Went on a long hike this past weekend on a trial full of wild raspberry bushes. Gathering them as I found out was not so easy. The bush is thorny to begin with and the undergrowth is predominantly nettles. Between the two, a forager has their work cut out for them. For the three hours of our hike, we found many over-ripe berries which we ate right away. The firmer ones came home with us and it was a decent quantity - enough to get us thinking if making a jam would be the best way to go. Foraging in the wild is a meditative experience for me.
For a few hours, I am paying very close attention to my environment to see if there are edible things I could gather. If hiking it slows down my pace to where the we might take double the time to cover the same distance. The conversations often turn to memories of childhood and running around in the rural India with my friends, finding leaves and berries to eat along the way. It makes me think about the most basic needs of life.
Spending four hours to gather enough to last a couple of meals puts many things in perspective. The gift of freed time in our lives and what we choose do with it. The value of observing life around us closely, the shape of a leaf, the color and texture of a berry, a patch of earth mushrooms are growing with exuberance. These things can be overlooked or serve as a way to connect to the earth as we were meant to.
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