p4nh.org
Our Food is Our Medicine | Partnerships for Native Health | Washington State University
http://www.p4nh.org/our-food-is-our-medicine
Skip to primary content. Skip to secondary content. Dietary Intervention for Hypertension. Education & Outreach. Our Food is Our Medicine. For the past three years, the Institute of Indigenous Foods and Traditions. The Suquamish shared stories about the decline of fish and sea cucumbers in the Salish Sea because of various forms of environmental violence, including unjust governmental policies, overfishing, pollution, and climate change. All these threaten the traditional Suquamish food system, as we...
p4nh.org
News | Partnerships for Native Health | Washington State University
http://www.p4nh.org/news
Skip to primary content. Skip to secondary content. Dietary Intervention for Hypertension. Education & Outreach. Summer Research Training Institute. Members of our staff recently enjoyed three rewarding and productive weeks at the Summer Research Training Institute in Portland, Oregon. Housed at the Northwest Portland Area Indian Health Board. Read More ». July 27th 2016,. Staying in the Circle of Life: A Curriculum for Cancer Survivors. Read More ». June 24th 2016,. The goal was to encourage and equip N...
millycanrap.com
Milly Can Freestyle | Milly Can Rap
http://millycanrap.com/freestyle
Whenever we get together, we like to take to the streets and freestyle. Here are some of our favorites! 2 thoughts on “ Milly Can Freestyle. October 19, 2016 at 2:41 am. Con estos batidos pɑra perder peso ganaráѕ mucha energíа рara. Enfrentar tսs actividades cotidianas conn a mejor cara. Nwic plants and foods. December 7, 2016 at 9:14 pm. I go to see day-to-day some web sites and websites to read posts, but this web site presents quality based content Milly Can Freestyle Milly Can Rap .
arcadianabe.blogspot.com
Wild Harvests: January 2014
http://arcadianabe.blogspot.com/2014_01_01_archive.html
Wild food experiments and personal foraging accounts from the Pacific Northwest centering on Northwest Washington and Southern Vancouver Island. Friday, January 10, 2014. Evaporating salt into darkness. Katrina and I made some more salt with our friends Paul and Eli out on Lummi Island. We stayed up into the night to finish and I took some fun photographs. Long time readers may remember our early methods. Posted by T. Abe Lloyd. Saturday, January 4, 2014. Year end foraging reflections. Elise Krohn's Wild...
arcadianabe.blogspot.com
Wild Harvests: How to eat a Horsetail
http://arcadianabe.blogspot.com/2015/03/how-to-eat-horsetail.html
Wild food experiments and personal foraging accounts from the Pacific Northwest centering on Northwest Washington and Southern Vancouver Island. Tuesday, March 24, 2015. How to eat a Horsetail. In the Pacific Northwest we have several species of horsetail. Two are edible, three are useful as sandpaper, and the remaining are neither useful to humans, nor common (limited to sloughs and marshes). Following are descriptions of the edible species. Giant Horsetail ( Equisetum telmateia. Fruits are choice edibl...
arcadianabe.blogspot.com
Wild Harvests: October 2014
http://arcadianabe.blogspot.com/2014_10_01_archive.html
Wild food experiments and personal foraging accounts from the Pacific Northwest centering on Northwest Washington and Southern Vancouver Island. Monday, October 13, 2014. Klipsun Magazine features local foragers. My bicycle powered wild rice hulling machine. Photograph by Evan Abell. WWU student writer Michelle Dutro and photographer Evan Abell spent an afternoon harvesting and processing wild foods with me while working on their article " Wonders of the Wilderness. Which features local foragers. Primiti...
arcadianabe.blogspot.com
Wild Harvests: March 2014
http://arcadianabe.blogspot.com/2014_03_01_archive.html
Wild food experiments and personal foraging accounts from the Pacific Northwest centering on Northwest Washington and Southern Vancouver Island. Saturday, March 1, 2014. Bigleaf Maple sap- running strong. It snowed 8” in Bellingham on Feb 23. And for the last week, the Bigleaf Maple taps have been running copiously. February 26. The homemade evaporator has been performing admirably. With a backlog of sap, I have been boiling for 16 hours a day at an average rate of 1.5 gallons per hour. I hav...Plants fo...
arcadianabe.blogspot.com
Wild Harvests: February 2014
http://arcadianabe.blogspot.com/2014_02_01_archive.html
Wild food experiments and personal foraging accounts from the Pacific Northwest centering on Northwest Washington and Southern Vancouver Island. Wednesday, February 5, 2014. My Bigleaf Sugar Bush. A dripping tap. CD Lloyd Photograph. The sap is running! For the last few days we’ve had the sweet combination of freezing nights, above freezing days, and ample soil moisture that are needed to produce Bigleaf Maple ( Acer macrophyllum. And when the next cold snap hit I got more sap in two good days than I did...
arcadianabe.blogspot.com
Wild Harvests: November 2014
http://arcadianabe.blogspot.com/2014_11_01_archive.html
Wild food experiments and personal foraging accounts from the Pacific Northwest centering on Northwest Washington and Southern Vancouver Island. Thursday, November 6, 2014. Wild Rice husking machine. My brother produced this fun video of my bicycle powered Wild Rice husking/hulling machine. Posted by T. Abe Lloyd. Subscribe to: Posts (Atom). Author of Wild Berries of Washington and Oregon. Click on photo to check out my new book! Wild Rice husking machine. View my complete profile. Eating the Good Food.
arcadianabe.blogspot.com
Wild Harvests: Birch- Maple's sappy boyfriend
http://arcadianabe.blogspot.com/2015/03/birch-maples-sappy-boyfriend.html
Wild food experiments and personal foraging accounts from the Pacific Northwest centering on Northwest Washington and Southern Vancouver Island. Friday, March 6, 2015. Birch- Maple's sappy boyfriend. Our warm winter has not been good for Bigleaf Maple ( Acer macrophyllum. Two weeks ago on Feb 21. And decided to mobilize. I drilled into my first Maples around noon on a sunny day with temps in the low 50s, and the sawdust was dry. Two more Maples also yielded dry sawdust and no subsequent sap flow,...I rus...