A Guide to Spring Foraging in Pennsylvania

April 24, 2023

Foraging is a way to enter a reciprocal relationship with nature and enjoy its unique gifts.

 

Foraging for plants lets us form relationships with the local land and enjoy the bounty of wild foods. From berries to ferns and mushrooms, many wild plants in Pennsylvania are not only edible but are incredible sources of nutrition. Although it doesn’t take much to begin, it’s essential to forage safely, ethically, and responsibly to ensure that you’re not degrading wild areas or taking a chance on your health. Here are essential tips and a guide to wild foods you can look for this spring! 

 

Why Forage? 

Few people realize that many, if not all, plants in a forest offer some medicinal or culinary value. As we forage for them, we gain a greater appreciation of our local flora and learn to live more locally in our bioregion. 

Of course, many people tout foraging to get “free” food, but that’s not the right approach. Many indigenous writers, like Robin Wall Kimmerer, have pointed out that foraging is a way to enter a reciprocal relationship with plants. Through proper harvesting, we can respect and enjoy their offerings and learn to enhance rather than take away from the bounty of natural places.  

 

Primex Garden Center-Pennsylvania-A Guide to Spring Foraging--harvested forest herbs

How Do You Properly Forage? 

Whenever you’re foraging, it’s paramount to do it sustainably so that you’re not degrading plant populations or the wildlife that depend on them. The gold standard is to leave areas better than you find them. Here are some key tips to guide your foraging practice:

  • Only Take One Tenth to One Third: whether you’re harvesting berries, dandelion greens, or anything else, it’s important not to damage the plant you’re using or take away sustenance from other wildlife. To this end, only take up to one-third of the plant or berries you find. Leave the rest for the birds and animals and enough for the plant to recover.
  • Never Take the Last Plant or Only Plant: If only one or a few individuals of your desired plant are in that area, don’t harvest it. If you take the last one, you spell the end of that population. Instead, let it grow and reproduce and only forage from plants that are abundant enough to keep thriving. 
  • Don’t Forage for Rare or Endangered Plants: leave these plants alone, and let them grow and reproduce.    

 

A Guide to Foraging Safely in Pennsylvania 

As you probably know, foraging for wild foods comes with risks. Some plants are poisonous or have poisonous properties that you need to avoid. Some plants should be cooked before you can safely eat them. Some edible plants may closely resemble others that are toxic. Researching, correctly identifying species, and only foraging in appropriate areas are important. Here are fundamental guidelines to remember: 

  • Be Sure Before You Eat It: identify your plants by more than one indicator, e.g., by leaf shape, flower, color, and stem shape. If you’re unsure, then don’t eat it. Be especially careful with fungi and learn from an expert, if possible.
  • Start By Only Eating a Little: even if you’re 100% sure that something is edible, start by only eating a little bit. Wild foods are powerful; you never know how your body will react. Wait to see if it agrees with you before you forage and eat more.
  • Don’t Forage from Sprayed of Contaminated Sites: get to know your site by visiting it several times and researching its history before you begin foraging. Don’t eat anything that was sprayed by pesticides, or is growing near a road, a former industrial site, or contaminated land. Sometimes even natural parks are sprayed for invasive species. Double-check and be sure before you forage.  
  • Follow the Laws of the Land: only collect plants where it is legal. If you want to forage on private land, ask the landowner’s permission first. Before you forage in nature parks or public lands, be sure that it is permitted for your safety and the well-being of the natural space. 

 

Natural Foods that You Can Forage in Pennsylvania 

Here are some wild plants that you can harvest and enjoy this spring:

 

Primex Garden Center-Pennsylvania-A Guide to Spring Foraging-fern heads

Ostrich Fiddlehead Ferns

Halfway through the spring, the coiled head of these ferns can be harvested and eaten. These highly nutritious delicacies taste like an asparagus shoot and should be cooked before being eaten. You can identify ostrich ferns with smooth stems with a deep U-shaped groove. Only harvest about 3, or roughly half, of the fiddleheads from each plant. The brown, paperlike scales don’t need to be removed before eating. Ostrich ferns are also popular ornaments that you can grow for beauty or fiddleheads in your garden.      

 

Primex Garden Center-Pennsylvania-A Guide to Spring Foraging-morel mushrooms

Morel Mushrooms 

Morel Mushrooms are another spring delicacy you can harvest from the woods—these mushrooms fruit between mid-April and mid-May. You’ll often find them near dying or dead trees. Wrinkly, rigid caps, and a hollow inside will help you identify them. 

Depending on the morel species, they may be creamy, light gray, or dark gray. Be sure to distinguish them from False Morels, which are also wrinkly but do not have hollow cavities. Morels have a woodsy, nutty, and toasted flavor when sauteed, excellent in cream sauces or a stir-fry.    

 

Primex Garden Center-Pennsylvania-A Guide to Spring Foraging-harvesting nettle

Stinging Nettles 

Nettles are truly a wild superfood, rich in iron and other vitamins. The leaves and shoots have a spinach-like flavor that are often enjoyed in soups, stews, or steamed. It also can be dried and made into a nutritious tea. They’re best harvested when the leaves are tender in the spring or early summer. They have opposite, 2-4 inch leaves with toothed edges and a rough, veiny look. 

To avoid getting stung, use gloves when harvesting and handling stinging nettle. Cooking renders the tiny stinging fibers harmless.    

 

Primex Garden Center-Pennsylvania-A Guide to Spring Foraging-wild ramps

Wild Ramps 

Also known as wild leeks or garlic, ramps are pungent but flavorful allium growing in the eastern United States and Canada wild forests. They have a small bulb, narrow green shoots, and a strong garlic-like smell. Since they take decades to grow, we recommend only harvesting the leaves—one from a single plant—so they continue growing. As one of the first plants to kick off the growing season, they’re best harvested in the springtime. Ensure you can identify several toxic look-alikes correctly before harvesting and enjoying ramps.

 

More Tips for Ethical Foraging 

  • When possible, spread the spores or seeds of the plants you are harvesting to help them reproduce. 
  • Only harvest as much as you plan to use.
  • Don’t create new trails in a forest.
  • Pick up any litter you see as an act of reciprocity to the plants. 

 

Foraging is a beautiful way to enjoy the gifts of nature and to help plant populations thrive. When we visit foraging sites repeatedly, we bond with those places and are interested in seeing them flourish. Foraging allows us to learn about wild plants, the animals that use them, and how we’re connected to the web of life. For more information on foraging guides in Pennsylvania, visit our garden center today!