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The Ultralight
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Survival Use Of Plants
(Adapted from the U.S. Army Survival
Manual)
After having solved the problems of finding
water, shelter, and animal food, you will have to consider the
use of plants you can eat. In a survival situation you should
always be on the lookout for familiar wild foods and live off
the land whenever possible.
You must not count on being able to go
for days without food as some sources would suggest. Even in
the most static survival situation, maintaining health through
a complete and nutritious diet is essential to maintaining strength
and peace of mind.
Nature can provide you with food that will
let you survive any ordeal, if you dont eat the wrong plant.
You must therefore learn as much as possible beforehand about
the flora of the region where you will be operating. Plants can
provide you with medicines in a survival situation. Plants can
supply you with weapons and raw materials to construct shelters
and build fires. Plants can even provide you with chemicals for
poisoning fish, preserving animal hides, and for camouflaging
yourself and your equipment.
EDIBILITY OF PLANTS
The critical factor when in a survival
situation, and using plants for food, is to avoid accidental
poisoning. Eat only those plants you can positively identify
and you know are safe to eat.
Absolutely identify plants before using
them as food. Poison hemlock has
killed people who mistook it for its relatives, wild carrots
and wild parsnips.
At times you may find yourself in a situation
for which you could not plan. In this instance you may not have
had the chance to learn the plant life of the region in which
you must survive. In this case you can use the Universal Edibility
Test to determine which plants you can eat and those to avoid.
It is important to be able to recognize
both cultivated and wild edible plants in a survival situation.
Most of the information in this chapter is directed towards identifying
wild plants because information relating to cultivated plants
is more readily available.
Remember the following when collecting
wild plants for food:
Plants growing near homes and occupied
buildings or along roadsides may have been sprayed with pesticides.
Wash them thoroughly. In more highly developed countries with
many automobiles, avoid roadside plants, if possible, due to
contamination from exhaust emissions.
Plants growing in contaminated water or
in water containing Giardia lamblia and other parasites are contaminated
themselves. Boil or disinfect them.
Some plants develop extremely dangerous
fungal toxins. To lessen the chance of accidental poisoning,
do not eat any fruit that is starting to spoil or showing signs
of mildew or fungus.
Plants of the same species may differ in
their toxic or subtoxic compound content because of genetic or
environmental factors. One example of this is the foliage of
the common chokecherry. Some chokecherry plants have high concentrations
of deadly cyanide compounds while others have low concentrations
or none. Horses have died from eating wilted wild cherry leaves.
Avoid any weed, leaves, or seeds with an almond like scent, a
characteristic of the cyanide compounds.
Some people are more susceptible to gastric
distress (from plants) than others. If you are sensitive in this
way, avoid unknown wild plants. If you are extremely sensitive
to poison ivy, avoid products from this family, including any
parts from sumacs, mangoes, and cashews.
Some edible wild plants, such as acorns
and water lily rhizomes, are bitter. These bitter substances,
usually tannin compounds, make them unpalatable. Boiling them
in several changes of water will usually remove these bitter
properties.
Many valuable wild plants have high concentrations
of oxalate compounds, also known as oxalic acid. Oxalates produce
a sharp burning sensation in your mouth and throat and damage
the kidneys. Baking, roasting, or drying usually destroys these
oxalate crystals. The corm (bulb) of the jack-in-the-pulpit is
known as the "Indian turnip," but you can eat it only
after removing these crystals by slow baking or by drying.
WARNING
Do not eat mushrooms in a survival situation! The only way to
tell if a mushroom is edible is by positive identification. There
is no room for experimentation. Symptoms of the most dangerous
mushrooms affecting the central nervous system may show up after
several days have passed when it is too late to reverse their
effects.
Plant Identification
You identify plants, other than by memorizing
particular varieties through familiarity, by using such factors
as leaf shape and margin, leaf arrangements, and root structure.
Use a good guide before you are in a survival situation, to practice
identifying plants.
Learn as much as possible about plants
you intend to use for food and their unique characteristics.
Some plants have both edible and poisonous parts. Many are edible
only at certain times of the year. Others may have poisonous
relatives that look very similar to the ones you can eat or use
for medicine.
Universal Edibility Test
There are many plants throughout the world.
Tasting or swallowing even a small portion of some can cause
severe discomfort, extreme internal disorders, and even death.
Therefore, if you have the slightest doubt about a plants
edibility, apply the Universal Edibility Test (Figure 9-5) before
eating any portion of it.
1. Test only one part of a potential food
plant at a time.
2. Separate the plants into its basic components-leaves, stems,
roots, buds, and flowers.
3. Smell the food for strong or acid odors. Remember, smell alone
does not indicate a plant is edible or inedible.
4. Do not eat for 8 hours before starting
the test.
5. During the 8 hours you abstain from
eating, test for contact poisoning by placing a piece of the
plant part you are testing on the inside of your elbow or wrist.
Usually 15 minutes is enough time to allow for a reaction
6. During the test period, take nothing by mouth except purified
water and the plant part you are testing.
7. Select a small portion of a single part and prepare it the
way you plan to eat it.
8. Before placing the prepared plant part
in your mouth, touch a small portion (a pinch) to the outer surface
of your lip to test for burning or itching.
9. If after 3 minutes there is no reaction on your lip, place
the plant part on your tongue, holding it there for 15 minutes.
10. If there is no reaction, thoroughly
chew a pinch and hold it in your mouth for 15 minutes. Do not
swallow.
11. If no burning, itching, numbing stinging, or other irritation
occurs during the 15 minutes, swallow the food.
12. Wait 8 hours. If any ill effects occur
during this period, induce vomiting and drink a lot of water.
13. If no ill effects occur, eat 0.25 cup
of the same plant part prepared the same way. Wait another 8
hours. If no ill effects occur, the plant part as prepared is
safe for eating.
CAUTION
Test all parts of the plant for edibility,
as some plants have both edible and inedible parts. Do not assume
that a part that proved edible when cooked is also edible when
raw. Test the part raw to ensure edibility before eating raw.
The same part or plant may produce varying reactions in different
individuals
Before testing a plant for edibility, make
sure there are enough plants to make the testing worth your time
and effort. Each part of a plant (roots, leaves, flowers, and
so on) requires more than 24 hours to test. Do not waste time
testing a plant that is not relatively abundant in the area.
Remember, eating large portions of plant
food on an empty stomach may cause diarrhea, nausea, or cramps.
Two good examples of this are such familiar foods as green apples
and wild onions. Even after testing plant food and finding it
safe, eat it in moderation.
You can see from the steps and time involved
in testing for edibility just how important it is to be able
to identify edible plants.
To avoid potentially poisonous plants,
stay away from any wild or unknown plants that have -
Milky or discolored sap.
Beans, bulbs, or seeds inside pods.
Bitter or soapy taste.
Spines, fine hairs, or thorns.
Dill, carrot, parsnip, or parsley like foliage.
"Almond" scent in woody parts and leaves.
Grain heads with pink, purplish, or black spurs.
Three-leaved growth pattern.
Using the above criteria as eliminators
when choosing plants for the Universal Edibility Test will cause
you to avoid some edible plants. More important, these criteria
will often help you avoid plants that are potentially toxic to
eat or touch.
An entire encyclopedia of edible wild plants
could be written, but space limits the number of plants presented
here. Learn as much as possible about the plant life of the areas
where you expect to be traveling or working.
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Steve's Notes: Of the hundreds of edible wild
plants you can learn to identify, there are probably only a few
dozen that are widespread and will yield a good return
in calories for the time spent collecting them. Some of the best
survival plants, in my experience: cattail, wild raspberries
and blackberries, service berries, dandelions, wild blueberries,
wild onions and leeks, and burdock.
It is worth learning to identify many others, but start with
a few of these if you want to be ready quickly to make a meal
of plants in a survival situation. |
Continued here: Survival
Use Of Plants - Part Two.
See also: Survival
Cordage And Lashings.
Back to the Wilderness
Survival Guide.
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