Eating Wild In BC

6 Wild Berries You’ll Want To Add To Your Foraging List

Hikers, campers – really all outdoor enthusiasts – know the value of being able to find edible plants and berries. Whether your food cache has run low on a camping trip, or you want to bring that sweet taste of nature back to your campfire, we have a list of six berries you can find in BC and you’ll definitely want to add these to your menu.

Cloudberry. Photo by Dreamstime/Inbj

Cloudberry

Cloudberries have a somewhat sour taste to them, and they’re high in vitamin C. When the berries are ripe, they’re a salmon colour, with long stems and broad leaves with five lobes. Unripe berries will be hard and more of a red colour. Cloudberries can be found in peat bogs and peat forests.

Crowberry. Photo by Dreamstime/Pisotckii

Crowberry

The crowberry looks similar to a blueberry, and it has a glossy black colour on the outside and the berries are about a third-of-an-inch in size. These berries are modest in flavour, but that flavour will intensify as you cook them or with freezing. You’ll find crowberries in shady, dry areas, muskeg and forests.

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White mulberry. Photo by Dreamstime/Cristina Dini

White mulberry

Mulberries are a wonderful fruit for picking and eating, or you can bake with them. The berries are juicy and sweet, and they ripen around midsummer. In BC, you’ll find white mulberries and they grow on a bush or small tree.

Salal. Photo by Dreamstime/Brigitte Eaton

Salal

As you get closer to the coast, you’ll find more salal. These berries have a mild, sweet flavour, and they’re good for drying. You’ll often find salal in thickets.

Salmonberry. Photo by Dreamstime/Pnwnature

Salmonberry

Growing in wet, coastal forests, the salmonberry is right at home in BC. The ripe berries are a yellow-red colour with a mild, sweet flavour. Even the young shoots of this plant are edible, making them a top pick for survivalists.

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Thimbleberry. Photo by Dreamstime/Stefan Schug

Thimbleberry

With no thorns, the thimbleberry is easy to find and pick, and it provides a nice flavour. This berry grows in the foothills and mountain regions, and even the young shoots can be peeled and eaten raw.

 

Next time you’re out camping or hiking, see if you can find some delicious berries to add to your dinner plate.

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