Organikos posted: "Weeds are named by beholders whose eyes are subject to bias, we have read before; thanks to Rivka Galchen, and the New Yorker for the reminder, and the reference to this book: What Is a Weed? The names we call plants say more about us than they do abo" Organikos
Weeds are named by beholders whose eyes are subject to bias, we have read before; thanks to Rivka Galchen, and the New Yorker for the reminder, and the reference to this book:
The names we call plants say more about us than they do about the greenery that surrounds us.
Steve Brill's first stop was the greenery behind the bike racks. Brill, who is known as Wildman Steve, picked up a weed with heart-shaped seed pods and a small, four-petalled white flower. About thirty of us were gathered for a three-hour foraging tour through Prospect Park, in Brooklyn.
Illustration by Karlotta Freier
The plant was shepherd's purse, a name that references the seed pods' resemblance to the containers shepherds used to make from the bladders of sheep. "It's in the mustard family," Brill said. "Most all of the flowers in the mustard family are four petals in the shape of a cross." He encouraged everyone to take a bite, and to tell him what vegetable it tasted like.
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