The earth has come alive.
A month ago, I went out in the woods with Dustin Raxter, scouting places he collects ramps. This week, I was in the woods again with Dustin and his father, Ted. This time, the earth had come alive – ramps, trillium, lily-of-the-valley, branch lettuce, and dozens of other wood-land plants.
Today we were collecting ramps for the last day of ramp “production” at the Smoky Mountain Native Plants Association – where the ramps would be dried and added to their cornmeal product, or powdered and sold as seasonings. Ramps (“Allium tricoccum”), also called wild leeks, are found growing on rich, wooded slopes in the heart of the Blue Ridge mountains at altitudes greater than 3000′. Mid-April is prime season. Our goal today was twenty pounds of ramps. Yesterday, Dustin and Ted collected 51 pounds, which took eight hours to collect. Read More | Comments



















Three of the nine “lessons” for optimizing your life involve food.


