forage-plants
О программе
Этот навык позволяет Claude идентифицировать и безопасно собирать съедобные дикорастущие растения, используя многофакторное определение и универсальный тест на съедобность. Он предоставляет правила безопасности, принципы устойчивого сбора и методы приготовления в условиях выживания в дикой природе. Разработчикам следует использовать его при создании приложений для пополнения запасов пищи, определения лекарственных растений или повышения безопасности в походных условиях за счёт распознавания растений.
Быстрая установка
Claude Code
Рекомендуетсяnpx skills add pjt222/agent-almanac -a claude-code/plugin add https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanacgit clone https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac.git ~/.claude/skills/forage-plantsСкопируйте и вставьте эту команду в Claude Code для установки этого навыка
Документация
Forage Plants
Spot and safe gather edible and useful wild plants in wilderness.
When Use
- You need to boost food supply in wilderness or survival setting
- You need medicine or tool plants (cordage, tinder, insect repel)
- You want to spot plants around camp for safety (avoid toxic species)
- Long-term wilderness setup where forage stretches open rations
Inputs
- Required: Habitat to forage in (forest, meadow, wetland, shoreline)
- Required: Ability to spot fine plant details (leaf shape, arrange, flower shape)
- Optional: Field guide or reference stuff for region
- Optional: Container for gathered plants
- Optional: Knife for harvest
- Optional: Fire and water for prep (see
make-fire,purify-water)
Steps
Step 1: Know the Deadly Plants First
Before learn what to eat, learn what will kill you. Memorize these high-risk families and species for your region.
Critical "Never Eat" Plants (Northern Hemisphere):
┌─────────────────────┬────────────────────────────────┬─────────────────────┐
│ Plant │ Key Identification │ Danger │
├─────────────────────┼────────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────┤
│ Water hemlock │ Hollow, chambered stem base; │ Deadly in minutes. │
│ (Cicuta) │ smells like carrot/parsnip; │ Seizures, death. │
│ │ wet habitats; compound leaves │ No safe dose. │
├─────────────────────┼────────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────┤
│ Poison hemlock │ Smooth stem with purple │ Deadly. Ascending │
│ (Conium maculatum) │ blotches; musty smell; │ paralysis. │
│ │ finely divided leaves │ │
├─────────────────────┼────────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────┤
│ Destroying angel / │ White mushroom; white gills; │ Deadly (liver │
│ Death cap (Amanita) │ ring on stem; cup (volva) │ failure in 3-5 │
│ │ at base; grows near trees │ days). No antidote. │
├─────────────────────┼────────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────┤
│ Castor bean │ Large star-shaped leaves; │ Seeds contain ricin. │
│ (Ricinus communis) │ spiny seed pods │ Deadly if chewed. │
├─────────────────────┼────────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────┤
│ Foxglove │ Tall spike of tubular flowers; │ Cardiac glycosides. │
│ (Digitalis) │ fuzzy, wrinkled leaves │ Heart failure. │
├─────────────────────┼────────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────┤
│ Nightshade family │ Some edible (tomato, pepper), │ Berries and foliage │
│ (Solanum, Atropa) │ many toxic; 5-petaled flowers; │ of wild species can │
│ │ alternate leaves │ be lethal. │
└─────────────────────┴────────────────────────────────┴─────────────────────┘
Absolute Rules:
1. NEVER eat a plant you cannot positively identify
2. NEVER eat white or red berries unless specifically identified as safe
3. NEVER eat mushrooms in a survival situation unless expert-level confident
4. NEVER eat plants with milky or discolored sap (exceptions exist but require expertise)
5. NEVER eat plants from the carrot/parsley family (Apiaceae) unless certain — this family contains the deadliest plants alongside the most common herbs
Got: You can spot most dangerous plants in your region on sight and will not mix them with edible species.
If fail: Unsure about any plant in these families? Do not eat it. Cost of false positive (eat deadly plant) is death. Cost of false negative (skip safe plant) is missed meal. Always err toward caution.
Step 2: Read the Habitat
Different habitats make different resources. Survey area before collect.
Habitat-to-Resource Mapping:
┌──────────────────┬─────────────────────────────┬──────────────────────────┐
│ Habitat │ Common Edible Plants │ Look for │
├──────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┼──────────────────────────┤
│ Open meadow / │ Dandelion, clover, plantain,│ Sunny, disturbed ground │
│ field edges │ chicory, wild onion, │ with diverse low plants │
│ │ lamb's quarters │ │
├──────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┼──────────────────────────┤
│ Forest floor │ Wood sorrel, ramps (spring),│ Dappled shade; look near │
│ │ violets, fiddleheads (spring│ logs and clearings │
│ │ only), nuts (fall) │ │
├──────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┼──────────────────────────┤
│ Forest edge / │ Berries (blackberry, │ Transitional zone with │
│ hedgerow │ raspberry, elderberry), │ maximum species diversity │
│ │ rose hips, hawthorn │ │
├──────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┼──────────────────────────┤
│ Wetland / stream │ Cattail, watercress, │ Moist soil, standing or │
│ bank │ wild rice, arrowhead │ slow water │
├──────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┼──────────────────────────┤
│ Shoreline / │ Seaweed (kelp, dulse, nori),│ Rocky intertidal zones, │
│ coastal │ sea lettuce, glasswort │ salt marshes │
├──────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┼──────────────────────────┤
│ Disturbed ground │ Lamb's quarters, amaranth, │ Trailsides, old fields, │
│ (ruderal) │ purslane, chickweed, │ roadsides (avoid │
│ │ stinging nettle │ herbicide areas) │
└──────────────────┴─────────────────────────────┴──────────────────────────┘
Got: You spot which habitat type you are in and have short list of likely edible species to look for.
If fail: Habitat unknown or plant spread low (dense conifer forest, desert)? Focus on universal species in Step 8. In dry env, look for cacti pads (Opuntia), mesquite pods, or acorns from oaks. In deep forest, look for inner bark (cambium) of pine, birch, or basswood as emergency calories.
Step 3: Identify Using Multiple Features
Never spot plant by single feature. Use multi-feature method.
Identification Checklist — Confirm ALL of the following:
1. LEAF SHAPE AND MARGIN
- Simple or compound?
- Smooth, toothed, or lobed?
- Pointed or rounded?
2. LEAF ARRANGEMENT
- Alternate, opposite, or whorled on the stem?
- Basal rosette?
3. STEM CHARACTERISTICS
- Round, square, or ridged?
- Hollow or solid?
- Hairy, smooth, or thorny?
4. FLOWER STRUCTURE (if present)
- Number of petals
- Color
- Symmetry (radial or bilateral)
- Arrangement (spike, cluster, umbel, single)
5. SMELL
- Crush a leaf: minty, oniony, bitter, no scent?
- Some families have distinctive smells (mint = square stem + aromatic)
6. HABITAT AND SEASON
- Where is it growing? (wet, dry, sun, shade)
- What time of year? (confirms seasonal species)
7. ROOT/RHIZOME (dig one sample)
- Bulb, taproot, fibrous, or rhizome?
- Color and smell of the root
Rule: You need a match on ALL features, not just some.
A single mismatch means you have the wrong plant.
Got: Positive spot based on at least 5 matching features. You can name species and say why it is not dangerous look-alike.
If fail: Any feature not match your reference? Do not eat plant. Set it aside and move to another candidate. Look-alikes are main cause of forage poisoning — wild carrot (edible) vs poison hemlock (deadly) differ in stem markings and smell but share leaf shape.
Step 4: Apply the Universal Edibility Test (Emergency Only)
This test is last resort for fully unknown plants when you have no reference and face starvation. Takes 24+ hours and carries risk.
Universal Edibility Test Protocol:
(Only use when: no field guide, no known species, genuinely starving)
1. SEPARATE the plant into parts: leaves, stems, roots, flowers, seeds
(each part must be tested independently)
2. SMELL the plant part — reject if strongly bitter or acrid
3. SKIN CONTACT: rub the plant part on inner wrist
Wait 15 minutes — reject if burning, rash, or numbness
4. LIP TEST: touch plant part to corner of lip
Wait 15 minutes — reject if burning, tingling, or numbness
5. TONGUE TEST: place on tongue, do not chew
Wait 15 minutes — reject if unpleasant reaction
6. CHEW TEST: chew and hold in mouth, do not swallow
Wait 15 minutes — reject if bitter, soapy, burning
7. SWALLOW TEST: swallow a small amount (teaspoon)
Wait 8 hours — eat nothing else during this time
Reject if nausea, cramps, diarrhea, or any ill effect
8. If no reaction after 8 hours: eat a small handful
Wait another 8 hours
If still no reaction: the plant part is likely safe
CRITICAL WARNINGS:
- Test ONLY ONE plant part at a time
- Do NOT test mushrooms with this method (toxins can be delayed 24-72 hrs)
- Do NOT test plants with milky sap
- Stay hydrated throughout the test
- This test does NOT detect all toxins (cumulative toxins, carcinogens)
Got: After full test protocol, you have tentative edible plant, but with less certainty than positive ID.
If fail: Any reaction at any stage? Spit out or induce vomiting if swallowed. Drink water. Do not re-test same plant. Move to different species. Vomiting or diarrhea? Focus on hydration and rest before resume test with another plant.
Step 5: Harvest Sustainably
Take only what you need and keep plant population.
Sustainable Harvesting Rules:
1. Never take more than 1/3 of any plant stand
2. Never pull entire plants when leaves or fruits will do
3. Cut cleanly with a knife rather than tearing
4. Spread harvesting across a wide area
5. Leave root systems intact for perennials
6. Never harvest rare or protected species
7. Avoid plants near roads (exhaust contamination),
agricultural fields (pesticides), or industrial areas
Harvest by Plant Part:
┌──────────────┬───────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ Plant Part │ Harvest Method │
├──────────────┼───────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ Leaves │ Pick individual leaves; leave at least 2/3 │
│ │ of the plant's foliage │
├──────────────┼───────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ Roots/tubers │ Dig carefully; replant any root crown or │
│ │ small tubers to regenerate │
├──────────────┼───────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ Berries/fruit│ Pick ripe fruit only; leave some for wildlife │
│ │ and seed dispersal │
├──────────────┼───────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ Bark/cambium │ Only harvest from downed or already damaged │
│ │ trees; never ring-bark a living tree │
├──────────────┼───────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ Seeds/nuts │ Collect from the ground when possible; │
│ │ leave enough for wildlife and regeneration │
└──────────────┴───────────────────────────────────────────────┘
Got: Fair amount of positively spotted plant stuff, harvested without killing source group.
If fail: Plant stand too small (fewer than 10 individuals)? Take only token sample or find bigger group elsewhere. Over-harvest in survival is understandable, but in short-term setups, conservation keeps resource open in coming days.
Step 6: Prepare for Consumption
Many edible wild plants benefit from or need prep.
Preparation Methods:
┌──────────────┬──────────────────────────────┬──────────────────────────┐
│ Method │ When to Use │ How │
├──────────────┼──────────────────────────────┼──────────────────────────┤
│ Raw │ Known-safe species like │ Wash in purified water; │
│ │ dandelion, wood sorrel, most │ eat fresh │
│ │ berries, watercress │ │
├──────────────┼──────────────────────────────┼──────────────────────────┤
│ Boiled │ Reduces bitterness, breaks │ Boil 5-15 min; discard │
│ │ down mild toxins; required │ water for bitter plants │
│ │ for nettle, dock, fiddleheads │ (leaching) │
├──────────────┼──────────────────────────────┼──────────────────────────┤
│ Double-boiled│ Plants with significant │ Boil 10 min, discard │
│ (leached) │ oxalates or tannins (acorns, │ water; boil again in │
│ │ dock) │ fresh water │
├──────────────┼──────────────────────────────┼──────────────────────────┤
│ Roasted │ Roots, tubers, seeds, nuts │ Place in coals or near │
│ │ │ fire; cook until soft │
│ │ │ or dry │
├──────────────┼──────────────────────────────┼──────────────────────────┤
│ Dried │ Preservation for later use; │ Air dry in sun/wind or │
│ │ concentrates calories in │ near fire (not in │
│ │ seeds and roots │ direct flame) │
└──────────────┴──────────────────────────────┴──────────────────────────┘
Key Preparation Rules:
- Always wash plants in purified water before eating
- Cook any plant from wet or contaminated habitats
- Boil stinging nettle for 2+ minutes to neutralize stinging hairs
- Boil fiddlehead ferns thoroughly (raw fiddleheads are mildly toxic)
- Leach acorns in multiple changes of water until bitterness is gone
Got: Plant stuff is clean, prepared right for species, and ready to eat.
If fail: No fire for cooking (see make-fire)? Limit forage to species safe to eat raw. Taste very bitter after prep? Plant may hold high levels of tannins or alkaloids — do not force yourself to eat it. Discard and try another species.
Step 7: Monitor for Reactions
Even rightly spotted plants can cause individual reactions.
Reaction Monitoring Protocol:
1. Eat a small quantity first (a few leaves or one berry)
2. Wait 1-2 hours before eating more
3. Watch for:
- Nausea or stomach cramps → stop eating, drink water
- Tingling or numbness in mouth → spit out, rinse mouth
- Skin rash or hives → possible contact allergy
- Diarrhea → stop eating, focus on hydration
- Dizziness or vision changes → possible toxic reaction,
seek help immediately
If a reaction occurs:
- Stop eating the plant immediately
- Drink large amounts of water
- If severe (difficulty breathing, confusion), this is a medical emergency
- Note which plant and which part caused the reaction
- Do not re-eat that plant
Got: No bad reaction after 1-2 hours. You can then eat normal portion.
If fail: Mild reaction (stomach discomfort, mild nausea)? Stop eating plant, hydrate, rest. Reaction should pass within few hours. Severe reaction (swelling, difficulty breathing, confusion, rapid heartbeat)? This is medical emergency — seek help right away. Induce vomiting only if told by medical guide and ingestion was within 1 hour.
Step 8: Build Your Knowledge — The Universal Five
Start with five plants found across most of temperate Northern Hemisphere. Master these before grow your list.
The Universal Five (Beginner-Friendly Edible Plants):
1. DANDELION (Taraxacum officinale)
Habitat: Lawns, fields, disturbed ground (nearly everywhere)
ID: Basal rosette of toothed leaves; hollow stem; yellow
composite flower; milky sap (exception to the milky sap rule)
Edible: Entire plant — leaves (raw/cooked), flowers (raw/fried),
roots (roasted as coffee substitute)
Season: Year-round; best in spring before flowering
2. BROADLEAF PLANTAIN (Plantago major)
Habitat: Lawns, paths, disturbed ground
ID: Basal rosette of oval leaves with parallel veins;
tall seed spike; leaves are tough and fibrous
Edible: Young leaves (raw in salads, older leaves boiled);
seeds (edible raw or ground)
Medicinal: Crushed leaves used as poultice for insect bites/stings
Season: Spring through fall
3. WHITE CLOVER (Trifolium repens)
Habitat: Lawns, meadows, roadsides
ID: Three round leaflets (sometimes four); white round flower
heads; creeping ground cover
Edible: Flowers (raw or dried for tea); young leaves (raw or
cooked — cook to improve digestibility)
Season: Flowers in spring/summer; leaves year-round in mild climates
4. CATTAIL (Typha latifolia / T. angustifolia)
Habitat: Wetlands, pond edges, ditches, marshes
ID: Tall (1-3 m); long flat sword-like leaves; distinctive brown
cigar-shaped seed head
Edible: Shoot base/heart (raw, spring); pollen (flour substitute,
summer); rhizome (starchy, peeled and boiled/roasted,
year-round); young flower spike (boiled, early summer)
Utility: Fluff = tinder and insulation; leaves = weaving material
Season: Different parts edible year-round
5. WOOD SORREL (Oxalis spp.)
Habitat: Forest floor, shaded areas, gardens
ID: Three heart-shaped leaflets (resembles clover but leaflets are
notched/heart-shaped); small 5-petaled yellow, white, or pink
flowers; leaves fold at night
Edible: Leaves and flowers (raw — pleasant lemony/sour taste)
Caution: Contains oxalic acid; eat in moderation (not as a staple)
Season: Spring through fall
Progression:
Master these 5 → Add 5 regional species → Add 5 more → Build to 20+
(20 positively known species provides meaningful foraging capability)
Got: You can spot all five universal plants on sight using many features and know which parts to eat and how to prep them.
If fail: None of these five are in your area (e.g., desert, high arctic, tropical)? Check region-specific references. These five are specific to temperate zones. In tropical env, look for coconut palm, banana/plantain, taro (must cook), breadfruit, and moringa. In dry regions, look for prickly pear cactus (Opuntia), mesquite, and agave.
Validation
- Deadly plants for region known and can be spotted on sight
- Habitat surveyed and likely edible species short-listed
- Each plant spotted using at least 5 features (multi-feature method)
- Plant confirmed as NOT dangerous look-alike
- Harvest sustainable (no more than 1/3 of any stand)
- Prep method right for species
- Small test portion eaten first with 1-2 hour watch time
- No bad reactions before eat full portion
Pitfalls
- Single-feature spot: "It has three leaves like clover" is not enough. Many toxic plants share single features with edible ones. Always use full multi-feature list
- Carrot family confusion: Apiaceae family (carrot, parsnip, parsley) holds both common foods and deadliest plants in Northern Hemisphere. Avoid unless expert-level sure
- Mushroom forage in survival: Mushrooms give little calorie value and include some of most lethal organisms on earth. Risk-reward ratio is bad in survival context
- Eat too much of new plant: Even safe plants can cause digestive upset in quantity, especially if your gut not used. Start small
- Ignore prep rules: Raw fiddleheads, raw elderberries, unleached acorns — some plants edible when cooked are mildly toxic raw
- Forage near polluted areas: Roadsides (lead, exhaust), ag edges (pesticides), and industrial zones may have technically edible but polluted plants
See Also
make-fire— needed for cooking foraged plants; many species need boil or roast to be safe or tastypurify-water— clean water needed for washing foraged plants and for leach/boil prep methods
GitHub репозиторий
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