees dedicating time to this application, then it is worth a punt.

See the full press release below and an article on the Transition Culture website

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Today is Earth Overshoot Day

Unlike governments, nature doesn’t do bailouts. Yet as of today, hu manity will have placed more demand on ecological services – from filtering CO2 to producing food, fiber and timber– than nature can provide in this year, according to Global Footprint Network calculations. From now until the end of the year, we will meet our demand for ecological services by depleting resource stocks and accumulating carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.

“It’s a simple case of income versus expenditures,” said Global Footprint Network President Mathis Wackernagel. “For years, our demand on nature has exceeded, by an increasingly greater margin, the budget of what nature can produce. The urgent threats we are seeing now – most notably climate change, but also biodiversity loss, shrinking forests, declining fisheries, soil erosion and freshwater stress – are all clear signs: Nature is running out of credit to extend.”

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When a Transition Group Stalls

Luckily this hasn’t happened to Transition Bedford but it is happening in one of our neighbouring towns, Oxford. Some of the members of the Oxford Initiating group have put together some thoughts and ideas about the problems they’ve encountered as part of a learning process. See here. None of us are immune to these problems and i think some valuable lessons could be learnt.

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Bedford replies: 'We are NOT stupid, Mr Prescott.'

In a recent article, former Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott was quoted to say that the Bedfordshire town of Bedford, should be given a “stupid award” owing to its local planning committee opposing the construction of wind farms on aesthetic grounds. While the implications of this opposition are duly noted, the recently formed community initiative Transition Bedford, part of the larger Transition Town Network of over 1500 local initiatives worldwide, replies, “Look deeper, Mr Prescott, and you will find that the people of  Bedford are not at all stupid in matters to do with climate change and peak oil.”

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