I tried wild artichoke after watching this video! It does taste good,a bit like meaty mash potato however in my opinion it's not worth the bother of navigating all the spines.From a tennis ball size wild artichoke you get less than 1 mouthful.That's why it's not sold commercially.
Thanks Kevin,this is just what I wanted to see,I am in west Melbourne,Australia and there are thousands of these plants here growing in the river valleys.I am about to go out and get a bunch of wild artichokes!
I always wear safety specs from the hardware shop when I work with plants like this!!!! (African Boxthorn berries have hideous thorns that could skewer out an eye! I hear that they are a pest in Californy now!) Great vid! Ƹ̵̡Ӝ̵̨̄Ʒ
Is there a baby there with you? Also where's the best place in San Francisco to find these? I live in Dogpatch and so far I've only found one stunted plant growing next to 3rd street and the flower pods were too small to eat. I might go back later and try to harvest the seeds to cast them in some of the abandoned lots in the neighborhood.
These can pick up pollutants from the air and the soil, so I would be EXTREMELY CAUTIOUS in eating anything growing in San Francisco, especially anywhere near buildings or a road.
I would not recommend bringing this plant to an area that doesn't already have it. I think it takes winter temps down to 25 or so, hard winter climates kill it. We get 15 or so inches of rain here a year, but it all mostly comes in the winter, so once established these plants need very little rain.
Yeah, but what fun would that be? No, actually the thorns even got me through the leather garden gloves, and it doesn't work because my fingers can't maneuver as well, so I was getting stuck more with them than without.
LOL, stab me in the eye! It looks like a beautiful specimen. I have respect for spiky plants, I'm thinking they don't grow in my area though. But we do have lots of different thistles. I am a big fan of milk thistle. I think it is time artichoke dip.
I tried wild artichoke after watching this video! It does taste good,a bit like meaty mash potato however in my opinion it's not worth the bother of navigating all the spines.From a tennis ball size wild artichoke you get less than 1 mouthful.That's why it's not sold commercially.
TheFreakyShrimp 1 month ago
Thanks Kevin,this is just what I wanted to see,I am in west Melbourne,Australia and there are thousands of these plants here growing in the river valleys.I am about to go out and get a bunch of wild artichokes!
TheFreakyShrimp 2 months ago
5 Stars
ytmalveo 3 months ago
What little fur stuff? I do not know of any part of the Cynara cardunculus that is poisonous.
feralkevin 6 months ago
Ugh i mean told instead of golf. Stupid auto correct x) sryy
jilliannorrie 6 months ago
Good! But i've been golf not to eat it till you have all the little fur stuff on it cuz it is poisonous. True?
jilliannorrie 6 months ago
I always wear safety specs from the hardware shop when I work with plants like this!!!! (African Boxthorn berries have hideous thorns that could skewer out an eye! I hear that they are a pest in Californy now!) Great vid! Ƹ̵̡Ӝ̵̨̄Ʒ
zuditaka 9 months ago
Hi, I have these plants growing in my garden, but was told that you can't eat the flowers but you can eat the leaves. How do you cook the greens?
hocasatown 1 year ago
Is there a baby there with you? Also where's the best place in San Francisco to find these? I live in Dogpatch and so far I've only found one stunted plant growing next to 3rd street and the flower pods were too small to eat. I might go back later and try to harvest the seeds to cast them in some of the abandoned lots in the neighborhood.
sarcasticcomment 1 year ago
These can pick up pollutants from the air and the soil, so I would be EXTREMELY CAUTIOUS in eating anything growing in San Francisco, especially anywhere near buildings or a road.
feralkevin 1 year ago
@sarcasticcomment they are also considered invasive species
AlbertoBarreradotcom 1 year ago
wow I eat it a lot, but never saw it in it's natural environment.
StarryRendezvous 2 years ago
Hi Kev. Im in Australia - and im interested to know what climate these grow in - min and max temperatures, soil type and rainfall?
Hamish121212 2 years ago
I would not recommend bringing this plant to an area that doesn't already have it. I think it takes winter temps down to 25 or so, hard winter climates kill it. We get 15 or so inches of rain here a year, but it all mostly comes in the winter, so once established these plants need very little rain.
feralkevin 2 years ago
Have you tried leather gardening gloves?
Hamish121212 2 years ago
Yeah, but what fun would that be? No, actually the thorns even got me through the leather garden gloves, and it doesn't work because my fingers can't maneuver as well, so I was getting stuck more with them than without.
feralkevin 2 years ago
informative & dangerous vid
Diatonic135 2 years ago
cardunky dunk!
True5cience 2 years ago
Indeed.
feralkevin 2 years ago
LOL, stab me in the eye! It looks like a beautiful specimen. I have respect for spiky plants, I'm thinking they don't grow in my area though. But we do have lots of different thistles. I am a big fan of milk thistle. I think it is time artichoke dip.
HomesteadProvocateur 2 years ago