My saviour! Thanks :)
tierelantijntje
I cannot confirm nor deny that I have relocated some Allium ursinum from my local forest to my garden 😅 I have some herb butter I made with it in the fridge now! I make a lot in the spring, and put it in the freezer in small batches for later.
Yes, birch trees! I haven't tried it myself. And no problem! I have a big collection of books and love to share :D
They do! Might be that this plant has a genetic variegation that causes it to be more red than it's neighbors. This plant is a delicious substitute for spinach by the way :)
Stinging nettle tea is supposedly very healthy! I always make stinging nettle soup in the spring, usually there is some Alliaria petiolata growing close by that taste like garlic so that goes in the soup as well. For elderflower tea: dry the flowers, don't eat the stems, leaves or raw fruit as they are poisonous. You can try elderflower lemonade from the supermarket to see if you like the taste, I hate it :P but I use the berries to add to my apples when I make cider (you have to heat the berries to nutralize the toxins, and remove all stems and leaves as they are poisonous).
I use blackberries and wild strawberry fruits in my tea, but my books say you can use the leaves as well.
Other berries you will be able to find: Rosa canina and Rosa rubiginosa: you make tea of the fruits (and jam as well!) For tea from leaves: Betula leaves, Lamium (dovenetel) leaves, Achillea millefolium leaves and flowers, Tilia cordata (linden) blossoms (this is delicious! my favorite tea), wild mint
For some good books and cards to take with you for foraging I recommend you check KNNV Uitgeverij, I have this info from some of their books, I like the 'Wildplukken' series by Peter Kouwenhoven & Barbara Peters. I prefer to get my info on this stuff from books printed by a reputable place that are about our local ecosystem, because there is so much bad information on the internet.
I agree this is most likely Daucus carota. If you are looking for some tasty herbal teas from Dutch wild plants I can recommend stinging nettle (harvest top 4 young leaves), elderflower (not in season now though..), wild blackberry and wild strawberry. I have some Dutch books about foraging, I will check for more!
Like the others have said, the ripening takes a long time. As long as the plant isn't dropping the fruits or they are rotting before ripening I would just wait patiently :)
In my country they use vans like a Mercedes Sprinter because you can actually keep your stuff dry and even make a little workshop in there. The only use I can think of for a pickup truck is maybe gardeners so they don't have to haul a trailer for their green waste? Could also maybe be useful to haul strawbales if you have a small farm. But you can just do that in a trailer behind your van as well, and your equipment will be dry inside the van and you can leave the trailer when you don't need it.
Backup cameras became required by law in 2016
That must be local to you, my 2019 car doesn't have one and in my (European) country this is not mandatory.
Ohhh dit soort verhalen hou ik van! Ik heb nog nooit van deze man gehoord, maar ik ga dit pand zeker opzoeken vd week. Dankjewel, ook voor de leestip. In Europa is bijna uit na de rit terug door oneindig Duitsland, dan heb ik nog Lords of Chaos over de Noorse Black Metal scene liggen maar daar ben ik wel snel doorheen denk ik.
You seem to own all UFO pictures! Very interesting, keep them coming :)
Yes I tried that one, the book wasn't there sadly. I also like the search options for LibGen more, and nostalgia I guess haha. Will try Anna's archive in the future when I need something specific! Thanks for the tip