Inverting conventional expectations about when plants are valuable, discovering that 'wrong' seasons often offer the richest teachings and unexpected harvests.
The Hodja famously did everything backwards, and this principle applies to seasonal foraging wisdom. While guides tell us when plants are 'ready,' the Hodja invites us to ask: what if the 'wrong' season teaches us more? Winter roots reveal themselves when leaves fall away. Summer's abundance shows us which plants disappear entirely, teaching scarcity. Spring's tiny shoots teach patience. By inverting our expectations—valuing the dormant season's clarity, the crowded season's abundance paradox, the scarce season's innovation—we develop ecological literacy. This isn't about harvesting inappropriately, but about deepening perception through reversal. What seems useless teaches us most. The plant that appears at the 'wrong time' becomes our greatest teacher about resilience and timing. This practice transforms foraging from calendar-bound to intuitive.
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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