> " '" " 'Z x ' neither under-ripe nor overripe) they are very tasty and sweet. Local native people would sometimes pick them by running small wooden “ berry rakes” through the foliage, wide enough to allow leaves to pass, but narrow enough to pull o ff the berries. The berries were then cleaned by being tumbled down a moistened cedar plank - the berries would roll and the leaves and stems would stick. Many botanists also include the native “ bog cranberry” in the genus Vaccinium - in its tart flavor and preference for soggy places, this plant is very similar to domestic cranberries. For all-around good eating, it’ s hard to beat the blackberries and raspberries, each o f them sporting distinctive multi-chambered berries, what some botanists refer to (in the privacy o f their own homes) as “ tasty and dangling aggregates o f drupelets.” Locally, a lucky few might find the black raspberry or the creeping raspberry. And one is sure to find the widespread raspberry-like thimbleberry, with its soft leaves, rose-like flowers, and shallow, deep-red, thimble-like berries, which taste like sweet, seedy raspberries when ripe. Various blackberries twine and tangle through our environs, including the ubiquitous Himalayan blackberry, an introduced plant which grows on disturbed sites, with its huge, sweet, purple-black berries. The native, fruity-tasting “ trailing blackberry” also is profoundly toothsome, but is an elusive Rubus, more common alongside logging roads. The salmonberry is also o f this genus, a common plant with blackberry-like berries, watery, orange or red, sweet on rare occasion; such berries were too watery to preserve by most native peoples, but were very popular berries to eat fresh. Salal, a brushy evergreen relative o f the heaths and heathers, was probably the most important source o f berries to this coast’ s indigenous inhabitants. The berries are sweet and juicy, with a flavor vaguely reminiscent o f concord grapes - traditionally, they were eaten raw or pulverized and dried into cakes or “ fruit leather” for storage. A close relative, the Oregon Wintergreen, looks like a dw arf salal plant, and produces red, salal-like edible berries. Clusters o f tiny “ red elderberries” also grow on tall, light green bushes along the coast - eaten raw they are awful, likely to cause nausea. You w ill wish you had thought twice. But cooked they become tasty, and ancient elderberry roasting pits still crouch below our coastal soil, where local folks rendered piles o f these berries into cooked berry cakes, to be stored and eaten throughout the year. A short distance inland, blue elderberries are now appearing, a somewhat tastier berry which requires little processing. A good berry for wines and jams, the elderberry continues to be popular among industrious locals with abundant berries and patience. In the coastal forests o f the Northwest, we also have several currants or “ gooseberries” o f the genus Ribes, with small maple-like leaves and spiny stems. The small black berries o f the “ black gooseberry” are usually tasty, while the berries o f the “ stink current” has a flavor which varies widely, from awful to excellent. The “ trailing black current” and the “ red-flowering current” both have berries which are edible but not very palatable without additional ingredients and extensive processing. Strawberries require no introduction. The extremely sweet small berries o f the “ coast strawberry” grow on local dunes and other well-drained sites, while closely-related w ild strawberries o f a different stripe grow nearby. But other local LaJ Northwest coastal forests abound with berries. During late summer, down under the forest canopy, more than h alf o f our shrubby native plants are dotted with berries, red, blue, orange, white, black. Growing amidst the wet and dark green forest tangle, berries make much ecological sense: it a plant’ s seeds are carried by the wind, they won’t go far. Likewise, even the most wind-beaten berry won’t take flight. But they are the most tasty, nutritious and sweet things to be eaten in the deep woods. Mammals and birds disperse berry-borne seeds far and wide, without complaint - caching them away, or passing the specially-adapted seeds unharmed through the digestive tract. Very simple. Very effective. And we - inept seed-dispersers all - are the beneficiaries o f this forest choreography. It is time to eat. But first, some words o f warning. Among all o f the other useful things urban kids learn in camp - how to sing “ Michael Rowed the Boat Ashore” in rounds, for example, or weave festive ashtrays out o f raffia - they also learn this: white berries usually are not edible, blue berries almost always are, and all unfamiliar red berries should be left alone until someone with more berry wisdom can come along and give them an official okay. And your camp counselors weren’t kidding. This maxim should be chanted repeatedly as you head out into the woods, berry pail in hand. Likewise, the native peoples o f this coast, berry experts by necessity, taught this to the uninitiated: only fools and the living dead ate white berries. Blue berries could be eaten without hesitation by children in the woods; red berries could not. The red berries belonged to “ W ild Woman” a lewd and cannibalistic granny with super-human strength, dwelling in the deep woods - wild hair on her head, profuse body hair, evil-smelling breath, long pendulous breasts, razor sharp teeth, a booming voice, tattooed skin (some considered her a female Sasquatch; some readers may know her as Dzonokwa). And, as any long-ago native kid could have told you, i f children ate red berries while they traveled alone in the forest they would be carted away by this W ild Woman, roasted for dinner, and eaten. End o f story. The moral o f this cautionary tale: you’d best bring the berry basket back to the longhouse, where you’ ll have plenty o f parental supervision, before you try to eat any red berries. But the abundance and diversity o f truly edible berries in the Northwest is staggering. We have a wide variety o f huckleberries and blueberries; these two berries, for all practical purposes, are the same thing - members o f the genus Vaccinium, largely differentiated on the basis o f their color. The plants with lighter blue berries are called “ blueberries” and plants with darker purplish berries are called “ huckleberries.” Many o f our blueberries do not fare well in clearcut environments, and only persist in our remaining matbre forests; here we find oval-leafed and Alaska blueberries, and both are tasty when ripe. Two outstanding, sweet and tasty berries - the bog and dw arf blueberries - grow in our general area but only in hard-to-find places, low- elevation bogs or subalpine heaths. Evergreen huckleberries are far more common on this coast, with shiny dark evergreen leaves and tiny blue-black berries; these berries develop in late summer but often remain on the bush until winter, providing people and critters alike w ith late-season berries. There are also the widespread “ red huckleberry” bushes on this coast, with berries that look like small red or pink blueberries - when ripe (and there is a window o f about 5 minutes when they are O w n e r* -J eB fc