Enjoying king salmon on the King Salmon!
Kodiak, Alaska is an amazing place to take advantage of local food sources, but most of these come through subsistence activities: hunting deer, elk, and goat, gathering berries, fishing for halibut and salmon, and storing these foods for the winter. Betty Odell supplied our camp with homemade salmonberry jelly and her very own smoked salmon, which were produced by the berries and fish she and her family harvest on the island. Patrick keeps a lovely garden that flourishes in the short growing season, since local veggies are impossible to buy in the grocery store, and he is a skilled and committed hunter. Enjoying Kodiak elk roast and halibut filets in our Massachusetts kitchen brings a whole new dimension to our local eating pledge!The people who lived on this site more than 1000 years ago probably fished for salmon, captured migrating birds and caribou, and also made use of local plant life. Thanks to Discovering Wild Plants, we were able to identify many usable plants on our landscape. While we were a bit early to eat the abundant cloud berries, we did nibble on fireweed shoots, beach lovage, and watermelon berry leaves, and enjoyed the strong scent of Labrador tea as we walked through the muskeg around camp. I was too afraid to make it into tea after I found out the potential side effects, but it is also quite popular for throwing on the steamy rocks in the banya.
You forgot the Nagoonberry flower blossoms. Those were tasty and something I had never tried before. Great Post! Patrick
ReplyDeleteWow - very impressive! But what are the side effects of Labrador tea?
ReplyDeleteI'm pretty sure severe diarrhea was one of them...
ReplyDelete