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The Mulberry Tree: From Empire Builder to Urban Outlaw For 3,000 years, this tree was worth more than gold. China guarded its secret with the death penalty. Smuggle mulberry seeds across the border? Execution. Reveal the secret of silk? Execution. The entire ancient world economy — the Silk Road itself — existed because of what this tree could produce. In 552 AD, two monks pulled off one of history's greatest heists. They hid silkworm eggs and mulberry seeds inside hollow bamboo canes and walked the entire Silk Road back to Constantinople. Three thousand years of monopoly ended by two walking sticks. The mulberry spread across the world. Kings planted millions of them. In 1619, Virginia colonists were legally required to plant mulberry trees. America dreamed of becoming a silk empire. That dream failed. But the trees remained. Today, mulberry trees grow in all 50 U.S. states. They produce 200-300 pounds of fruit per year. They live over 100 years. They need almost no care. And in many American cities, they are illegal to plant. Tucson. Las Vegas. El Paso. Albuquerque. All have banned mulberry trees. The official reasons? Pollen allergies and "public nuisance." The real story? We have defined abundance as a problem. In this video, we uncover: • The 3,000-year monopoly that made silk worth its weight in gold • The spy mission that changed world history with two bamboo canes • Why mulberries contain 3X more iron than blueberries • The secret compound in mulberry leaves that Japan uses for blood sugar • Why only male trees cause allergies (and why bans ignore this) • The absurd reason cities classify free fruit as a "nuisance" • How Native Americans used red mulberry for thousands of years • Why we ban free mulberry trees, then pay $20/lb for dried mulberries • How to find, grow, and harvest mulberries for free This is not just a story about a tree. This is a story about how we forgot what abundance means. ⌛ Timestamps: 0:00 - The tree worth more than gold 1:30 - The secret China guarded for 3,000 years 4:00 - The greatest seed heist in history 6:00 - America's failed silk dream 7:00 - Why American cities banned the mulberry 9:00 - The nuisance that feeds you for free 10:30 - How to grow and harvest mulberries 🌿 Mulberry Varieties to Grow: • Illinois Everbearing - sweetest, most productive • Black Mulberry (Morus nigra) - richest flavor • Red Mulberry (Morus rubra) - native to North America 📍 Where to Find Mulberry Trees: They grow wild in parks, along roadsides, in abandoned lots, and in old neighborhoods across America. Peak season: May-June. 📚 References: • "The Silk Road: A New History" - Valerie Hansen • USDA Plants Database - Morus species • Journal of Functional Foods - Mulberry leaf DNJ research • City ordinances: Tucson, Las Vegas, El Paso, Albuquerque 🔔 Subscribe to Nature's Lost Files for more forgotten knowledge they don't want you to remember. #Mulberry #SilkRoad #ForgottenFoods #FreeFruit #UrbanForaging #FoodHistory #BannedTrees #Superfood #Homesteading #FoodSovereignty #NaturesLostVault #AncientHistory #Foraging