
Baby wild blueberries
I walked down our dirt (gravel) road today to deliver an Easter basket to my neighbor. Just that short distance provided me with a treasure trove of interesting (to me) photos.
The wild blueberries have appeared! It won’t be long until blueberry dessert time!
I also found a rare (in this area) Solomon’s Seal. A few years back I dug one up to sample the tubers. But since I hadn’t seen any for several years, there was no

Solomon's Seal
way I was going to disturb this one brave little spray of leaves that grew along the roadside.
I also found some wild strawberry plants that are a lot larger than the ones that grow on the edges of my yard. I wonder if the strawberries will be larger also. They are usually so small that I eat them as fast as I pick them and never have enough left over to

These wild strawberry plants are much larger than the ones that usually grow around here--more than double the size that I'm used to seeing.
make dessert with.
The Japanese honeysuckle blooms are getting ready to open. It’s actually a noxious weed around here, but the blossoms are so beautiful and the scent so heavenly that I love them. I haven’t yet made tea from the flowers, although I have intended to. This year I will finally do it!
And I couldn’t resist more greenbrier photos. I think the shoots and tender new, almost translucent leaves are beautiful.
I used to pick and cook a lot of poke salad shoots. But an odd thing happened

Young greenbrier leaves
to the flavor. The ones in our area used to have a wonderful taste that was a cross between asparagus and green beans. Last year, when I was in Florida, I picked some to cook for my sister to introduce her to them. But when they were done, they were completely tasteless. I threw them out. Then when I got home I picked some and they had the same puzzling lack of flavor.
I believe that it may have been due to all the rain we had. Steve Brill in New York has described poke shoots as having a pungent taste. Ours never did–they were always mild tasting and good. So climate must have a big bearing on flavor. I’ll cook

Young poke salad plants
some tomorrow and see how they turn out this year.
If you want to try poke salad shoots, only use the shoots with small new leaves at the end. The mature plant is poisonous. When the leaves lose their new green color and translucence, they are no longer edible. Also avoid shoots that have a lot of red on them. To remove the small amount of water soluble toxins in the young shoot and leaves, bring a large and small pot of water to boil. After the water in the small pot is boiling, add the shoots and cook for 5 minutes or so. Drain and pour more boiling water over the shoots and cook for two or three minutes more. Pour that water off and cover them with boiling water once again and cook a couple more minutes until done.

Wild lettuce bolting. This one had been run over by a lawn mower.
The water from the first two boils will be reddish and cloudy. The water in the last boil will remain clear. At this point, you have a safe, very healthy vegetable that was once a staple food in the Deep South, particularly in the war years. Brush with butter and salt lightly when done.
My older neighbor remembers her mother cooking poke salad for dinner.
Up North, they call the cooked greens poke salat. Down here, it’s still poke salad. 🙂
I also stumbled upon a wild lettuce bolting. This is the sweetest, tenderest variety of wild lettuce. Even though it

Baby black cherries
was bolting, the leaves only had a tiny, pleasant tinge of bitterness.
The blackberry flowers are beginning to lose their petals, which means small green blackberries will be appearing soon. And the black cherries continue to grow in abundance. I made syrup with them last year. This year I’ll probably make jelly.
This post is getting WAY too long, so I’ll add the rest of the photos without comment.

Blackberry flowers are beginning to lose their petals.

Red clover. Their red blossoms are nutritious in teas and recipes.

Yellow clover. When wilted, it develops coumarins, so I avoid it.

Yellow poplars (tulip trees-not edible) grow all over our property, but I had never noticed flowers on them. Today I found several fallen blossoms where branches had been knocked down. Will have to go looking for flowers on the trees tomorrow.

I don't think birdsfoot violets are edible, but wanted to post this picture anyway!

And finally, another strange, bulls-eye looking leaf parasite. Will have to research what it is. On edit - this is a maple eyespot gall. It is caused by a midge and it does not hurt the tree.
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