bright green things.
by Pippa ~ July 17th, 2007. Filed under: Finland, environment, food, friends, gardening, health, plants, tea.Possibly the most fantastic and unexpected thing that happened at Aliese’s yesterday was that I discovered that her backyard is full of stinging nettles. Most people would balk at the idea of picking nettles for fun, but what I saw in front of me was not a painful plant, but wild produce ready to be gathered.
Earlier this winter I’d hopefully planted seeds primarily so I could use the nettles as a nitrogen rich green compost, but they didn’t grow very well, so I’ve been looking out for some wild plants to harvest from. I’d seen some nettle-like plants by the side of the road earlier in the week, but my tentative stroke of the leaves didn’t result in any stings - so yesterday I took a braver approach and put my hand flat onto the leaves which did confirm my suspicion that the plants were indeed nettles.
It’s not that painful. I figure that nettle stings are the discomfort equivalent of eating warhead lollies - some people are braver or have a higher tolerance than others - luckily for me the sting is bearable.
So I borrowed some rubber gloves (I’m not yet brave enough to enter a nettle patch with bare hands) and scissors and picked a bag full of prickly leaves, ready to be dried and made into tea.
What did seem really weird that it was just over a year ago, in Finland’s early summer that I helped Ninnu prepare nettles for tea. But temperature wise I figure that there’s not much difference between July in Australia and early June in Finland.
Now of course I’ve remembered that nettles can be added to soup (fresh and dried), risottos, pancakes and used as a hair tonic as well as being a tea for people and gardens.
Aliese, it looks like I’ll have to come over this weekend and do some “weeding” for you!
July 17th, 2007 at 6:22 am
Soup was good, and I’m thinking of adding dried nettles to bread at home. Did you know that nettle stings are very good for avoiding all kind of joint diseases (arthritis etc). My grandma “voluntarily” grabs nettles every now and then with her bare hands as a preventative cure
July 17th, 2007 at 2:07 pm
The way to handle stinging nettles with bare hands is to be firm. If you pinch their stems then the stinging parts get crushed before they can sting you - just don’t let them brush your skin in the process.
As a kid I used to have stinging nettle fights with my sister - she could never grab them without getting stung so it was always a very one-sided fight.
July 18th, 2007 at 6:05 pm
weed away, weedy!
can you also do my washing and ironing and finish off my phd?
or maybe the wonder weed nettles are able to do that themselves…
xo lsd