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The Rural Voice, 2019-09, Page 38The way Peter Blush tells it, the first time he saw leeks growing in an Ontario forest, he literally lay down on the ground and started grazing on the leeks. “My girlfriend’s mother was horrified,” remembers Peter, who was raised in the United States and then lived in Quebec for decades. In Quebec, leeks are protected because of decades of over-harvesting. So Ontario’s bounty was overwhelming. As a former war correspondent and graphic designer, he really didn’t know a lot about wild edibles but he knew about leeks. However, that first experience in the spring of 2005 was transformative for Peter, who had by then moved to the Stratford area. A few days later, he was talking to a lady named Linda at the dog park. She was a biologist and asked Peter if she could hunt for wild edibles with him. Instead of looking at the ground, Peter noticed Linda was focussed on the trees. “When we were finished the hike she told me we had to return in the Autumn because there would be lots of mushrooms then. That was my first introduction into the tree and mushroom relationship. I was hooked,” says Peter. He began a process of self-schooling himself on wild edibles. At first, he foraged for fiddleheads and wild mushrooms, selling them to local chefs. But he found chefs were “greedy” and Peter started getting uncomfortable about the sustainability of the business. When Stratford Tourism hired him to lead a wild edibles workshop, it sold out. “I took that idea and ran with it, but I do make sure to also teach workshop attendees how to harvest sustainably.” I joined Peter on a hike. First stop was on the roadside at a patch of common daylilies (we call them tiger lilies). He encouraged me to pop off a bud and eat it. “It will taste nutty at first and then you will start to feel a spicy heat,” he said. That is exactly what happened and it was exciting to acquire this bit of knowledge to satisfy a deep-rooted, survivalist, instinct. “But don’t eat too many,” he cautioned. “Most people can handle it but if your stomach isn’t used to it, it can give 34 The Rural Voice Foraging for wild edibles “It’s like an outdoor grocery store,” says forager, Peter Blush, who teaches people what is safe ... and what is not Peter Blush (centre) of Stratford is the intrepid leader of Peter Puck’s Foraging. A naturalist, Peter leads would-be foragers into the woods to discover what bounty is available from April to November. He finds mushrooms such as beech rooters (top left) and pheasant-back mushrooms (top right), a bracket fungus that is also edible when young and fresh. • By Lisa B. Pot • Forests