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👩🌾 ~ Enjoy? Like, share, and subscribe to our channel! 👕🧢Wear your favorite plants. Check out our merch! ➡️ https://botanywithbrit.square.site 🌱Learn more fun plant facts ➡️ https://botanywithbrit.com Today we learn about fireweed all while enjoying the views up high along the Coleman glacier on the slopes of Mt. Baker (Kulshan). Fireweed comes by its name by being one of the first colonizers after a forest fire. Both its ability to spread through rhizomes in the rich soil left after a fire and its ability to send wind dispersed seeds sailing on the breeze makes it an efficient spreader. Fireweed likes disturbed ground, so you might also come across it in logged areas or along roadsides. Modern activity may have actually expanded the range of this plant. The seeds of fireweed have a tuft of fine white hair, and Puget Sound people who wove mountain goat wool blankets would use the fluff to fill out their supply of wool. This fluff could also be used as tinder when starting fires. Fireweed is edible, and the plant was sought out in the springtime for its sweet inner pith that tastes somewhat like cucumbers. French trappers boiled or steamed the stems and served them like asparagus, and the flowers unopened buds can be pickled like capers. The plant contains 4x's the vitamin C of oranges, and in Russia a tea was made of the leaves (which may have a laxative effect, just so you're warned). Tastiest of all, in Greenland the leaves were combined with seal blubber for a spicy treat. Yum? For more facts about fireweed and other favorite plants visit: https://www.botanywithbrit.com Follow and connect with us! / botanywithbrit / botanywithbrit