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Nature's Garden: A Guide to Identifying, Harvesting, and Preparing Edible Wild Plants Paperback – Illustrated, March 1, 2010

4.8 4.8 out of 5 stars 1,865 ratings

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A detailed guide to 41 of the most widespread wild foods in North America, covering how to find and identify them, which parts are used, when and how to harvest them, and how to prepare them for the table. The cultural and natural history of the plants are also discussed. There is no overlap between the plants covered in this book and The Forager's Harvest.

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4.8 out of 5 stars
1,865 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers find the book's descriptions and information on wild plants clear and useful. They appreciate the excellent pictures that help them understand the content. Readers find the author's stories engaging and entertaining, making it a worthwhile investment. Overall, they consider the book a valuable resource for learning about edible plants in North America.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

174 customers mention "Readability"165 positive9 negative

Customers appreciate the author's thorough explanations of plants and their history. They find the descriptions accurate and informative, with great pictures. The book provides extensive information and helps readers identify and use plants effectively.

"...Not only are his pictures only second to those of Kallas, his descriptions are spot on, and reading his books are like reading one of your favorite..." Read more

"...Thayer is a real expert who knows whereof he speaks; he has eaten all the plants he writes about, not just once, but many, many times...." Read more

"...All plants are very well discussed giving great descriptions of the appearance of the plant as well as what the edible parts are and what to expect..." Read more

"...Each plants “chapter” covers the myths, characteristics, different variations of some plants (i.e. Different types of oak trees), range and habitat,..." Read more

154 customers mention "Information quality"148 positive6 negative

Customers find the book provides useful information on foraging and herbal remedies. It offers clear descriptions of wild plants and how to use them. The author combines research and personal experience to provide a comprehensive guide for foragers. The book includes photos and general information about foraging safety.

"...full color pictures of each plant covered are the best I've seen in wild food literature, and he covers each plant from seedling to the dinner plate..." Read more

"...One thing Thayer stresses is the importance of plant identification, and to that end he presents a four-step process for identification, and what..." Read more

"...its own synopsis with a description, range and habitat, and harvest and preparation, accompanied by full color photographs of the plant and in some..." Read more

"...just information about foraging, poisonous plant identification, becoming an expert, and safe consumption of wild plants...." Read more

108 customers mention "Pictures quality"106 positive2 negative

Customers appreciate the book's clear pictures and information. They find the photos helpful for identifying plants, with descriptions of their appearance and edible parts. The book includes photos of various plant parts, including roots, leaves, stems, flowers, fruits, nuts, and seeds. It also provides detailed instructions on identification, harvesting, preparation, and potential lookalikes.

"...process for identification, and what are probably the best photographic illustrations to be found in any book on edible plants...." Read more

"...All plants are very well discussed giving great descriptions of the appearance of the plant as well as what the edible parts are and what to expect..." Read more

"...400 pages to be exact. Lots of pictures...." Read more

"...The book is of good quality and pictures are clear." Read more

34 customers mention "Edible content"34 positive0 negative

Customers find the book helpful for identifying and cooking wild plants. They appreciate its detailed descriptions of the taste and preparation methods. The book covers information about 42 different edible plants, with plenty of pictures.

"...Descriptions of the plants are excellent. Recipes are added by the author, plus his enthusiasm and good nature jump out at you through the page...." Read more

"...This book covers information about 42 different edible wild plants. 400 pages to be exact. Lots of pictures...." Read more

"One VERY COMMON, delicious, very nutricious plant that he missed, and which dates back to AT LEAST 9th Century England, is Common Lambsquarters..." Read more

"...It even describes the taste and gives advice on how to prepare it for storage or eating, including whether it can be eaten raw or if it needs to be..." Read more

29 customers mention "Storytelling"29 positive0 negative

Customers enjoy the author's storytelling style. They find the stories engaging and informative, with his personal experiences finding and eating wild plants. The book is described as fun to read and informative.

"...come out with another book, with even more plants, and just as much non-nonsense, solid, fact-based advice, and just as many opinions...." Read more

"...The commentary on Chris McCandless was in my opinion the most interesting part of the book...." Read more

"Engaging style and great photos. This is geared the most to plants of the northeast region, because Thayer wrote about what he knows...." Read more

"...books with thorough details and information but he also adds his own personal stories...." Read more

29 customers mention "Value for money"29 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate the book's value for money. They find it a great investment and recommend it for beginning foragers. The book is a useful addition to their wilderness survival packs and an asset to any outdoor person's library.

"...The section on Oaks and acorns are worth the price of the book by it self let alone the numerous other plants in it...." Read more

"...I've waited too long for a book like this. It's one of the best investments I've ever made...." Read more

"...Highly recommended for beginning foragers." Read more

"...narrowed his focus to a much smaller number of plants that have significant food value...." Read more

12 customers mention "Humor"12 positive0 negative

Customers enjoy the author's sense of humor and humorous stories about wild food. They find the honesty and sarcasm refreshing.

"...His honesty and sarcasm are refreshing and very much needed with all of the 'not so great books' on this subject that are out there...." Read more

"...Thayer is an engaging writer - he's funny! Great story telling about his adventures in life finding and eating wild foodstuffs...." Read more

"...The writing is conversational, humorous, engaging, and utterly unpretentious...." Read more

"...easy to understand, has excellent pictures, and the author has a good sense of humor...." Read more

11 customers mention "Poisonous plants"9 positive2 negative

Customers find the book helpful for identifying and consuming wild plants safely. They appreciate the detailed descriptions of poisonous plants that look like edible ones. The book provides good warnings about potential dangers.

"...The first 75 pages are just information about foraging, poisonous plant identification, becoming an expert, and safe consumption of wild plants...." Read more

"...ideal time to harvest, what to look for, and MOST importantly, poisonous lookalikes...." Read more

"...[that you might mistake a plant for along with detailed descriptions of poisonous plants you could mistake for edible ones." Read more

"...It is nice that he goes into depth on each plant and shows poisonous look-alike plants...." Read more

Very Informative, but he missed a common VERY NUTRITIOUS green that's been eaten for CENTURIES.
4 out of 5 stars
Very Informative, but he missed a common VERY NUTRITIOUS green that's been eaten for CENTURIES.
One VERY COMMON, delicious, very nutricious plant that he missed, and which dates back to AT LEAST 9th Century England, is Common Lambsquarters (Chenopodium album). The United States Department of Agriculture lists Lambsquarters in USDA nutrition tables.I especially liked his research on the history of the various Black Nightshade species, whose berries and leaves have been eaten by hundreds of millions of people in various countries, for centuries.The book is of good quality and pictures are clear.
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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on November 2, 2011
    Beneficial foraging books
    The opening paragraphs are designed to assist others avoid some of the pit falls I made in purchasing wild food literature. You can skip this and go directly to the individual book reviews if you choose. Please note that this review is of multiple wild food books. I prefer authors that work with the plants they are writing about, and don't just repeat things they read from another book (yes some wild food authors actually do that). I also prefer books with good descriptions, lots of photos of each plant to make identification easier, and to cover the plant from identification to the plate. That's my bias, here is my review.

    I'm just a guy who likes to forage and enjoys the learning and nutritional aspect of wild foods. My main purpose for writing this review of multiple wild food books on one review is to assist others coming to wild foods for the first time (like I was three years ago), and to hopefully help them avoid some of the easily avoided pit falls I made in the literature I chose. At first I wanted books with the most plants in it for my money. It made sense to me at the time but ended up being a grave mistake. Books that devote one picture and a brief explanation to a plethera of plants helped me identify some plants in one stage of growth, but did next to nothing that would have allowed me to use them as food. Example, most books will show you one picture of the adult plant. Many times that's not when you want to harvest it. No one would eat a bannana that was over ripe and pure black and call banana's in general inedible due to that experience. Yet many who have sampled a dandelion have done exactly that. As I've learned from John Kallas, one has to have the right part of the plant (this includes proper identification of the plant), the plant has to be at the right stage of growth, and it has to be prepared properly. If you can't do those three things you shouldn't be sticking the plant in your mouth. Now on to the individual books.

    Wild Edible Plants By John Kallas: 6 stars because it deserves more than 5

    Instead of having hundreds of plants with one picture and one paragraph of information Kallas gives you less plants in far more detail and unmatched photography. If I could give this book to everyone in the United States I would as it is the best book I have found on the market. His descriptions of the plants are spot on and easy to read, his multiple full color pictures of each plant covered are the best I've seen in wild food literature, and he covers each plant from seedling to the dinner plate in stunning detail. If I could only own one book on wild edible foods this would be the one. No book can give you everything you need as a forager. That being said John does a superb job of plant selection in that most people in north america will be able to find all these plants within a mile of their home. For a guy taking care of two children under 3 years of age this book allowed me to forage while staying close to home. Consider this a must own. John also runs wild food adventures in Portland Oregon which offers wild food instruction in that area.

    Nature's Garden By Samuel Thayer: 5.2 stars the second must own, and it too deserves more than 5 stars.

    If I could only own two wild food books this would be the second one on my shelf next to John Kallas book. The section on Oaks and acorns are worth the price of the book by it self let alone the numerous other plants in it. Mr. Thayer uses color photographs at various stages of growth just like Kallas does. After you own Kallas book you will be hooked and Nature's Garden is the next logical progression in your journey. Other reviewers have covered Sam's brilliant rebutal to Jon Krakauer's propagandist poison plant fable of how Chris McCandless died. Chris died of starvation not a poisonous plant. Sam actually has this section of the book posted on his website for viewing (go to foragersharvest dot com), and is worth reading even if you don't buy the book. I really benefited from Sam's sections on the different wild lettuces, elderberries, thistles, and many others. On top of that Sam has the most engaging writing style of all the wild food authors I've encountered. Not only are his pictures only second to those of Kallas, his descriptions are spot on, and reading his books are like reading one of your favorite novels.

    Foragers Harvest By Samuel Thayer 5 stars

    I prefer Thayer's Nature's Garden over this book for my area. That being said I can't really say anything bad about this book. Good descriptions, excellent pictures at various stages of growth, good selection of plants, and done with accuracy. This book was to my knowledge the first of it's kind back when it was released back in the mid 2000's. To my knowledge it was the best book on the market then, and has only been surpassed by his follow up book Nature's Garden and Kallas Wild Edible Plants. Being the first book in this motif it (unjustly I might add) received numerous attacks by a few disgruntled souls on amazons book review section. One must remember Thayer was revolutionary in this field when he released this book, and people had a hard time adjusting. As my friend Stephen T. McCarthy once posted, "All truth passes through three stages: First, it is ridiculed. Second, it is violently opposed. Third, it is accepted as being self-evident. Well anyone who has used Sams books should understand the advantage of covering less plants in more detail than covering many plants with little to no detail like the over-hyped gimmick books that litter the wild food market do. I few things I really liked about this book include (but are not limited to): descriptions and photographs on cat tail, wapato, service berry, stinging and wood nettle. The canning section is solid for the beginning forager like I am. This in my opinion still fits the must own catagory.

    Euell Gibbons, Stalking the Wild Asparagus 4.5 stars

    Line drawings that are OK. Descriptions of the plants are excellent. Recipes are added by the author, plus his enthusiasm and good nature jump out at you through the page. I mostly use this book in conjunction with other books, and I never use it for it's photographs or line drawings. Not that their bad. Just not enough for a total novice in my opinion. Now his descriptions are excellent and should not be ignored.

    Nancy J. Turner, "Food Plants Of Coastal First Peoples" and "Food Plants of Interior First Peoples" I'll give it 5 stars for ethnobotany and 4 stars as a foraging book.

    If you live in the pacific northwest these books are MUST HAVES. A thorough grouping of the plants used by native americans for food in the pacific northwest. Why I only give it 4 stars is that it is essentially put in a field guide format which is very limiting when trying to use a plant for food. Plus while Turner is the queen of plants and uses in the pacific northwest, you'll only get a tenth of what she knows on any given plant. Kallas and Thayer go into much more detail, have numerous pictures, and lead their readers toward success. With Turner you'll get one good picture in one stage of growth. Through experience I've found that just isn't good enough. She does have more plants in her books than Kallas and Thayer but when you cover them in less detail that is to be expected. To be fair to Nancy I don't get the impression that these were designed specifically for foragers. All this being said I own them and wouldn't give them back if you paid me double what I paid for them.

    Linda Runyan, The Essential Wild Food Survival Guide 3.8 stars, a good book.

    Well first I do have some issues with this book: I'm not fond of the line drawings or black and white photos, she does edibility tests on wild foods and discovered many of them that way (which I'm not a fan of), and some of her descriptions are lacking in my opinion. All that being said she cans her wild foods, dries them for winter use, and lives off of wild edibles all year long successfully. She shares a lot of this knowledge with the reader in this book, and being a nurse myself I'm also able to relate to her thinking in a lot of ways. Plus her stories of using cat tail fluff as stuffing for a couch only to find out that it was infested with insect eggs was hilarious. She tells you all the mistakes she made so you don't have to repeat them. She will tell you to use two other good field guides along with hers. I would plan on not using hers at all for the pictures. I have issues with her lack of oversight on the pictures. I'm sure some will disagree but when Linda tells you in her video (by the same name) that her chickweed picture isn't very good it does bring to mind credibility questions.

    Edible Wild Plants a North American Field Guide, by Elias and Dykemann. 3.5 stars

    At one point in my very early stages I thought this book was the bomb. However, I would identify a plant, find it at times accidentally for the most part, and go "now what?" And that is the weakness of the field guide format in wild food literature (Thayer and Kallas do so much more for you). This book is almost the opposite of Linda Runyans in some ways. She doesn't give you good pictures but gives you some good details on what to do with the plant after you find it. This book gives you some good pitures, a brief description, and then says "your on your own kid." In Samuel Thayers "Foragers Harvest" he gives great descriptions between wood nettle and stinging nettle (both are edible when properly prepared). Thayer also happened to point out that this book actually has a picture of wood nettle and call it stinging nettle. I checked up on this, and lo and behold he was right. They have two pictures and one is wood nettle and one is stinging nettle. They are both listed as stinging nettle in the book. This tells me that the authors might not know all the plants as well as they should. Don't get me wrong I still like the book. But it does prove that wild food authors don't always use or know the plants their writing about.

    Honorable mention goes to "Abundantly Wild" By Teresa Marrone. It is a wild food cook book. The pictures in the book are not great (though oddly beat many of the photos in supposed field guides) but I have read a few of the recipes and they look promising. I'll write a review about a year from now once I've put the book to the test. Until then I'll let you read the reviews on this book and make up your own mind.
    153 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on June 27, 2013
    Last year I purchased Thayer's earlier book, The Forager's Harvest: A Guide to Identifying, Harvesting, and Preparing Edible Wild Plants, based on a review from a botanist who couldn't find enough good things to say about it, and it quickly became my go-to manual from foraging in Michigan fields and forests. Now Thayer has come out with another book, with even more plants, and just as much non-nonsense, solid, fact-based advice, and just as many opinions.

    Thayer is a real expert who knows whereof he speaks; he has eaten all the plants he writes about, not just once, but many, many times. When he tells you that the fruit of the Mayapple is not, as many state, poisonous, or that the seed of the hackberry, chewed with the pulp, is an unappreciated treat, you can trust him. He is respectful of those, like Euell Gibbons, whose knowledge he respects, and unsparing in his criticism of those who spread false information, like Jon Krakauer and several other authors of foraging books who he accuses of spreading false and even dangerous misinformation. At the same time, he can be very witty when the occasion arises.

    As in his previous book, Thayer begins by discussing the issues of conservation and sustainable harvest. Some plants should be harvested little, or not at al, depending on how plentiful they are in a given area. Some, like garlic mustard, are invasive that crowd out and suppress the growth of native species and should be completely harvested- and then enjoyed.

    One thing Thayer stresses is the importance of plant identification, and to that end he presents a four-step process for identification, and what are probably the best photographic illustrations to be found in any book on edible plants. Where confusion with a toxic species is a possibility, he presents photos of the lookalikes, and points out the differences.

    One criticism of his previous guide was that it was too location specific. Western and coastal readers wrote in to complain that the plants Thayer described were not found in their part of the country. In answer to these critics, this book contains a list of what percentage of the plants described in the book might be found in different states, and I was pleased to see that 100% of them may be found in Michigan. Perhaps surprisingly to critics, most of the states on the list are home to at least 80% of the plants discussed, and Nevada (49%), Alaska (43%) and Hawaii (39%) host fewer than 69% of the species.

    All in all, a perfectly wonderful book. If you already have Thayer's earlier foraging book you've probably already ordered this one. If you're just starting out, buy both, and Euell Gibbons' Stalking the Wild Asparagus, Field Guide Edition, while you're at it' There are a lot of books on foraging in print right now, but these three may be all you'll ever need.
    20 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

  • Peter Becker
    5.0 out of 5 stars Massive Information !
    Reviewed in Germany on March 6, 2017
    Book 2 of Sam Thayer`s Edible Wild Plant Curriculum is simply outstanding. Over 500 pages of wildfood wisdom at it`s best !
    Nature`s Garden has to be bought along with The Foragers Harvest, then your all set.
  • Marti
    5.0 out of 5 stars Ammmmazing book
    Reviewed in Italy on April 15, 2021
    All of Samuel Thayer books are extremely precious for foragers. This book covers extensively all the mentioned plants and their uses.

    Love it. Super super recommended!
  • SAS
    5.0 out of 5 stars Educating and Entertaining: a rare find!
    Reviewed in Canada on January 28, 2013
    If you buy this book merely for interest's sake, you will be surprised at the entertaining and personable style of Thayer's writing: he brings wonderful insight and stories to make the read interesting.

    If you buy this book merely for entertainment (which is frankly quite unlikely), you will be surprised at the depth of knowledge and experience that Thayer brings to his narratives.

    A perfect mix of facts and anecdotes, Thayer presents something infinitely better than book knowledge: refined personal experience. You will likely be very impressed with this book. I have heard similar praise for his other book, Forager's Harvest.
  • A Painter from the UK
    5.0 out of 5 stars Even better than The Forager's Harvest? Many of the plants do grow in UK/Europe
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on May 30, 2011
    I bought and read this book last year when it was first published. I recall being possibly even more impressed with it than with The Forager's Harvest (Thayer's first book) which I'd enjoyed immensely. It is clear that Samuel Thayer writes with passion and a lifetime's experience.

    Yes he is based in North America and thus writes about his native plants. However, don't be put off by that. Many of the plants do indeed grow here in the UK/Europe e.g. sow thistle, hazlenut or elderberry to name but three. Admittedly some are cultivated plants here (e.g. jerusalem artichoke) however, if you use the scientific names to cross reference many of these plants, you can find where they are likely to grow right here in Britain.

    If you want a pair of books on wild food where the author's knowledge and enthusiasm shine through then get Nature's Garden and The Forager's Harvest: A Guide to Identifying, Harvesting, and Preparing Edible Wild Plants whether you live in the UK, or North America.

    You might also try the excellently illustrated Edible Wild Plants: Wild Foods from Dirt to Plate (Wild Food Adventure Series, Volume 1) by John Kallas, the first in a planned series, covering common greens (yes, another North American book but almost every plant grows in the UK).
  • A. C. Seruntine
    5.0 out of 5 stars One of the Best
    Reviewed in Canada on November 29, 2014
    IMO, Thayer's books are simply the best books out there on the art of foraging. They don't cover a huge range of flora, but more importantly, they teach one how to understand flora, how to identify it, and as importantly, when to harvest it and how to use it.