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What is a good source of vitamin C in the wild?

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I know I could just carry a bottle, but scavenging is much more fun. What is a good source of vitamin C in the wild? Have spruce needles really got enough?

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This post was sourced from https://outdoors.stackexchange.com/q/1397. It is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

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All types of berries are your answer here! Pretty much any (edible) variety contains a large amount of vitamin C - blueberries, strawberries, raspberries, blackberries for instance. (Blackberries and raspberries seem to be especially prevalent at the right time of the year here in the UK.) And they're tasty too.

Of course, it goes without saying if you're not 100% sure what a plant is then don't risk eating it.

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Scurvy Grass Sorrell has leaves rich in Vitamin C, and got its name from sailors travelling round Cape Horn who would eat the leaves to avoid scurvy.

It tastes pretty good, despite what the Wikipedia page says, but I'm not sure how widespread it is outside South America.

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Pine needle tea is a good solution which is available year round in areas where pines grow. Do be careful to identify properly, and take care to not guzzle the stuff down... too much is bad for you. However this is the easiest to find and pine needle tea has a ton of vitamin C.

Dandelion greens are plentiful in many areas and good for vitamin C, though I detest the flavor.

Chicory is a decent source, though I find it to be too easy to misidentify.

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There are many sources of vitamin C in the wild. Some of the tricks that I have come across is to know how to extract it in ways that do not destroy the vitamin C. Berries are great in vitamin C and may be eaten raw. However there are a great variety of other sources of vitamin C in the wild.

Let’s take a look at a few wild sources of vitamin C from plants available in my habitat (Southwestern Pennsylvania). For reference, the orange – at 100 grams – contains approximately 53 mg of vitamin C.

Species (100 g), parts of plant, vitamin C content (1, 2, 3)

  • Dog rose (Rosa canina), fruit, 1252 mg

  • Balsam fir (Abies balsamea), needles, 270 mg

  • Eastern white pine (Pinus strobus), bark and needles, 200 mg and 32 mg respectively

  • Garlic mustard (Alliaria petiolata), aerial parts, 190 mg

  • Red spruce (Picea rubens), needles, 169 mg

  • Wild garlic (Allium vineale), leaves, 130 mg

  • Garden yellow-rocket (Barbarea vulgaris), basal leaves, 130 mg

  • Common blue violet (Viola sororia), basal leaves, 130 mg

  • Lamb’s quarters (Chenopodium album), whole young plants, 130 mg

  • Elderberry (Sambucus nigra), fruit, 116 mg

  • Shepherd’s purse (Capsella bursa-pastoris), basal leaves of first year plants, 91 mg

  • Wild leeks (Allium tricoccum), leaves, 80 mg

  • Woodland strawberry (Fragaria vesca), fruit, 80 mg

  • Mock strawberry (Duchesnea indica), leaves, 79 mg

  • Eastern redbud (Cercis canadensis), flowers, 69 mg

  • Mountain ash (Sorbus aucuparia), fruit, 68 mg

  • Common yellow woodsorrel (Oxalis stricta), leaves, 59 mg

  • Northern white cedar (Thuja occidentalis), needles, 45 mg

Looking at this list, it’s quite evident that vitamin C is ubiquitous in nature. And it’s not just found in plants. One can acquire vitamin C by consuming animals; the heart, liver, and adrenals are all good sources of vitamin C.

This list also hints at another important implication: our hunter and gatherer ancestors surely were ingesting vitamin C in levels greater than what is recommended today. After all, the average indigenous diet was far more diverse than the modern dietary amalgamation of corn, wheat, and soy; this traditional heterogeneity ensured that vitamin C was easily acquired. Additionally, research has shown that animal organs, rich in vitamin C, were favored over muscle meats in traditional diets. - Finding Vitamin C Outside The Grocery Store – Looking Into Wild Sources

The number one on the list is "rose hips" and this is my personal favorite due to its' history in Britain during World War II.

During World War II in Britain, the general public were encouraged to return to (or re-learn) the art of foraging in order to supplement or augment rationed foodstuffs. Most of the emphasis was on wild vegetation, there not being a great deal of wild game accessible to the ordinary person. The concept was not just tossed out to the population to follow-up as they saw fit, it was actively promoted and resourced by the government. The Ministry of Food published several leaflets on how to find and use the “Hedgerow Harvest” and County Herb Committees were set up to organize collections on a large scale. The latter was directed particularly towards wild foods with health benefits – many of the sources of fruit no longer being available – and also included foods for livestock feeding, such as horse-chestnuts (‘conkers.’)

One item singled out for particular attention was the rose-hip - a valuable source of vitamin C. The national diet was at some risk of shortage of Vitamin C due to the cessation of importation of fruit such as oranges during the war. The solution was to ask the public to collect rose hips from wild or cultivated bushes, the harvest then to be processed by commercial companies into syrup which could then be made available in the shops. The details and success of the campaign are eloquently told in two articles in The Times [London, England] in autumn of 1941, and mid-winter 1942. - The Rose Hip Collection Campaign (WW II).

At one time people could read articles on how rose hips saved the British during the World War II. It makes great tea and syrup! In fact, Recipes Past and Present has some fun recipes for ways to use rose hips, including written and video instructions. Much of it was taken from a Ministry of Food leaflet, Hedgerow Harvest, published in 1943.

Wartime Rose Hip Collecting in Britain

Wartime Rose Hip Collecting in Britain

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