Well Iv noticed they grow very long in soft soil similar to pine roots but not as strong I wonder iff it makes decent cordage iff split n braided
I'm trying to make an apocrathy and cloth dying plot where my nettles were taking over the whole area, and smothering a beautiful rose Bush.
That sounds a bit ironic - grubbing out one of the best medicinal plants and cloth dying plants to make room for an apocrathy and cloth dying plot - but, I realise you mean you want other plants as well as the nettles, not instead of them
in answer to the OP's question - I have used nettle roots as temporary binding but the stem is far better for long-term cordage.
Thanks yeh it seems similar to pine roots but less even lengths n not as strongThey do, but I don't think it makes as good a cordage as the stems.
In drier climates, the nettles wither over Winter, and the stems can just be cut and rubbed to free the fibre rich skins. The fibres come out fine and short and spin to make beautiful thread. Here we mostly have to peel them before they rot.
The stuff from the roots makes a heavier cordage altogether. It's very sound for binding stuff though, like a stone axe head into a cleft stick and then resin glue used to bond it all together.
Not long after I joined the forum, I was talking about nettle cordage and one of the other members said that he reckoned the roots were much stronger.
Well, I've tried them, but I think it honestly depends on the nettles, where they're growing, how long they've been growing, kind of thing.
I don't get consistency to any cordage I've made from them, but I do with the stems.
Each to their own
M
Nothing says Spring like nettle soup!They're a good food, especially in Winter and Spring when it's hard to find fresh greens.
Don't eat the old shoots, they have crystals that aren't good for us, but fresh sprigs from nettles picked just now are quite tasty
I made papas rellenas with them the other day. Washed, patted dryish, chopped and fried with very little olive oil, the nettles and other Spring greens as the filling.
Very good.
Nettles make good soup too.
If you dry the leaves and rub them down to fine dust, they can be a salt alternative for folks who have to be careful with salt intake. They're not 'salty' but it's a seasoning.
M