PlayBook🌿
Urban Foraging Walk
Discover edible plants hiding in plain sight in your city. Learn to see food where you only saw weeds.
€ 5–20
budget
Ignite
pace
De meeste mensen lopen dagelijks langs voedsel zonder het te zien. Brandnetels groeien langs fietspaadjes, paardenbloemen duiken op tussen stoeptegels, en wilde knoflook verspreidt zijn geur onder parkbomen. Een stad die je alleen kende als beton en verkeer, toont plotseling een verborgen laag van eetbare planten die wachten om ontdekt te worden.
Het moment dat je je eerste handvol verse bladeren uit een scheurtje in het asfalt plukt, verschuift er iets in je beleving van de stad. Je vingers ruiken naar wilde peterselie of zuuring, en je beseft dat de stad je altijd al voedde. De groene randen waar niemand naar kijkt blijken kleine voorraden te zijn. Langzaam wandelen wordt een vorm van jagen, waarbij elk grassprietje en onkruidje een potentiële maaltijd kan zijn.
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by PlayTryBe team
Get a foraging identification guide for your region. A physical book is best , you'll be outside and a book doesn't need signal. Spend 20 minutes learning five common edibles.
12Suggestion: Start simple: dandelion leaves, wild garlic, nettles, elderflower, and blackberries are hard to confuse.Walk to a park, canal bank, or woodland edge in your city. Bring a bag, scissors or a small knife, and your guide. Walk slowly. Look at the ground level.
Suggestion: Most people walk at eye level. Edible plants live at ankle height. Crouch often.The first time you recognise something edible growing in a crack in the pavement, your relationship with your city changes. It was always feeding you , you just weren't looking.
Harvest carefully. Take only what you'll use today. Cut cleanly , don't pull roots unless the guide says to. Thank the plant if you want. It sounds silly until you do it.
Continue walking. Try to find at least three different edible species. Touch them, smell them, look at them closely. Most have a smell that confirms their identity.
Halfway through your walk, sit down. Lay out what you've found. Look at it. You gathered this from your city. These are gifts from the cracks and edges.
Take your harvest home. Wash everything thoroughly. Make something simple: a salad, a pesto, a tea, a soup. Let the foraged ingredients be the star.
3I've walked this path a hundred times and never noticed the wild garlic growing under the bridge. The city is full of food if you slow down enough to see it.
Eat what you made. Taste the city in a way you never have before. Write down where you found each ingredient , next season, they'll be there again.
For anyone copying this
Do as we did
Suggestions
- Get a local foraging guide or app (like PlantNet or a regional foraging book) for identification. When in doubt, don't eat it.
- Spring and early autumn are the best seasons. Summer is too dry, winter too barren.
- Only pick where it's legal and away from roads, pesticides, and dog-walking areas.
- The rule of thirds: take only a third of what you find, leave the rest for the ecosystem.
Variations
Guided version
Guided version: Join a local foraging walk led by an expert. Most cities have them in spring and autumn.
- Note: Guided version: Join a local foraging walk led by an expert. Most cities have them in spring and autumn.
Tea walk
Tea walk: Only forage for things you can make tea from. Nettle, chamomile, mint, linden flowers.
- Note: Tea walk: Only forage for things you can make tea from. Nettle, chamomile, mint, linden flowers.
Photo-only version
Photo-only version: If you're unsure about identification, just photograph and research. No picking until you're confident.
- Note: Photo-only version: If you're unsure about identification, just photograph and research. No picking until you're confident.