Can you eat pine needles in an emergency?
If you are in a survival situation in the woods and really hungry, and you are unsure about which plants are edible, can you eat pine needles?
In the spring you can commonly find delicious new shoots on spruce. They are quite good as a snack when there are no oth …
8y ago
All pines, spruces and firs have edible needles. All yews are poisonous, and can look like some of the above, so be car …
13y ago
The resin has alot of calories. On a video called how to eat a pine tree I think they said 2000 calories in a teaspoon …
7y ago
Yes & no. The U.S. Navy land survival training in Pensacola, Florida teaches students to chew on pine needles to ob …
9y ago
Pine needles have virtually no caloric value. I would not recommend pine needles as an energy source, although they have …
13y ago
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5 answers
The resin has alot of calories. On a video called how to eat a pine tree I think they said 2000 calories in a teaspoon full. In a museum in hungary they said the shephards used to put it on their teeth from where it comes off slowly and it gave them energy to walk all day.
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All pines, spruces and firs have edible needles.
All yews are poisonous, and can look like some of the above, so be careful you have identified the tree correctly!
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In the spring you can commonly find delicious new shoots on spruce. They are quite good as a snack when there are no other significant sources of food to eat, or perhaps on a hike.
This post was sourced from https://outdoors.stackexchange.com/a/14290. It is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
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Yes & no. The U.S. Navy land survival training in Pensacola, Florida teaches students to chew on pine needles to obtain vitamin C. But you don't actually chew and swallow them.
This post was sourced from https://outdoors.stackexchange.com/a/10511. It is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
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Pine needles have virtually no caloric value.
I would not recommend pine needles as an energy
source, although they have plenty of vitamin C and make delicious tea. This is good in winter to avoid getting scurvy in a long-term survival situation.
As already mentioned, Yew needles are toxic to the human body. There are several genera of yew. Generally they grow at higher elevations and in man-made parks.
If anything looks like these yew needles, leave them be and don't eat them:
This post was sourced from https://outdoors.stackexchange.com/a/860. It is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
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