Appalachian Trail
Sunday, April 5

Appalachian Footbridge

Footbridge Over the Appalachian Trail

Today we explore America's most famous hiking trail, which runs for hundreds of miles from Maine to Georgia. Our stretch, running through Pawling, NY, is loaded with wild foods.

This tour is preceeded by a free 60-minute wild foods talk and presentation at Native Landscapes, 991 Route 22, Pawling, NY, which as adjacent to the trail.

As soon as we head off from the nursery, we'll find the huge leaves of burdock, with an edible root that tastes like artichokes and potatoes. Nearby, we'll find loads of wild parsnips, garden escapees that taste even better than their commercial forerunners, plus lots of wild carrots, a.k.a. Queen Anne's Lace.

Wild Parsnip Leaves

Wild Carrot

The wild version of this common vegetable is more flavorful and chewy than the commercial strain, making it especially suitable for carrot cakes, soups, and cookies.

Other common herbs and greens we can expect include water mint, wild mint, garlic mustard, field garlic, hairy bittercress, violets, chickweed, mullein, lamb's-quarters, yarrow, purslane, sheep sorrel, wood sorrel, poor man's pepper, sassafras, and black birch.

We'll also find lots of jewelweed, a major medicinal herb with juice that relieves a variety of skin irritations, from insect bites to preventing poison ivy rash. In addition to the common species, spotted jewelweed, which has an orange flower, this is the only tour where we'll also find pale jewelweed, with its yellow flower.

If it has rained beforehand, we could find the season's first gourmet wild mushrooms. Oyster mushrooms, enokis, and tree ear mushrooms all may appear early in the season.
The free 60-minute presentation begins at 9:30 AM, and the 2-1/2 hour walking tour starts at 10:30 AM; both on Sunday, April 5, at Native Landscapes, 991 Route 22, in Pawling NY.

Call (914) 835-2153 at least 24 hours ahead to reserve a place for the tour.