Sunday, May 31, 2026

Foraging


[Beginner]  Contact your local extension office to find out which plants in your area are edible, where they grow, and what season is peak to forage for each. For a variety of wild edible recipes, refer to MaryJane’s Outpost Guidebook. 

Who:  My local extension is hands-off with foraging topics.  Fortunately, I found some great field guides.  

Calflora.  Volunteer/citizen science organized plant ID that lets you zoom into a map quite closely to learn about what grows close to home.    

Foraging Southern California, Douglas Kent-- better coverage of dangerous look-alikes and other names for the species.  Also has some coverage of non-plant foraging (snails, crayfish).  Slightly more accessible for newbies (i.e. "top 10 edibles," chapters organized by conceptual names "greens, berries, fruits, etc.," more pocket-sized).  Author has taught at a local college, lives in our county, and made a lecture available online. [add to personal library]

Foraging California, Christopher Nyerges-- more focused on edibility and preparation of material.  Better coverage of the biozones (desert, chaparral, mountains) and the plants endemic to each.  More coverage of forageables that require post-processing (i.e. flour extenders like acorns).  Author continues to docent foraging and survival skills classes just one county away. [add to personal library]  

All That the Rain Promises and More... David Arora-- Mushroom ID.

Growing Gourmet and Medicinal Mushrooms  Paul Stamets-- Mushroom cultivation.  

Wildcrafted Fermentation Pascal Baudar-- Great inspiration to branch out from after mastering the basic salad and MJF recipes.  


What/Why:  The "recipes" I am focusing on initially are nutrient-dense salads.  I already have a good rhythm of buying lettuce and having a couple "big salads" a week.  Passive gardening using "weeds" or plants that are particularly adapted to the environment might allow us to eat food that is cheaper and even more nutrient-dense than what is available at the grocery store with minimal additional work planning and planting.  I am most interested in "bland" greens that have a long growing season.  I have learned from my first forays into foraging that there are quite a few greens and flowers that are edible, but are so bitter or limited in quantity, they would be more of an amuse bouche in a salad than a foundation.  

Secondary objectives are (1) to identify other plants/fungi I could introduce to my yard to extend the foraging season and (2) to find uses for things that grow rampant in my yard (i.e. morning glory, Norfolk pine) 

Tertiary objectives as I level up would be to identify "trail snacks" in wild areas I visit frequently, local alternatives to store-bought staples that require a bit more processing (soup/sautee greens, dried/preserved items, coffee, tea, flour), and extend my knowledge of dye, basketry, and medicinal plant options.    


Where:  

I will focus on the "weeds" in my own yard because I live in an urban area and can be sure my yard has not been treated with chemicals or been exposed to as much road-side pollution.  However, Douglas Kent's lecture was a comfort that in investigations on the feasibility of urban foraging to combat food deserts, they didn't find the pollution load of plants harvested on sidewalk medians to be too troubling.  Extra credit:  neighbors have fruit trees, cacti and weed seeds I might want to reintroduce into my yard now that the deep mulching has suppressed a lot of what had been there.  I reviewed the book notes on seaside and riparian plants, but will file this away for emergencies only because (1) most of the local beach/waterways are parks and protected land with strict and/or convoluted no-harvest rules (2) there is substantial pollution from urban runoff that could coat the plants; one of my book authors encourages harvesting and drying local seaweed while my other guide suggests not to harvest any algae or seaweed at all south of Malibu.      

When: 

Spring is peak season.  My guide says 70% of the foodplants available are salad/potherbs.  Most of these germinate in the winter rains but have died or gone to seed in our droughty summer.  

Late Spring-Summer-Fall is when the foraging shifts to fruit/nut/seeds.  I will think about planting some of these varieties into my yard to extend the season but I also have a decent collection of domesticated veggies and a mini orchard that can fill this niche. 

Fall-Winter is listed as a good time to go mushrooming.  I have several mushroom guide books, but have been able to snack more easily when we took the approach of inoculating an area with a known distinct-looking mushroom spore (in this case, stropharia rugosannulata) and harvesting fruiting bodies that emerged.  The volunteer mushrooms I have tried to identify in the yard have ranged from inconvenient to inedible to deadly.  Amanita (death cap), fulgo septica (dog vomit) - although it can absorb heavy metals which might be cool for around the foundation lead abatement),  mature phallacea (stinkhorn)-- some nocturnal animal beats me to digging up the edible stage "eggs," coprinoid (inky cap) possibly edible but tiny and progresses from harvestable to spent too quickly to definitively ID and harvest.  

Within my daily routine, I plan to work on this by grazing a little as I make the rounds, watering cultivated plants that are not on irrigation systems and learning a little bit more about plants and peak seasons as I go.  

How:  

As I forage, I am reminded of the principles of honorable harvest outlined in Braiding Sweetgrass.

1.  Ask permission:  identify the plant, identify yourself and your plans for it.  Indulge yourself in a little spiritual "woo" to determine if it is willing to cooperate.  

2.  Use restraint:  never take the first plant you see, never take more than half, don't waste any part of what you harvest. 

3.  Minimize harm/give back:  harvest in a way that allows the plant to recover, offer a gift in return (i.e. water, fertilizer, spread its seeds)

Supplementing this, I've learned when first trying a plant it is best to eat just a little bit and wait 2 hours before eating it in quantity.  Nyerges's book has also highlighted several plants that are edible but that some people are not able to tolerate.  



[Intermediate] Spend time in the field finding places to forage before, during, and off season. Learn to identify the plants by location, leaves and stalk characteristics.  

Here are field notes from my watering tour the morning of 5/31/2026... 



Laurel-- I planted this in a pot thinking it would be fun to eventually bonsai into a nod to the Greek myth about the nymph Daphne who was chased by Apollo until her dad changed her into a tree.   This variety is the regular, not super-fuerte California version and since I don't make that many soups, is probably enough even in bonsai form to cover my household need for seasoning.  Growing in its potting soil is chickweed.  Chickweed tastes fine as a raw green but doesn't grow big enough leaves to be much of a salad foundation.  

Fennel-- I intentionally planted this, but love grazing on it and so does my kid.  We also saw it was a hit with swallowtail caterpillars.  

Mint-- I planted this (in a container!) and have found it is a great low-maintenance herb.  

Grape-- I bought these vines from a nursery.  At first, I was disappointed they might have been mislabeled as the variety leafed out into a seedy concord I never would have intentionally ordered.  That said, all the seedless table grape varieties I planted along the same fence have failed and this one is going strong.  I love that the feral cats hide here and patrol the grapes from bird snacking.  If I get good at blending and straining out the seeds, I bet this would make great fruit leather.  I also like the idea of using its big leaves as a green to wrap dolmas.  

Citrus-- this is a domesticated potted variety of lemon (see tag!) from MIL.  It hadn't occurred to me to sample the flowers until studying the foraging books.  The zagara smell amazing but have a bit of a bitter finish.  Maybe it could be offset by steeping in a simple syrup or garnishing in a limited quantity.  

Fig-- I bought this tree as well, but it was listed in one of the foraging books and is definitely a low-maintenance tree that produces an abundance of fruit.  

Dock-- I bought this from seed after trying some in a salad mix my MIL's neighbor gifted her.  I regret planting this.  Only the very smallest leaves are palatable and even then, they taste so bitter.  I wish I had asked my MIL's neighbor to provide a cutting from her mellower stock instead.    

Purslane -- this was purslane but its season was so short it is past.  I will watch for it next year to sample.  What is growing in the yard now is the less-succulent and not edible spurge.  

Mallow-- I know our yard is capable of growing this, but I was unable to find any at the end of May.

Oxalis-- the season is mostly passed for this, when it covered our orchard in drifts.  That said, I can still find little pockets of it.  Both foraging books mentioned kids will snack on it and I have found that to be the case.  I love the garnish potential of the lemony flowers.  

Spiderwort -- this is the winner.  A mild leafy green that grows in quantity!  The purple flowers could work as a general garnish as they don't have a have a distinctive flavor or scent profile.  I could also try introducing some more riparian variety plants to this laundry grey water outflow area.    

Prickly Lettuce-- I want to watch these closer to understand what people mean by compass plant and that it follows the sun.  The leaves are on-par with sow thistle, but I subtract a point for the potential to do battle with its prickly stem.  

Sonchus?  (Sow Thistle) or Lactuca virosa?-- this might be my number two pick for salad workhorse.  It grows despite trying to bury it and tastes only a click more bitter than artisan lettuce.  The slugs don't seem to take much interest to it either.  

Dandelion-- I know the yard is capable of growing this even though I didn't spot any this morning to taste-test against spiderwort, prickly lettuce, sow thistle, and lambsquarter.  When I do see it, I let it go to seed and blow the heads in wishful thinking of more greens.  

Nasturtium --  These flowers would be the king of salad garnish, showy, floral smell with a peppery kick at the finish.  I also found some seed pods on this excursion that I want to try to pickle in ACV to see how they compare to capers which I purchase in quantity.  

Lambsquarter-- when we moved in, this was everywhere but now between a couple years of chicken grazing and heavy mulching, it isn't growing in quantities to be much of a salad workhorse.  Maybe I can scatter the seeds more liberally this fall.  

Nightshade-- I know the yard is capable of growing this and was delighted to learn the dark ripe berries are edible.  It might be too early in the season to find any of the plants on my walk.  I did, however, find a bunch of very happy cherry tomatoes I had planted which are nightshade relatives.  

Oak - we have 2 trees on the property but I've never gone to the trouble of collecting, shelling, boiling, drying, and grinding the acorns.  I am exhausted just thinking about it, but it is useful to know it was a staff of life for indigenous tribes before the Columbian exchange.  This one looks a bit sick, perhaps a boring bug has done too much damage.  It makes wonderful cover for small birds and we have a woodpecker in the area who might work on it, so I am reluctant to see it go.  It might be interesting to see what mushrooms grow in oak if it does need to come down.    


Bladderpod-- planted this as a nectary for hummingbirds but have learned that the flowers and seeds can also be harvested and cooked later in the season.  

Passive Agriculture Wish List

*Cattail-- I could try planting some of this in the little raised fishpond that doubles as a rainwater catchment and watering can refill station.  I doubt I could grow it in a meaningful quantity there, but I was so captivated by Kimmerer's chapter in Braiding Sweetgrass about it being the "K-mart" of useful plants.  

*Carob tree -- possibly try the seeds in a store first before replacing one of the failed trees in the orchard.

*Currant bush -- Unlike gooseberries, these are not spiny.  Probably look for a white/pink variety that is tasty enough to not require cooking.  

*Amaranth-- is so striking in other people's gardens and I love that both the leaves and seeds are usable.  

*Chia seeds -- This could work as a low-maintenance understory in the orchard and I love the awe with which Nyerges writes about golden chia, a tablespoon of which could sustain an Indian on a 24 hour forced march.    

*Buckwheat -- I have scattered this as a ground cover crop but not much has taken.  Perhaps it is time to try again.  

*Wild Cherry-- cultivated cherry rootstock has failed in our yard, possibly for lack of chill.  It might be fun to try growing these.  Nyerges even claims the meat from the seed can be used if you are careful about cyanide.  

*Strawberry Tree/Arbutus -- every so often, the edibles nursery we frequent mentions these in their newsletter.  I love the idea of a tree that is both ornamental and useful, but would want to try some of the fruit first.  

*Plantain -- Guides indicate this might be a bit bitter for fresh eating, but, after playing a foraging board game called WildCraft, my daughter often says that when she dies, she wants to come back as plantain because it is so cute.  I also love the story of it being whiteman's footprints and being a useful rather than noxious weed in Braiding Sweetgrass. 

*Violet -- several friends in the sisterhood list violet as a favorite fragrance but it is surprisingly difficult to procure as an essential oil for candles and other gifts.  I'd like to smell the real thing and try it as an edimental.  

*Lemonade Berry/Sugarbush/Sumac- this is another one I'd like to find on a trail and try before committing lawn space.  I have really enjoyed dried sumac spice, so if this is its source, it might be fun to grow.  

*Honey Locust -- sounds so promising as a tree to replant the median with, but manuals are mixed about whether it would thrive in our coastal environment.  

*California Coffee berry -- this is intriguing as I have 3 coffee trees on the property but have come to appreciate that methods for making decaf are tricky.  How cool would it be to be able to grow something similarly flavored as a caffeine-free option?  


Nuisance Weed Potential uses: 

Asparagus Fern-- this is not edible and has annoying thorns.  Some people cultivate it as a houseplant, so maybe I could dig some up and try propagating it for my kid's end of driveway plant stand.  It may tolerate shadier environments so I could pilot it as a houseplant in darker corners of our house (i.e. master bathroom)  





Morning Glory-- Definitely not edible.  Its redeeming qualities are that it seems to feed the hummingbirds when their feeders run dry.  I've also had some limited success trying to weave it into a cone-shaped basket.  I also have used the knowledge that it thrives here to plant sweet potato which is a relative (pictured below).  




Campsis radicans* (Trumpet Vine)  Cape Honeysuckle-- I think?  I'm not fully convinced I have ID'ed this correctly.  This attracts birds and is ornamental but still* isn't edible.  Some sources say the bark can be used to quell bleeding and leaf/bark can be used to treat stomach issues.   (Thank you Professor Kent, for solving our mystery!)  




Lantana -- ambivalent comments on whether the fully ripe berries are edible, so I think I will stick with the low hanging (and less controversial) fruits and leave these for the birds for now.  


Saturday, May 16, 2026

Happier Feet

Content warning:  TMI for most readers-- skip this one!  
That said, this was the best place I could think of to capture what I hope will be my sad toe turn around with my memory starting to get a little fuzzy and no abiding offline journaling habit.  But heck, 10-20% of the population has the same problem as me and the number climbs to 35% for the over 65 crew.  Maybe some readers will benefit from reading my lab notes.  So, even if it is a bit of a compromise on privacy, here goes!      

Objective/Hypothesis:  18 months from now (i.e. Thanksgiving 2027) have a left toenail that is improved to the point where I do not feel self-conscious going barefoot without polish cover with the support of a new podiatrist and ChatGPT.  


Background:  contracted Trichophyton rubrum in the intense training that lead up to completing an Ironman in Arizona in the fall of 2017.  When OTC topical stuff did nothing, I sought treatment from a podiatrist (2019-2020ish?) which included an oral antifungal (probably terbinafine) with the understanding I would need to get follow up bloodwork to refill the prescription.  Also with the understanding that reinfection was highly likely due to difficulty completely disinfecting the environment.  Oral seemed to be working, but the doctor declined writing a second Rx and insisted on a second appointment (not discussed at intake).  At this point, we had pandemic controls, I had an infant and not great childcare coverage.  I had vivid memories of waiting a long time for the first appointment listening to the doctor quarrel over the phone next door about not having been invited or something to a conference while I stressed that the clock was running down on my sitter coverage at home.  Now I was stressing I had toxified my liver and no one was willing to discuss it with me over the phone in the worst case and this being some sort of second co-pay grift situation in the more likely scenario.  I declined making a second appointment and settled into a routine of my hubby shellacking the offending nail with a heavy coat of my favorite nail polish.  I briefly consulted a few years later with my general physician and got a similarly bleak prognosis and an Rx for a topical nail paint which we applied haphazardly and is now 2 years expired.  

Intervention/Experiment:  

5/15-5/25:  Prep.  Based on suggestions from ChatGPT.  
  • Remove nail polish
  • Begin treatment with Lamasil AT (topical terbinafine) assuming comorbidity with Athlete's foot.  While package claims 2 weeks sufficient, will probably need to continue longer due to reservoir in nailbed.  I have a pretty good anchor habit of 2x/day face washing so I will stack this application with that.  
  • Begin overnight treatment with 40% urea lotion to soften nails and allow better topical treatment penetration.
  • Begin weekly treatment with disposable emery board to debride build up on nail and allow products to penetrate more effectively.  I am finding this might work better with a full soak rather than a shower.  Perhaps in a future week I will try to stack it with a Friday heat the spa and hang with MacGyver day because I think he misses our now on hiatus pedicure catch ups.  
  • Prioritize barefoot policy at home to maximize dryness/airflow.  I am finding this works a bit at cross-purposes to covering my feet with Lamasil cream in the morning and then slip-sliding around the house.  However I am finding it is pretty agreeable to my attempt to keep the house cleaner projects (though the other 2 inhabitants wear their shoes all over and then complain when they can't find pairs to wear at the back door, so...)
  • Douse shoes with lysol and situate outside during the day to do some amount of UV disinfection in sunny socal.  I thought I could store them outside indefinitely and then remembered we have a feral cat situation and the spray of those is even more objectionable that the smells coming out of the depths of my climbing shoes.  Considered plug-in UV shoe disinfectors but they are expensive, reviews of their efficacy are mixed, and it would be a big departure from our current dump shoes at the back door routine to use them consistently.   
  • Disinfect all toe clippers with rubbing alcohol.  Discover just keeping an open tiny container for disinfecting is unsafe, so will stick with keeping it capped at all times except during a 10 min dip after tools are used.  
  • Take baseline toe nail photos (below)
  • Research + purchase 2 new sandal models at REI to wear once I have podiatrist go-ahead during the full treatment process to maximize sanitation and allow rotation to fully dry (Keen Newport-- machine washable, toe cap affords some privacy if self-conscious in social settings.  Bedrock Cairn EVO-- minimalist sandals that should be easy to disinfect for everyday use).  I am in a clothes low-buy phase, but this spree seemed ordained with notices from REI I had member benefits to spend and both shoes being available at the local shop for 25% off and an opportune sushi-rolling class for the kid enabling MacGyver and I to swing by for a date night.  Retire Minnetonka moccasins.  
  • Request appointment with different podiatrist who advertises several fungal treatment modalities on 5/25...  

Current concerns:  1.  my climbing shoes are really hard to fully disinfect and I wear them barefoot for about 2 sessions per week but I am not ready to replace them, especially while I feel I still have an active not-fully treated infection.  I can try wearing with socks, storing outside of the bag, and spraying liberally with Lysol after use until I am ready to replace them.  2.  general concerns the new podiatrist won't get back to me, won't be flexible enough to work around my childcare logistics (like the last guy), will have a grim prognosis, or that I actually have the liver toxicity situation.    
 



5/30/2026 


I think it is already starting to look a little better, right?  

Yesterday was the first appointment with Dr. Baik.  He trimmed and sanded back a lot of the nail and I did the first of what will be 7 monthly laser treatments.  The laser could get hot, but we made it through the session without switching to the other laser.  We also discussed the terms my daughter could join for future appointments if I can't find someone to watch her.  I have a cream I apply twice daily and a nail polish I apply once daily.  Dr. B. said he could see scaling on my feet (I figured these were callouses) that indicate fungal infection, so I guess my Lotramin AT regimen wasn't fully effective.  Part of my challenge was adherence (falling from 2x daily to 1x) and another part was coverage (often putting it on and then immediately being called on some barefoot errand elsewhere).  I have stashed the Dr. Baik perscriptions on my bedside table with a good book so it will be the first thing I do in the morning and the last thing at night when my feet are maximally clean from an evening shower.  The book will keep me from running off and smearing lotion all over the house floors while it penetrates (2-5 minutes).  

Today is the day I officially cut over to my two "easy to clean + good air flow" sandals.  I will try to store them outside on dry sunny days and alternate which ones I use daily.  I ordered a preowned "shoezap" UV light on eBay because I think my climbing shoes will be a problem to keep from reinfecting my feet; and I cannot open them up enough to have natural light penetrate the toe area.  Dr. Baik also sent me home with a shoe spray which I coated them with yesterday night to help reduce the fungal load.  

In the next grocery order, I plan to try a biotin supplement to help with nail growth.  

The final instruction to disinfect my shower with bleach is a bit tricky.  Our main bathroom is slate and it isn't fully sealed.  Technically it is porous.  There is one window with broken sashes for hypothetical ventilation but it is placed pretty high up on the wall.  I don't love the idea of using dilute bleach daily-every three days in these circumstances.  MacGyver suggested plans to sand down the flaking slate so everything drains fully with no little puddles and then to super seal the works.  However, I am not sure how far down on the priorities list this falls.  I am comforted that under this plan, I will be seeing Dr. Baik monthly so if progress stalls because of this, he is available to course-correct.  

When I mentioned this project to a fitness accountability buddy, he mentioned having a similar struggle until he "quit sugar."  So now I am thinking about what that could look like.  I'm not ready to go cold turkey and with a kid and a lot of extra-curriculars, I feel I need to have the flexibility to eat some restaurant or processed food.  However, I could definitely cut back on finishing sugary kid snacks that have been abandoned (just compost them) and ordering just coffee+milk-based options when hunting for a third space close to where my kid is doing a class.  I can't believe it, one of the youtubers doing a zero sugar challenge found that even french fries have added sugar to assist with browning!