Wild food forage course

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Mr Cake

Forager
Jun 20, 2005
119
5
my house
I’d just like to say thanks to Joe and the team at Wilderness Survival Skills for a very enjoyable and instructive weekend down in Wiltshire taking part in their Wild Food Forage course. I’d previously been on a Primitive Tools course with WSS and had been sufficiently impressed by the instructors (I posted a review of the course on BCUK last year) to pay for another of their courses.

Friday evening comprised the usual site safety brief, a lesson in putting up a basha for those who wanted to borrow one, a cutting tools lesson and making digging sticks for the next day. The evening meal, a hearty sausage casserole, was as good as I expected after my last visit.

The main part of the course was the plant walk on the Saturday with Glenn and Anthony which wasn’t very far in distance (5 or 6 miles), but because there was so much to learn it took up a big part of the day. Along the way we collected various wild foodstuffs for eating later. The emphasis was on safety; on clearly identifying plants and on checking more than one reference source as well as harvesting in a sustainable manner. Although there was a lot of stuff to be learnt it never felt rushed and the instructors were more than willing to take on board information from the clients including a use for nettles which I couldn’t repeat on a family forum.

Glennburdock.jpg


I thoroughly enjoyed the walk both for the plant information but also because of the especially beautiful Wiltshire countryside (I’m a Moonraker by birth and so possibly biased). It was a long hot day and people were starting to wilt when we entered the cool of a wood to find that a holdall of pigeons was there waiting to be prepped as well as fresh water and pitta breads. Whilst Anthony got the fire going the students prepped the pigeons under Glenn’s tutelage. Lunch therefore was pigeon pittas using some of the wild foods we’d gathered, washed down with larch tea.

pigeonpitta.jpg


In the end it was a long day but a productive one and made the excellent food in the evening (based around duck, rabbit, langoustine and the wild edibles we had foraged during the day) even more appetising.

It wasn’t just plant identification; over the weekend there were lessons on trapping and snaring, field preparation of various game, bannock and bread making, use of dutch ovens, cordage making with nettles and various other practical skills. There was even an impromptu flint knapping lesson one evening. Sadly I missed that as I’d had an early night and was tucked up asleep in the group shelter (aka the midge motel until I got a fire going).

shelter.jpg


Joe and the team were at pains throughout the course to ensure that we students were kept occupied though there was never any sense that any activity was compulsory. If you didn’t want to field dress pigeons then something less gruesome would be found for you to take part in if you wished or if you wanted you could just sit in the sun and read a book. As we were told at the start of the course we could do as much or as little as we wanted.

plankingbacon.jpg


Sunday was spent learning many of the skills mentioned above and was rounded off by a test of what we’d learnt. There were thirty plants to identify, state if they were edible and note down one fact. It was clear from the final scores that a lot had been learnt and from the good natured ribbing throughout that the students had had a good weekend. After the test it was time to say our goodbyes and I’m sure I wasn’t the only person who wouldn’t have minded if the course had been rather longer.
 

queeg9000

Forager
Apr 24, 2006
182
2
Caldicot, South Wales
Fair do's that looks like you had a great time on the course, and it sounds well prepared, with plenty to keep you occupied and interested.

Out of interest, what did you do with the Burdock root? As I've seen a few around my local woods, and wouldn't mind trying it out.
 

Mr Cake

Forager
Jun 20, 2005
119
5
my house
There was so much and such a variety of food that night it's hard to remember to be honest. It was cut into strips and fried with ramsons and some other wild greens. As I said on my previous review I'm no gourmand but I can assure you it tasted very nice indeed. I didn't eat a lot of it though as I was busy stuffing my face with langoustine and the burdock went very quickly.
Joe's a member on BCUK so hopefully he'll drop in and give you the gen at some point.
 
Hello
Glenn here (the bearded one holding the Burdock).

That burdock actually snapped off, so god knows how long it actually was.

As Mr Cake has already mentioned, it was peeled (very important), sliced, par boiled, then stir fried with wild garlic stems and bulbs, silverweed roots(lovely and sweet), a little butter and our fine lea and perrins.

cheers
 

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