There is ample information about well over 100 plants. There are two drawbacks though. The pictures in the book are all drawn and colored. This gives a decent depiction of each plant, but there is no way I would trust identifying berries or mushrooms based on illustrations! The plants are all thrown in Willy-nilly. There is no table of contents to identify chapters, such as Berries, Nuts, Seeds, Herbs, etc. Rather, the index...
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I owned this before and I remember it seeming more durable but it is well written.
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This book first caught my attention in the 70s but over the years I had lost my original copy so I repurchased one. It is still a good book even though the pictures are all rendered as art, which makes me a little nervous on critical IDs. I enjoy the details on preparing the plants, some of which were apparently as the native Americans had done. It is a very good companion book to some of the more recent works out there such...
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I find this one useful. Drawings are not "natural" but compensate by revealing all major parts clearly: root, leaf, flower, stems. Anyway, I find one needs at least two books for reliable identity and often for any ID at all. Variations among species make identity of individual plants a lot harder than it might seem, excepting for a few easy plants like cat tails, purslane, etc. I agree with a prior reviewer that absence...
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When I was stranded with my dog in the Alaska Wilderness for a week and a half, this book saved my life. Without it, how could I have eaten well until the aircraft came - yes, you heard - eaten well! I thank Bradford Angier greatly for this wonderful text!
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