Learning what not to eat through playful experimentation and reversing assumptions about which plants are valuable or worthless.
Nasreddin Hodja often discovers truth by doing the opposite of what seems logical, and foraging mirrors this paradox perfectly. The plants we dismiss as weeds—dandelion, plantain, nettle—often contain the greatest nutrition, while showy berries may poison. This concept teaches that expertise in wild food comes from embracing the 'fool's path': questioning conventional wisdom, testing boundaries safely, and finding abundance in what others overlook. By adopting Hodja's playful irreverence toward expert pronouncements, foragers develop genuine discernment rather than blind rule-following. The examined joyful life means laughing at our mistakes—the wrong mushroom identified, the bitter leaf sampled—while learning deeply from each error.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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