Native Americans were well known to just chew on them and spit out the needles . Heat will destroy the vitamins . I have noticed young needles taste better ... less heat the better the taste also .. Boiling will make it bitter and kills the nutrients . So remember chewing the needles while you hike gives a great nutritional bonus . When I make tea .. I add raw ginger root ... Best flavor ever.
I leave the pine needles attached to a sprig pulled off the tree. Much easier to remove the needles when it's one piece. The inner bark of pine trees is edible. Some times of the year it's sweet!
@teamhunley Pines have round needles, spruce has square needles, firs have flat needles all of them are used the same way. Yews have flat needles and red berries, no cones and are poisonous.
And no, it isn't basically, just throwing in a few pine needles of fir needles, as appears—it takes quite a few of them; and, you have to twist or mash them, in some way break the fresh needle open, . . .
Vitamin C comes from almost anything fresh, plant or animal. Fresh lean wild meat has a high quantity of vitamin C, especially in the viscera such as the liver. The Inuit rarely struggled with vitamin C deficiency simply due to the amount of fresh raw meat they consumed. Cooking can remove large traces of Vitamin C, so the fact that they ate it raw is one benefit for them. Berries, meat, leaves, stalks, fruit, and even bark can all provide vitamin c if it is fresh.
@Looperberg My original American ancestor was from 17th century England. My family lineage has been plagued with all sorts of dental and orthodontal nightmares. So when I see something like Vannessa Kinsington trying to teach Austin Powers about modern dentistry and hygene, Ah loff ma bleedin ed off, ah do!
When I was walking out in the woods sometimes I would take a few pine needles and rub them in my hands and I often wondered if that was some kind of "vitamin-C".
I would hope anyone in a survival situation was rescued before they got scurvy??
GLH03 2 days ago
This has been flagged as spam show
i live in florida can i use a florida slash pine for this
griff101tut 1 month ago
Good Video.
shaskinmaccom 1 month ago
Native Americans were well known to just chew on them and spit out the needles . Heat will destroy the vitamins . I have noticed young needles taste better ... less heat the better the taste also .. Boiling will make it bitter and kills the nutrients . So remember chewing the needles while you hike gives a great nutritional bonus . When I make tea .. I add raw ginger root ... Best flavor ever.
Beachcrib 4 months ago
@Beachcrib you gotta love the pine tree.
survivealist 2 months ago
SOON YOU WON'T BE ABLE TO DRINK PINE NEEDLE TEA ;D HEHEHE
HappyGuide123 5 months ago
SHE'S SO HOT !!!!!
mandojb 6 months ago
I can't find the next part of this video. I would really like to see how you make a bowl and tea without modern items.
JeremyAllenF18 7 months ago
I leave the pine needles attached to a sprig pulled off the tree. Much easier to remove the needles when it's one piece. The inner bark of pine trees is edible. Some times of the year it's sweet!
WorldClimb 8 months ago
Useful information. Why shouldn't pregnant women drink it? Thanks!
themarkfellows2 9 months ago
much better than the dandy lion coffee
skunkape49 9 months ago
@skunkape49 I would say much more useful also, because pine needles are always available, and dandylions are seasonal
themarkfellows2 9 months ago
Anyone know where she got that silicone lip for the snow peak cup?
solobackpacking 1 year ago
where is thT RANCH? awsome
asssface2000 1 year ago
@asssface2000 Killington VT
PeakSurvival 1 year ago
Good video......boil water not the needles checkout my pine video
NoTraceSurvival 1 year ago
Wonder why pregnant women shouldn't drink the tea
brutallindigo 1 year ago
@brutallindigo Pines contain Turpentine not enough to hurt adults but very bad for fetus.
shogun6619 7 months ago
Here in NC pine trees down east have poisonous leaves. Something to mention before you brew up some tea...
teamhunley 1 year ago
@teamhunley Pines have round needles, spruce has square needles, firs have flat needles all of them are used the same way. Yews have flat needles and red berries, no cones and are poisonous.
shogun6619 7 months ago
they actually used lemons more than limes, so it should be :
lemony's
malcolmry 1 year ago
Oh, Hi, Hi again there, PeakSurvival, Hi,
And no, it isn't basically, just throwing in a few pine needles of fir needles, as appears—it takes quite a few of them; and, you have to twist or mash them, in some way break the fresh needle open, . . .
phillipgaley 1 year ago
finally i can leave a positive responce to one of your videos. A+
ironicly a lot of people when they came to the new world died and suffered from the scurv. while entirely surrounded by vitamin c.
MrAudacia 1 year ago
i am curious how it would taste .....i going to try dandelion tea ...i think she did a video on this ? i see some outside in my lawn
gasdorf 1 year ago
interesting info
azis1100 1 year ago
Vitamin C comes from almost anything fresh, plant or animal. Fresh lean wild meat has a high quantity of vitamin C, especially in the viscera such as the liver. The Inuit rarely struggled with vitamin C deficiency simply due to the amount of fresh raw meat they consumed. Cooking can remove large traces of Vitamin C, so the fact that they ate it raw is one benefit for them. Berries, meat, leaves, stalks, fruit, and even bark can all provide vitamin c if it is fresh.
OzaawaaMigiziNini 1 year ago
@Looperberg My original American ancestor was from 17th century England. My family lineage has been plagued with all sorts of dental and orthodontal nightmares. So when I see something like Vannessa Kinsington trying to teach Austin Powers about modern dentistry and hygene, Ah loff ma bleedin ed off, ah do!
BrokenAeroVT 1 year ago
When I was walking out in the woods sometimes I would take a few pine needles and rub them in my hands and I often wondered if that was some kind of "vitamin-C".
trailkeeper 1 year ago
We like this tip. Spruce Needles make the best tasting tea from the pine family. We look forward to your next video.
EconoChallenge 1 year ago
great info!
enjoythewildUSA 1 year ago
What's her name?
maurigian1 1 year ago
More leg videos ! SEXXY
meetcha2nite 1 year ago
You have such a helpful channel :)
FarSh0t 1 year ago
Great to know, looking forward to seeing the rest of how to make this. :)
praeeo 1 year ago
gratzz
toshibavoodoo 1 year ago
I just had some lime in my gin and tonic. It's done me the world of good. :D
stuntpea 1 year ago
omg, beautiful place, nice legs and great wsr information (:
tekknorat 1 year ago
Thanks for that.
LewisMattTramping 1 year ago
As always Video Gold, Thanks
skilegapcanada 1 year ago
Thanks for the tip.
DEMCAD 1 year ago
lmao nerds go get laid.
ogunjobi 1 year ago
Pine nedle tea! nice! never tried that before..
I hope we got the same pine trees down here and won´t get poisoned haha
condorlegion89 1 year ago
@condorlegion89 the only poisonous is yew, look up on the net or plnat books before trying pnt.
tekknorat 1 year ago
@tekknorat
Thank you man, I will certainly look it up. I wanna do the "soh-vivo" stuffs :)
condorlegion89 1 year ago
Ta good to know.
experimentalists 1 year ago
No, marry me!
glennglennvideo 1 year ago
Marry me!
naughtyfeline 1 year ago