Living of the land

Food, Nutrition and Agriculture
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Bizz901
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Location: St. Andrews fife

Living of the land

Post by Bizz901 »

Living of the land in woodland areas. What would you eat and use to have a balanced diet ??
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Plymtom
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Re: Living of the land

Post by Plymtom »

Bizz901 wrote:Living of the land in woodland areas. What would you eat and use to have a balanced diet ??
I'm not sure, it depends what's there, whatever I knew I could if we are talking desperate situation, I don't think worrying about balancing the diet would be an initial concern.
I have a strategy, it's not written in stone, nor can it be, this scenario has too many variables, everything about it depends on those variables, being specific is not possible.
preppingsu

Re: Living of the land

Post by preppingsu »

If you are thinking that a woodland area is where you might have your BOL then I would start by doing some guerrilla gardening now. Root veg and perennials are ideal in these areas. Plant some wild strawberries, raspberries etc. There would probably be brambles so blackberries.

Also a copy of Food for Free would be beneficial to identify those plants that you can eat. Familiarise yourself with edible fungi now.

Knowledge is the line between hunger and food.
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Briggs
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Re: Living of the land

Post by Briggs »

Wood sorrel is abundant right now. Try it, it's not bad. Goes well with pheasant. Su's advice to read up on foraging is spot on, although if you're planning on planting root veg in the woods you need to make your plot vermin proof and deer proof.
I recently experienced Plymouth City centre so that's why I prep.
adrian007
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Joined: Wed Jan 22, 2014 10:38 pm

Re: Living of the land

Post by adrian007 »

there is a technique with mushrooms.

1 - it is usually recommended you need 3 mushroom books - to x-ref properly what you have found. I would recommend any two + the River Cottage one, which goes beyond 'edible' to 'edible and tastes nice' which, is after all, the importnant thing.

2 - learn what the really poisonous ones look like. There aren't many.

3 - although there are about 6000 species, you don't need to know many. You can probably narrow down 5900 of them by saying 'does it look like something I'd want to put in my mouth'. Then learn the easiest 6 or 10, the ones that taste nice and have no poisoninous lookylikey's.

Keep a record of what you find where. Not every mushroom grows every year. Oh, and don't tell anyone and don't decimate the crop.

The River Cottage hedgerow book is the best foraging book I've read as well, so then you have mushrooms and planst covered.

Good luck
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SoCal92057
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Re: Living of the land

Post by SoCal92057 »

Without the ability to hunt for protein, living off the land is highly problematic. Even if you had a firearm, in a SHTF event most wild game would be taken by other hunters in a matter of weeks. Fishing is the most likely long-term source of protein. Both fresh and salt water.
Last edited by SoCal92057 on Wed Apr 30, 2014 6:15 pm, edited 1 time in total.
A government big enough to give you everything you want, is strong enough to take everything you have. - Thomas Jefferson
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damaralenoire
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Re: Living of the land

Post by damaralenoire »

When i read about Living off the land i automatically think Bear Grylls, cos lets face it, he seems to eat anything that grows, but i have heard of people who camp to regular locations and have planted a few types of edible plants near to where they camp just so they know there is emergency food for them. I wonder.... I would quite like the idea of hiring an expert to walk with me through woodlands etc for a day to just physically show me what i can and cant eat. Sometimes pictures in the books dont do any justice.
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“Life belongs to the living, and he who lives must be prepared for changes.”
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SoCal92057
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Re: Living of the land

Post by SoCal92057 »

damaralenoire wrote:When i read about Living off the land i automatically think Bear Grylls, cos lets face it, he seems to eat anything that grows, but i have heard of people who camp to regular locations and have planted a few types of edible plants near to where they camp just so they know there is emergency food for them. I wonder.... I would quite like the idea of hiring an expert to walk with me through woodlands etc for a day to just physically show me what i can and cant eat. Sometimes pictures in the books dont do any justice.
I agree with you about pictures in a book, but I'm not sure how long you can exist eating a meager diet of rabbit food and burning up huge amounts of calories trying to survive. Better to eat the rabbit.

By the way, Grylls was discredited several years ago. He is a phony. Visit the link I have provided.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article ... otels.html

The Canadian, Les Stroud, seems to be the real thing and also has his own survival series. Stroud does his own camera work.

Semper Fidelis
A government big enough to give you everything you want, is strong enough to take everything you have. - Thomas Jefferson
ForgeCorvus
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Re: Living of the land

Post by ForgeCorvus »

Damaralenoire: I flexed my Google and found This as one of several options
jennyjj01 wrote:"I'm not in the least bit worried because I'm prepared: Are you?"
Londonpreppy wrote: At its core all prepping is, is making sure you're not down to your last sheet of loo roll when you really need a poo.
"All Things Strive" Gd Tak 'Gar
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damaralenoire
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Re: Living of the land

Post by damaralenoire »

ForgeCorvus wrote:Damaralenoire: I flexed my Google and found This as one of several options

Thanks for that, will look into it
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“Life belongs to the living, and he who lives must be prepared for changes.”